Driving past endless cornfields, you might notice that much of the corn doesn’t look like the sweet kind found at the store. That’s because most corn isn’t grown for eating straight off the cob.
Field Corn: The Industrial Crop
Field corn—also called dent corn or feed corn—makes up the majority of corn grown today. It’s harvested late, when the kernels are hard and full of starch. This type of corn is mainly used to feed livestock and to produce items like corn syrup, ethanol, cereal products, cornmeal, and cornstarch. While we consume many products made from it, field corn is not meant to be eaten fresh.
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