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How to make popcorn that's actually good


To make good popcorn at home without buying an expensive movie theater style machine, you need a Whirley Pop. The basic/cheapest aluminum one with nylon gears is fine; I've been using mine for 10 years now without any problems (Amazon's Whirley Pop page tells me: "Last purchased Jan 23, 2014").

If you want it to taste like typical movie theater popcorn, you need Gold Medal Flavacol, which is a butter-flavored salt that most movie theaters use, and is the key ingredient for the distinctive taste. A 35-ounce carton of it for $9 will probably last you for years (I'm on my second carton in 10 years, and it's still nearly full).

I use:

• 1/2 cup of Orville Redenbacher's Original popcorn kernels
• 3 tablespoons of refined coconut oil (don't get unrefined; popcorn isn't supposed to taste/smell like coconuts)
• 1 rounded teaspoon of Flavacol

I preheat the oil with 3 popcorn kernels in it, and when they pop I add the rest of the popcorn kernels and Flavacol, close the lid, and stir until done, which should take about 3 minutes. You may need to use trial and error to find the heat setting on your particular stove that results in a popping time of ~3 minutes (you don't want it to take significantly more or less time than 3 minutes). Also, don't force the crank handle when it becomes hard to stir because it's full of popcorn (that's how those nylon gears get broken). Just stop stirring; it will be fine for the 10 or 15 seconds it takes to finish.

Then I immediately dump it into a paper grocery bag, pour 1/4 cup of melted butter over it, and shake it up for a minute.

You could eat it at this point, but contrary to how good it may sound, "freshly popped" popcorn isn't really a good thing, because it still has quite a bit of moisture from all the steam that was created when it was popping, and that can make it kind of tough and chewy.

When you buy popcorn from a vendor, they usually scoop it out of the bottom of the machine where it's been sitting over a warming element for some time. That warming element dries it out and makes it tender and crispy. To duplicate this critical aspect at home, I put the popcorn, paper bag and all, in the oven (preheated to 200°F) for at least 20 minutes (I don't know the upper time limit, but I know it's fine being in a 200-degree oven for an hour). It's worth the wait to me because no matter how good the flavor is, if it's tough and chewy it sucks.

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I found a small popcorn brand from Maine and recreated the seasoning blend because I prefer fresh popped.

Nutritional yeast
Onion powder
Parsley
Dill
Garlic
Tumeric
Spanish paprika.

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What brand? I knew someone here in Maine who used to produce popcorn under a small brand that was sold in local stores; people called him "Popcorn Larry." There were/are varieties with seasonings along those lines I think. He died several years ago. I don't even remember the name of the brand, but I'd probably recognize it if I saw it.

Edit: I remember now. It's called "Little Lad's":

https://www.pressherald.com/2020/06/07/little-lads-a-vegan-food-company-and-one-time-cafe-turns-25/

Movie theater style popcorn has always been my favorite though, and for that particular flavor, you just use Flavacol, because that's all that movie theaters use (the ones that don't use Flavacol use a knockoff of it from some other company).

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Yup, Little Lad's! Good stuff!

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For several years, Popcorn Larry and his employees were making Little Lad's popcorn in the former primary & middle (K–8) school building where I went to school from 1980–89.

He had a small fleet of vans and my mechanic friend Dave was who he always brought them to for repair and service, so that's how I knew him.

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