Recipe of Tasty Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn

  • By Lida Clark
  • 01 Jun, 2020
Recipe of Tasty Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn
Recipe of Tasty Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn

Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn Recipe. How to prepare it? What are the ingredients? Cooking tips and more… It is one of my favourite food recipe, this time i will make it a little bit tasty.

The Sweet were also a force to be reckoned with in pure rock music terms too. Their best known line-up consisted of lead vocalist Brian Connolly, bass player Steve Priest, guitarist Andy Scott, and drummer Mick Tucker.

Here is the best “Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn” recipe we have found until now. This will be smell and look delicious.

Ingredients of Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn

  1. It’s Handful of corn kernels.
  2. Take of Olive oil.
  3. It’s 1/2 tsp of salt.
  4. Take 1 tbsp of caster sugar.

Cognate and synonymous with Scots sweit, North Frisian sweete, West Frisian swiet.

Sweet & Salty Homemade Popcorn instructions

  1. Use a heavy saucepan, ceramic is ideal - I use a Le crueset.
  2. Pour in enough oil to just cover the base of your pan. Then add a handful of corn kernels, also enough to just cover the base of the pan in a single layer. Now sprinkle the salt over the kernels..
  3. Heat on a medium high heat. as the corn pops gently shake the pan to stop the popcorn scorching on the base..
  4. When the popping slows to every 4-5 seconds, pull off the heat and let it sit for a few minutes to make sure the popping has stopped..
  5. Dredge the popcorn with caster sugar and serve in a big sharing bowl..

Join the movement where artists give back to fans. #thatssweet.New York, USA. Перевод слова sweet, американское и британское произношение, транскрипция, словосочетания, однокоренные слова, примеры использования. Изучайте релизы The Sweet на Discogs. Приобретайте пластинки, компакт-диски и многое другое от The Sweet на маркетплейсе Discogs.From Middle English sweete, swete, from Old English swēte ("sweet"), from Proto-West Germanic *swōtī, from Proto-Germanic *swōtuz ("sweet"), from Proto-Indo-European *swéh₂dus ("sweet").

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