This corn stock recipe takes about 10 minutes of hands-on work and an hour on the stove. That's it. And what you get in return is a frozen supply of homemade corn broth that makes soups, polenta, and seafood dishes taste so much better than anything made with plain water.

After you cut the kernels off the cob, those bare cobs still hold sweet, starchy corn flavor locked inside. They're perfect for making sweet corn stock out of your leftover cobs.
I learned this recipe in 2008 from Robert and Molly Krause at a soup cooking class they taught before they retired. Robert used corn stock as the base for a refined corn chowder he served during corn season as part of a multi-course menu at Krause's in Lawrence, KS.
That class is also where I started making stocks and bases at home the same way Krause does: I treat it exactly like homemade tomato paste with a short window to make it, portion it into the freezer, and save it for the recipes that deserve it most.
You can only make this during corn season. For us, it starts around the 4th of July. When fresh corn is gone in September, it's gone. Make it now, freeze it, and you'll have it all winter.
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Why You Will Love This Recipe
- You're already buying the corn. The cobs are free.
- It's the base for creamy corn soup, polenta, shrimp bakes, and chowder. Use it when a recipe calls for water or a light stock.
- You can freeze it in portions and pull it out all winter when fresh corn is long gone.
- This is exactly how restaurants build flavor from scraps. Now you can do it at home.
Ingredients
You only need a few ingredients to make corn stock.

- Fresh Corn Cobs: Stripped of their kernels, but still full of flavor. Find local corn at the farmers' market or a roadside stand. Use them within 1 day of buying them. The cob holds onto the natural sugars and starch from the corn after cutting off the kernels, and that's what makes this stock. Don't use dried-out cobs or frozen cobs.
- Leek: The white and light green parts only. Rinse them thoroughly under cold running water. Dirt hides in between the layers.
- Yellow Onion: Peeled and split in half. Adds a savory backbone without overpowering the corn.
- Dry Riesling White Wine: This is the type of wine Chef Krause recommends for corn stock because its slight sweetness and stone fruit notes complement the corn. Stick with the dry Riesling, not a sweet Riesling, which can be overly sweet. If you prefer not to use wine, substitute an equal amount of water. For more on choosing white wine for cooking, the same principles I use for my curry butter sauce apply here. If it doesn't taste good in the glass, it won't taste good in the pot.
- Garlic, Bay Leaves, and Fresh Thyme: Classic aromatics that add herbal depth.
See the recipe card below for ingredient measurements.
What To Do With The Corn Kernels
Don't throw them away. The kernels can go in several directions.
- My cheesy corn recipe is a great use for a fresh batch, and it comes together fast as a side dish.
- You can also sauté them with 1-2 tablespoons of butter or olive oil and salt for a simple side or add them to a chopped salad.
- The stock and the kernels work together as a pair. Use the stock as the base for a pureed corn soup.
Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Rinse the leeks with water, making sure to separate the layers and wash out any grit. Place them in a large stockpot.

Step 2: Cut the kernels off all six cobs and save them for another use. I suggest laying the corn cob on its side to cut the kernels. It's less messy than holding the cob upright. Add the stripped cobs to the pot.

Step 3: Add the onion halves, smashed garlic, bay leaves, thyme sprigs, and white wine.

Step 4: Cover with 8 cups of water. Bring to a boil over high heat, then reduce to a strong simmer. Cook uncovered for 1 hour. Taste the stock. It should taste like corn. If the corn is older, it might need to simmer a bit longer.

Step 5: Strain through a sieve, cheesecloth, or a fine-meshed strainer into a clean bowl or pot. Discard the solids.

Step 6: Allow the stock to cool to room temperature before portioning and storing.
Top Tip
Use tongs to pull out the large corn cobs before straining. This makes the straining much easier and keeps the sieve from getting overloaded, awkward, and messy.
How To Use Corn Stock
Here are my favorite uses for corn stock:
- Corn Soup or Chowder: Use corn stock as the base instead of water or chicken stock. This is what I use in my creamy corn soup recipe.
- Polenta or Grits: Substitute corn stock for the water in any polenta or grits recipe. My creamy polenta with mascarpone is one place where this makes a real difference. The stock deepens the corn flavor in a way that water simply can't.
- Shrimp Bake: A shrimp bake that steams corn, sausage, potatoes, and shrimp in corn stock instead of plain water produces a sauce in the bottom of the pan that you will want to mop up with crusty bread. My easy homemade garlic bread is great for that.
- Anywhere you'd use a light stock: Soups, risotto, braises, pan sauces, or anywhere a recipe calls for water or vegetable stock.
Browse the full list of sauce and stock recipes for more ideas on building flavor from scratch.
Storage Information
Refrigerator: Store cooled stock in a covered container for up to 5 days.
Freezer: Portion the cooled stock into freezer-safe containers in 1 or 2-cup portions so you can pull out exactly what a recipe needs. Freeze for up to 8-12 months.
Label the containers, including the date and volume.
To thaw, move a container to the refrigerator the night before you need it, or thaw quickly in a bowl of cold water.
FAQ
No. It does not work. I tested a batch using frozen corn cobs, and the corn flavor was minimal and flat. I ended up throwing it away.
After one hour of strong simmering, taste it. It should be sweet and taste like corn. If it seems like it needs more corn flavor, simmer for another 10-15 minutes uncovered.
I suggest keeping it simple so the stock tastes like corn. You can substitute celery for the leeks. I don't use carrots because I find that their sweetness competes with the corn.

Did you try any of these tips? Leave a comment below to let us know how it turned out! Thanks for visiting!
📖 Recipe

Corn Stock Recipe
Equipment
- stock pot
- sieve
- large bowl
Ingredients
- 6 ears fresh corn on the cob
- 1 yellow onion (peeled and split in half)
- 2 garlic cloves (smashed)
- 1 leek (white and light green parts only, split in half)
- 2 bay leaves
- 2 thyme sprigs
- 1 cup dry Riesling white wine, or water
- 2 quarts water
Instructions
- Rinse the leeks with water, making sure to separate the layers and wash out any grit. Place them in a large stockpot.
- Cut the corn kernels off the cobs. Save the kernels for another use. Add the stripped cobs to the pot.
- Add the onion halves, smashed garlic, bay leaves, thyme sprigs, and white wine, if using.
- Cover with 8 cups of water and bring to a boil, then reduce to a strong simmer for 1 hour.
- Strain through a sieve, cheesecloth, or a fine-meshed strainer into a clean bowl or pot. Discard the solids.
- If not using right away, allow it to cool to room temperature before portioning and storing.
Notes
Nutrition
The provided nutritional information is an estimate per serving. Accuracy is not guaranteed.









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