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Puffcorn or corn puffs are puffed or extruded corn snacks made with corn meal, which can be baked or fried. Puffcorn belongs in the snack group products made with corn grits, rice, wheat, or other cereals. Puffcorn is often flavoured with cheese, caramel, oil, chili, onion, or garlic powder, and many other spices. [1]
Extruded corn snacks come in "puffed" and "crunchy" varieties. They include: Puffcorn. Cheese puffs and varieties (cheese curls, cheese balls, etc.) Seasoned "fries" such as Andy Capp's fries; UmaibÅ, cylindrical corn snack from Japan
People eat puffed grains in many ways, but it can be as simple as puffed grain alone and with sugar or salt for taste. Commercial products such as corn flakes and Corn Pops mix many ingredients into a homogeneous batter. The batter is then formed into shapes then toasted and/or extruded. This causes them to rise, but not puff or pop.
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Kurkure is a brand of spiced crunchy puffcorn snacks made up of rice, lentil and corn.It is owned by PepsiCo through its subsidiary Frito-Lay.It was First launched in India in 1999 and nine years later, the snack was launched in Pakistan in 2008.
"It's Corn" is a song by The Gregory Brothers that remixes portions of an August 2022 interview of Tariq Tull on Recess Therapy. [1] [2] [3] The song was released in August 28, 2022 on YouTube and went viral on social media platforms. [4] [5] [6] After the interview, seven-year-old Tariq was dubbed the CEO of Corn, and nicknamed the "Corn Kid". [7]
In performances, Chin plays an acoustic guitar with only one string, using the body of the guitar as percussion. [3] [1] [2]Luciano Blotta, who met Chin while in Jamaica shooting his 2007 documentary Rise Up, used his song "Chicken in the Corn" in the soundtrack of the movie. [2]
Whether deliberately copied or not, the melody of "Down by the Station" is closely related to the chorus of the French-Canadian folk song "Alouette". [3] [better source needed] Some have pointed out that though the first line is similar to "Alouette", it is closer to the tune of "The Itsy-Bitsy Spider," with the first two lines being similar.