Maple Rosemary Popcorn Recipe - Pamela Salzman Skip to content

Maple Rosemary Popcorn Recipe

popcorn recipe

Who isn’t stepping foot inside the kitchen again for the rest of their lives???  I used to say that after my first few Thanksgivings.  But let’s be real, come 4 o’clock the next day, I am ready to eat a meal that isn’t pie pretending to be breakfast.  That said, I thought I would ease you back into the kitchen with popcorn.  Don’t act so underwhelmed.  This is the best popcorn ever!

popcorn recipe

This is another recipe I sampled on the set of Hallmark Home & Family and I would have poured the whole bowl into my bag if that was an appropriate thing to do.  This maple-rosemary popcorn is just about one of the most addictive things I’ve ever eaten.  The rosemary is piney and marries perfectly with the subtle sweetness from the maple sugar.  And you all know how I love a little salt with my sweet.  It’s like a really sophisticated kettle corn and one where you control the ingredients.  We like that.  Buy organic popcorn, and pop it in coconut oil and top it with higher quality ingredients and that’s the way I like to cook.

popcorn recipe

I have been making homemade popcorn for the kids for after school snacks for years, but lately I’ve been making it when I have friends over to serve with drinks and hors d’oeuvres.  Why not?  Everyone loves it and popcorn is super light and won’t fill you up unless you eat the whole pot.  I also love it for watching football and to give as a gift.  See why I am posting this now?

popcorn recipe

I figured with holiday parties coming up, game days every weekend and gift-giving season upon us, this would be a perfect recipe to make often.  Cheers!

Maple Rosemary Popcorn Recipe
Author: 
Serves: 12
 
Ingredients
  • 1 cup popcorn kernels, preferably organic
  • 3 tablespoons unrefined virgin coconut oil
  • 5 tablespoon maple sugar or cane sugar
  • 1 tablespoons powdered sugar
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 4 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • ¼ cup melted unsalted butter or vegan butter
Instructions
  1. Heat the oil in a heavy bottomed extra large pot over medium heat. Add 3 kernels of popcorn to the pot and cover with a lid. When the kernels pop (this usually takes about 2½ – 3 minutes), add the 1 cup of popcorn in an even layer and cover with the lid, but not all the way. Leave it open about ½ inch to allow steam to escape but not wide enough to let the popcorn pop right out.
  2. Shake the pot every now and then. If you can’t shake it with the lid ajar, cover the pot, shake and open the lid again when you return the pot to the heat.
  3. Once the popping reduces to several seconds in between each pop, take the pot off the heat and remove the lid. Pour the popped corn into a large mixing bowl.
  4. While the corn is popping, melt your butter in a saute pan and toss in the rosemary sprigs. Cook the rosemary until it crisps up, but shut off the heat before the butter browns.
  5. Add maple sugar, powdered sugar, salt, and pepper to a spice grinder and pulse until evenly combined.
  6. Pour spice mixture over the popped corn. Toss with your hands a few times to combine.
  7. Drizzle the melted butter on top and continue stirring with your hands (or tongs) until the popcorn is uniformly coated.

 

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Comments

6 Comments

  1. So, I made the popcorn on Saturday night when my family was here and it definitely lived up to the hype. So yummy! With the exception of my mother-in-law, (who said I ruined the popcorn. Ha! Ha!), the other 7 people who ate it loved it. My brother-in-law said it I should sell it! (Another Ha! Ha!) I can’t wait to make it for all of my daughter’s teachers. My sister was able to go to Whole Foods for me and get the maple sugar so it was perfect. Thank you as always. 🙂

    • Um, LOL to the MIL comment!! So glad it was a hit with everyone else!

  2. Hi! I’m assuming the rosemary is in the butter to just give it a rosemary flavor and you discard it before you pour the butter over the popcorn or do you add the sprigs to the bowl? I am definitely making this for my daughter’s teachers. They got granola last year but popcorn this year. I’m going to try it out this weekend. Thanks as always!

    • Yes, you are correct! But I added the sprigs to the bowl so the photo would like something other than a boring bowl of popcorn!

  3. In total agreement with your eating philosophy but this recipe seems to fall a bit short. For example, recently I’ve read several published reports suggesting that coconut oil is not, in fact, as healthy as we’ve been led to believe. As for the other ingredients,…maple/cane/powdered sugar and 1/4 cup of butter. Maybe I’m missing something here but this doesn’t seem that healthy to me,…respectfully speaking.

    • Robert, I appreciate the respectful tone of your comment and opinion and thank you for following the blog. I actually agree with you! But, here’s where I can rationalize this. Popcorn is a treat food which should be eaten occasionally and in small amounts. If you were to buy kettle corn from a store or at the farmers market, they use the worst refined oil imaginable and tons of sugar. An even worse idea is microwave popcorn which I have written about on the blog before. The chemicals in the packaging that leach into the food are to be avoided at all costs. So this recipe is using better ingredients (I’m still a fan of unrefined coconut oil at higher temps – the meta study that came out this summer is controversial) and the recipe serves 12. So that works out to be 1 teaspoon of butter per person and 1 1/2 teaspoons of sugar per person. Not a health food for sure, but again I’m comparing it to commercially prepared popcorns. You can use olive oil to pop and cut back on the sweetener if you like. 🙂


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I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

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