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TikTok Is Randomly Obsessed With This Corn On The Cob Recipe — So I Tried It (And Not To Be Dramatic, But I Am Exhausted)

On one hand, they were delicious. On the other hand, they should come with a danger warning.

Hey, I'm Hannah — and I love two things: 1) testing out any and all food hacks, and 2) finding new ways to put my air fryer to use.

Like you, I've come across lots of recipes and tricks on TikTok that make me wonder, could this actually be worth it?

Most recently, I stumbled upon this recipe for air-fried corn "ribs," which are basically uncooked ears of corn that are quartered, seasoned, tossed in an air fryer, and then coated in an elote-inspired sauce. They looked really good.

A screenshot from TikTok of different corn "rib" recipes

With summer barbecue season just on the horizon, I figured I had to give it a try. Could they be the greatest new summer side dish? Or an absolute fail? Let's find out...

A woman holding a piece of charred corn

First, I assembled my ingredients. I watched enough TikTok videos to quickly realize that there are lots of ways to make these corn ribs, and you can play around with different spices and seasonings.

Ingredients for air fried corn ribs

If you want to follow a recipe rather than follow a TikTok, I'd suggest this one from food blog Seasoned to Taste.

Elote-style air-fried corn

The first step is to shuck and cut the corn. You halve the ears, then slice them again and again until they are in quarters. Seems simple enough, right?

A cutting board and pieces of corn

Wrong. Cutting uncooked corn on the cob into quarters turned out to be really difficult. I was using a brand-new chef knife (read: the furthest thing from dull), and I still seriously struggled to cut through the ear of the corn.

A woman holding a piece of corn

Eventually, fearing the loss of some fingers, I enlisted my husband to help me cut the last few pieces. Full disclosure: He struggled, too, but finished the job. About half of the corn fell apart in the process and became unusable for the ribs.

A man cutting corn on the cob

After about 20 minutes of physical exertion and a few close calls with our fingers, we called it quits. We had about eight or nine "ribs" of corn.

Corn and butter on a cutting board

I made a mixture of olive oil, melted butter, and some seasonings (garlic powder, salt, pepper, smoked paprika, and cayenne pepper), which I brushed onto the pieces of corn (baby corn and "ribs"). Then I put the corn and some sliced jalapeños in the air fryer at 400°F. After 15 minutes it was beginning to brown, so I added another five minutes for it to get more charred.

Also, at this point, an idea popped into my head. I decided to try the very same tactic using baby corn. There would be no slicing required, and I figured the final result would be similar.

A tray topped with corn going into the air fryer

Next, I drizzled all of the corn in mayonnaise and sprinkled it with crumbled Feta cheese (I didn't have Cotija, unfortunately), the chopped, charred jalapeños, fresh cilantro, more elote seasoning and paprika, and a squeeze of lime.

Charred corn with elote sauce

I followed the same method for the baby corn.

Charred baby corn elotes

The corn on the cob definitely got more charred than the baby corn in the air fryer. And the larger kernels held onto more of the elote topping while the baby corn sort of absorbed it. Both, however, were pretty tasty.

Holding a charred corn "rib"

That being said, I honestly...don't understand this trend whatsoever. You could just make grilled corn elotes, spare yourself the effort and the risk of chopping off a few fingers, and the flavor would be almost identical. Maybe I'm missing something, but IMHO, the fried corn ribs don't seem worth the extra effort. Your best bet is to stick with standard elotes here — this one's gonna be a no from me.

Have you tried making the TikTok-famous fried corn ribs? What did you think?