Most people grab an ear of corn at the store and assume all corn is the same. I did too—until I learned there’s a huge difference between the bright yellow corn we eat at barbecues and the tough, dried kernels grown across endless fields in the countryside. Your husband is right: they’re not even close.
Sweet corn is the kind you eat fresh. It’s picked early, when the kernels are soft, juicy, and full of natural sugar. That’s why it tastes sweet, why you can boil it in minutes, and why it spoils fast. It’s grown for flavor, not storage, and every ear is meant to be eaten straight from the cob, frozen, or canned.
Field corn is a completely different crop. It stays on the stalk much longer until the kernels turn hard and almost rock-solid. You can’t bite into it—it’s grown for animal feed, cornmeal, tortillas, cornstarch, fuel, and thousands of everyday products. Most of the corn you see driving past farmland isn’t the kind you put on the grill. It’s the kind that becomes flour, chips, oil, and even ethanol for cars.
So yes, they may look similar at first glance, but they’re grown for entirely different purposes. One is meant for dinner. The other is meant for everything else.