Food Hussy Recipes » Copycat

Elote in a Cup

Elote in a Cup is the perfect side dish or appetizer – it’s takes one of my favorite ways to eat corn on the cob and has all the flavor but makes it less messy and more portable! Loaded with fresh corn and a tangy creamy sauce topped with a crunchy spicy coating!

Elote (Mexican Corn) in a cup

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What You Will ❤️ About Elote in a Cup

  • Food Truck Favorite! My friend’s food truck makes this and it’s a best seller!
  • Corn all year! You can use frozen corn and still have that bite of summer all year round!
  • Quick! Only 5 min of cook time and it’s ready in 20 minutes.
Elote (Mexican Corn) in a cup

What is Elote Corn?

Elote means corn in Spanish and it’s plentiful and a very popular street food in Mexico. Traditional elote is corn on the cob covered in butter, mayonnaise, cotija cheese and chili powder. This recipe for Elote in a Cup makes that delicious street food a little more portable but with the same great taste!

ingredients for Elote

Ingredients for Elote in a Cup recipe

These ingredients are very similar to what you’d have if you kept it on the cob. Here’s what you’ll need: 

  • Salt & Sugar
  • Corn on the cob or whole kernel corn – you can use fresh or frozen
  • Duke’s Mayonnaise – I only use Duke’s! Have you tried it?
  • Limes
  • Hot Cheetos – this gives it a kick!
  • Chile powder or cayenne pepper – and another kick!
  • Tajin – and another kick! This is a blend of chili peppers, lime & salt.
  • Parmesan cheese – or romano, cotija, queso fresco or even feta cheese
  • Chopped Cilantro
Fresh corn

How do you cook corn for this elote recipe?

I like to use fresh corn for this recipe – mainly because I first tried this in the summer – when it’s available on every corner! But in January – I still like elote – but there’s no fresh corn! What to do? Here’s how to cook the corn – no matter what time of year you’re serving it!

  • Fresh corn on the cob – once your corn cut off the cob – boil 1.5 cups of water with 1 tbsp sugar. Add your corn and boil for 3-5 minutes. Then drain and let cool for 5 min.
  • Frozen corn – heat according to directions on the bag – typically microwave/steam for 6 minutes.
  • Canned corn – heat in a sauce pan. Then drain and cool for 5 minutes.

Cutting Kernels off the Cob

Remove corn husks and silks. Stand your corn cob on its end in a strainer – then take your chef’s knife and slice down each side – getting close to the bottom of the ear. This will keep your kernels from flying across the room!

Elote ingredients

How do you make Mexican Street Corn in a Cup?

  • Bring water to a boil and add salt & sugar – this helps make it like sweet corn
  • When salted water is boiling, add corn and cover with lid. 
  • Simmer corn for 3-5 minutes or until corn is cooked though and tender. 
  • While corn is simmering, combine mayonnaise, lime juice and salt in a small bowl. Refrigerate.
  • In a blender, add Cheetos, Tajin and chili powder. Pulverize until made into crumbs
  • When corn is done cooking, drain well and spread out in strainer. Allow to cool for about 3-5 minutes. 
  • Place corn in cup and layer mayo mixture and cheetos mixture on top of corn mixture
  • Garnish with parmesan and chopped cilantro and squeeze a lime wedge over top
    • You could even sprinkle with your favorite hot sauce

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Tips, Tricks & FAQs

What’s the difference between Elotes and esquites?

Elote is commonly known as the street corn served on the cob. Esquites is the Mexican street corn salad form of elote – usually served in a cup. So this recipe is a bit of both! 

What does Elote Mean in Spanish?

It simply translates to Corn

How do you say elote?

eee-LOW-tay is the pronunciation of elote

Can you use canned or frozen corn to make Mexican corn cup?

Yes – definitely! Instructions are in the recipe.

What cheese can you use for elote?

Traditional elote is served with cotija. You can substitute queso fresco, feta or – as we do – Parmesan!

Can you use something other than mayonnaise?

Sure! You could swap out with Mexican crema, sour cream or nonfat plain yogurt if you’re not a fan of mayo. If you are using mayo – I always recommend Duke’s.

Can you reheat elote in a cup?

Meh – not so much – if you think you’ll have more than you need – I recommend keeping the ingredients separate

Elote (Mexican Corn) in a cup

Elote in a Cup Variations

  • Grilled – you can also grill your corn rather than a quick boil! Very delicious!
  • Not in a cup – cook your corn but squirtle all the toppings on the ears of corn for a traditional Elote.
  • Veggies – saute bell peppers and onions and add to the corn mixture – then top with diced avocado.
  • Chicken – add pulled rotisserie chicken to the dish for a full meal
Traeger Grilled Chicken Thighs

What to serve with Elote in a Cup?

Other Yummy Recipes with Corn

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Elote (Mexican Corn) in a cup

Elote in a Cup

Elote in a Cup is such a fun dish – it's takes one of my favorite ways to eat corn on the cob but makes it less messy and more portable! You start with fresh corn and then layer it with a tangy creamy sauce and top it with a crunchy spicy coating! It's a super fun and unique side dish!
4.60 from 10 votes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 20 minutes
Course Side
Cuisine Mexican
Servings 4 people
Calories 430 kcal

Ingredients
  

Instructions
 

  • Bring water, salt and sugar to a boil in a small saucepan
    2 tbsp sugar, 1.5 cups water, 2 tbsp salt
  • While water is coming to a boil, shuck corn and cut it off the cob. You should yield 2 cups of corn for this recipe. You can also use canned or frozen corn for this recipe as well.
    2-3 ears corn on the cob
  • When water is boiling – add corn and cover with lid. Simmer for 3-5 minutes until corn is cooked and tender. Adjust accordingly if using frozen or canned. (frozen – you can microwave in bag, canned – heat with liquid in can)
    2-3 ears corn on the cob , 1.5 cups water, 2 tbsp sugar
  • While corn is simmering, combine mayonnaise, juice from 1/2 of lime and salt in a small bowl. Stir and refrigerate until ready to serve.
    1/2 cup Duke's Mayonnaise, 1 lime, 1/2 tsp coarse sea salt
  • In a blender, add Cheetos, Tajin and Chili powder. Pulverize until made into crumbs. Set aside until ready to serve.
    2 cups Hot Cheetos, 1 tsp chili powder, 1 tbsp Tajin
  • When corn is done, pour into a strainer to drain. Spread out corn around strainer to cool more quickly. Allow to cool for 3-5 minutes.
    2-3 ears corn on the cob
  • In your cups, add 1-2 spoonfuls of corn across bottom of dish. Spoon 1 large spoonful of mayo mixture over corn. (Go light on the mayo layer – it can overwhelm) Spoon 1-2 spoonfuls of Cheetos mixture over corn.
  • Repeat all layers – corn, mayo and cheetos.
  • Cut other half of lime into four wedges.
    1 lime
  • Sprinkle top with cheese, cilantro and a lime wedge.
    1/4 cup cheese, 1 tsp cilantro

Notes

**We are not dietitians and recommend you seek a nutritionist for exact nutritional information. The information in the nutrition box are calculated through a program and there is room for error. If you need an accurate count, I recommend running the ingredients through your favorite nutrition calculator.**

Nutrition

Serving: 0.5cupCalories: 430kcalCarbohydrates: 38.1gProtein: 9.7gFat: 28.6gSaturated Fat: 5.2gCholesterol: 20mgSodium: 508mgPotassium: 255mgFiber: 3.5gSugar: 9.7gCalcium: 137mgIron: 1mg
Keyword copycat, corn, mexican
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

11 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    At the moment I just finished making this recipe oh my gosh! Best elote bowl I’ve ever had. Normally I hate the mayo in the elote bowls but adding the lime and salt made it

  2. Thank you for your recipe. Just one thing, Elote is not a Spanish word. It’s derived from the native Mexican language náhuatl. In Spanish, corn is translated as maíz. My parents are from Spain, I was born in South America, and I’ve never heard that word before coming to the US. Please make the appropriate corrections in your publication.

    1. Well I don’t typically refer to Mexican as a language and if you Google translate – it says Spanish. So Ole to Elote! It’s Mexican Spanish – not Spain Spanish. Thanks for your thoughts.

4.60 from 10 votes (3 ratings without comment)

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