Grilled corn salsa is one of those recipes that's more technique than ingredient list. The corn has to be charred — really charred, not just grill-marked — for the smoky flavor to come through after the lime and cilantro wake everything up. Scoop it with chips, pile it on fish tacos, spoon it over a grilled steak, or eat it straight out of the bowl over the sink. A single bowl gets you through most of summer.
Grilled corn salsa
Charred sweet corn tossed with tomatoes, jalapeño, lime, and cilantro — a smoky summer salsa that goes with everything off the grill.

- Prep
- 10 min
- Cook
- 10 min
- Total
- 20 min
- Serves
- 6
Grilled corn salsa
Makes About 3 cups
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (16)
Optional additions
You'll need
- Grill (gas, charcoal, or grill pan)
- Sharp knife and cutting board
- Large mixing bowl
- Tongs
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 1/2 cup)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Silver Queen — classic white sweet corn; tender and sweet
- Peaches and Cream — bi-color (yellow and white kernels); excellent sweet-starch balance
- Honey Select — yellow, very sweet; chars beautifully
- Butter and Sugar — bi-color heirloom; one of the most flavorful
- Bodacious — yellow, sweet, holds sweetness for a day or two after picking
Ripeness
Husks should be green, fresh, and tight against the ear. Silk should be golden and slightly sticky, not dry and brown. Peel back a bit of husk and press a kernel with your thumbnail — milky liquid means ripe; watery means underripe; doughy means overripe.
Imperfections are fine
A few kernel-less tip bits are normal. Slight worm damage at the tip can be cut off — the rest of the ear is fine. Uneven kernel size doesn't matter once it's off the cob.
Good substitutions
- Frozen corn in winter — thaw, pat very dry, and char hard in a skillet
- Canned corn — rinse and drain well; doesn't char as dramatically
- Corn off the cob, briefly blanched — skip the grill for a fresher, crunchier salsa
- Hominy — swap entirely for a different texture and flavor
In season
US sweet corn peaks July through September. Sugar starts converting to starch the moment corn is picked — local corn is dramatically sweeter than supermarket corn.
How much to buy
About 4 ears — half a standard farm-stand bundle.
Find your corn grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season July – September
- For this recipe 4 ears
- Freshness Picked within 24 hours
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegan · gluten-free · dairy-free
- While you're there Fresh tomatoes and cherry tomatoes · Fresh cilantro · Jalapeño and other chilies · Fresh limes · Avocados (from California if sourcing hyper-locally isn't possible)
At the market
About 4 ears — half a standard farm-stand bundle.
Best varieties
- Silver Queen classic white sweet corn; tender and sweet
- Peaches and Cream bi-color (yellow and white kernels); excellent sweet-starch balance
- Honey Select yellow, very sweet; chars beautifully
Good to know
Tips
- Grill the corn naked (no husks). Husks act as insulation — removing them is what gets you real char.
- Cut the kernels into a wide bowl to catch them. A standing cob in a small bowl inside a larger bowl works even better.
- Save the cobs. Simmer them in broth for 20 minutes for a rich corn stock — great for risotto or chowder.
- A pinch of smoked paprika deepens the charred flavor. It's optional but transformative.
- Add the avocado and cilantro just before serving so they stay fresh.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 3 days in an airtight container. Don't add avocado until serving — it browns overnight.
- Freezer: not recommended — tomatoes and onions turn mushy when thawed.
Reheating
- Not applicable — served cold or at room temperature.
- To revive day-old salsa: add a squeeze of fresh lime juice and a handful of fresh cilantro.
Make ahead
- Grill the corn up to 24 hours ahead; strip the kernels and refrigerate.
- Dice the onion, jalapeño, and tomatoes up to 6 hours ahead.
- Combine the full salsa up to 24 hours ahead. Add cilantro, avocado, and cheese just before serving.
Variations
- Black bean corn salsa: add 1 can rinsed and drained black beans for a heartier dish.
- Mango corn salsa: add 1 cup diced ripe mango for sweetness; great with fish tacos.
- Mexican street corn salsa: skip the tomatoes; add 1/3 cup mayo, 1/3 cup cotija, and a pinch of chili powder.
- Smoky chipotle corn salsa: skip the jalapeño; add 1 minced chipotle in adobo and 1 teaspoon of the sauce.
- Grilled peach and corn salsa: add 1 grilled peach, diced, for late-summer flavor.
- Poblano corn salsa: grill a poblano alongside the corn; peel, seed, and dice.
Swaps
- No lime: swap for 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice plus an extra pinch of salt.
- No cilantro (if you're a cilantro-hater): swap for chopped parsley or flat-leaf parsley plus a sprig of mint.
- No jalapeño: omit and add 1/4 teaspoon chili powder for gentle heat.
- No grill: char kernels in a dry cast-iron skillet or under the broiler.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make corn salsa without a grill?
What kind of corn is best for salsa?
How do you cut corn off the cob without kernels flying everywhere?
Can corn salsa be made ahead?
How do I make it spicier?
What do you serve with grilled corn salsa?
Can I use frozen corn?
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