Quick Answer
How do you make buffalo grilled corn?Grill corn directly over medium-high heat (husk removed, or husk-on for 15 minutes then peeled) until charred in spots. Brush with warm buffalo sauce while still hot. Top with blue cheese crumbles, a drizzle of ranch or sour cream, fresh cilantro, and lime wedges. The buffalo sauce application happens off the grill — applying buffalo sauce directly to the grill burns the butter in the sauce and creates flare-ups. Let the corn get fully charred and cooked first, then sauce it. The natural sweetness of grilled corn contrasts beautifully with buffalo sauce's tangy heat.
Why Buffalo Grilled Corn Works
Buffalo grilled corn is a riff on elote — Mexican street corn — adapted with buffalo sauce replacing the traditional mayo-cotija-chili powder topping. The two preparations share the same structural logic: charred sweet corn, a rich dairy element, spice, acid, and fresh herbs.
The flavor compatibility: corn's natural sugars caramelize during grilling, creating a sweet, slightly smoky base. Buffalo sauce's tangy heat contrasts with this sweetness — the same way salted caramel works, where contrast between sweet and salty/acidic creates a more interesting flavor than either element alone. The Maillard browning on the corn also creates savory, complex flavor compounds that complement buffalo sauce's savory character.
The dairy toppings (blue cheese, sour cream, or ranch) serve the same function they do in traditional elote — they moderate heat, add richness, and create a creamy coating over the charred corn. Blue cheese is the natural choice for buffalo corn, referencing the classic wing-and-blue-cheese pairing. Ranch is the milder option for those who prefer it.
For a citrus twist that enhances both the corn and the buffalo sauce, the lime buffalo sauce variation is especially good in this application.
Grilling Technique
Two grilling approaches:
- Direct, husk-off: Faster (12–15 minutes), produces more char and deeper Maillard browning. Rotate corn every 3–4 minutes for even charring. The direct flame contact creates the distinctive black grill marks. This method is preferred when you want maximum char character.
- Husk-on (then peel and sauce): The husk creates a natural steam packet — the corn steams in its own moisture before the husk chars and the heat reaches the corn directly. After 15 minutes, peel back the husk and grill directly over heat for 3–5 more minutes for final char. This method produces juicier corn with somewhat less char than the husk-off method.
Buffalo sauce application timing:
- Remove corn from the grill and let rest 2 minutes.
- Brush warm buffalo sauce onto the corn using a pastry brush or spoon. The corn must be off the grill — the butter in buffalo sauce burns rapidly at grill temperatures and would create flare-ups and bitter char.
- Apply generously — grilled corn's textured, charred surface holds sauce well.
Ingredients
- 4 ears of fresh corn, husks and silk removed
- Olive oil spray or light brushing of oil
- Buffalo sauce (make fresh or warm pre-made):
- 3 tablespoons Frank's RedHot
- 2 tablespoons butter
- Toppings:
- 1/4 cup crumbled blue cheese (or cotija for lighter option)
- 2 tablespoons sour cream or ranch dressing (in a squeeze bottle for drizzling)
- Fresh cilantro leaves
- 2 limes, cut into wedges
- Pinch of extra cayenne or chili powder (optional)
Method
- Preheat grill to medium-high (450–500°F). Clean and oil the grates.
- Make the buffalo sauce: melt butter in a small saucepan over low heat, whisk in Frank's RedHot until emulsified. Remove from heat. Keep warm.
- Lightly oil or spray the corn ears on all sides.
- Place corn directly on the grill grates. Grill, rotating every 3–4 minutes, for 12–15 minutes total. The corn should be charred in multiple spots — this is correct, not burnt. The char creates flavor.
- Remove corn from grill. Let rest 2 minutes.
- Immediately brush warm buffalo sauce over the corn, covering all sides. Work quickly while the corn is hot — the heat from the corn helps the sauce adhere and melt into the char.
- Top with blue cheese crumbles, a drizzle of sour cream or ranch, fresh cilantro, and a squeeze of lime.
- Serve immediately with extra lime wedges and additional buffalo sauce on the side.
Tips
- The sour cream or ranch in a squeeze bottle creates the characteristic elote drizzle look — much more attractive and controllable than spooning. Put sour cream in a zip-lock bag with the corner snipped off if you don't have a squeeze bottle.
- For indoor preparation: use a cast iron grill pan over high heat. Heat the pan for 5 minutes until smoking hot before adding corn. Rotate every 3 minutes for 15 minutes total. The cast iron grill pan produces excellent char marks and smoke.
- Off-the-cob buffalo corn: cut the grilled kernels off the cob after saucing. Serve as a side dish in a bowl with toppings. This presentation is easier for parties or people who find eating corn on the cob messy. Also works as a taco topping or grain bowl component.
💡 Buffalo Corn Street Taco Topping
Buffalo grilled corn makes an excellent street taco topping. Cut the sauced, grilled corn kernels off the cob. Use as a topping for chicken or cauliflower tacos alongside avocado, pickled jalapeños, and sour cream. The corn's sweetness and the buffalo heat create a complex taco topping that adds color and crunch. The same topping works on nachos — scatter buffalo corn kernels over chips with cheese and bake, then finish with cold toppings (sour cream, guacamole, cilantro). The corn sweetness balances the chip's saltiness and the buffalo heat.
Variations
Buffalo grilled corn adapts well to different flavor directions:
- Lime buffalo corn (recommended): Use lime buffalo sauce instead of standard — the citrus note complements the sweetness of the corn particularly well. Add lime zest to the blue cheese crumble for extra citrus character.
- Honey buffalo corn: Add a drizzle of honey to the buffalo sauce before brushing on the corn. The corn's natural sweetness plus honey creates a distinctly sweeter preparation — closer to a honey butter corn than a spicy application, but with buffalo's tanginess.
- Smoky buffalo corn: Add a pinch of smoked paprika to the buffalo sauce. The smokiness amplifies the grill char character already present in the corn.
- Buffalo corn cups: Cut kernels off the cob and serve in paper cups (street corn style) with all the toppings — a party-friendly serving format.