Corn and Double Cheese Dip

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Corn is in season and I love a good dip.

You can see where I’m going with this.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip on wood

I especially love a dip that takes 30 seconds to make and is cool when it’s hot outside.

You can also put this dip into ramekins, top with a little extra cheese and either bake it at 400F for about 20 minutes or broil it until it’s bubbly.

Or you can spoon it onto Ritz crackers, Trisuits, or your favorite cracker and bake them as if they’re the “crust” to a mini pizza and the dip is the cheesy topping.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip on wood

But it’s hot and I didn’t want to turn on the oven.

So I just bellied up to the bowl.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip in blue bowl

You will need:

Corn – if you have fresh, slice it straight from the ear, no cooking required; or use frozen or canned corn

Ro-Tel (diced tomatoes and green chilis with a decent kick and is found near the canned and crushed tomatoes or tomato sauce in most grocery stores) or your use favorite salsa with as much kick as you enjoy

Cream cheese

Shredded cheese

Then you just stir and dig in.

The dip gets better as the flavors marry over time but if you’re impatient and need the fastest and easiest dip ever, this is a no-brainer.

You can also easily keep this dip vegan: use vegan cream cheese and vegan shredded cheese and you’re there.

You can also keep it very low-fat or no-fat, if that’s of importance to you, by using lower to no fat cream cheese and shredded cheese. The flavor may not be quite as good with those substitutions, but if you use spicy enough salsa, you may not miss the fat. Let’s face it, dip tends to be on the empty-calories side of the spectrum and sometimes lightening things up isn’t a bad thing.

And boy, this stuff is addicting.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip on crackers on wood

The crunchiness and sweetness of the corn, the spiciness from the tomatoes and chilis, the cheese, and the creamy factor the cream cheese adds, all on top of crunchy crackers, it wasn’t too shabby.

It reminds me a bit of pimento cheese dip, which I adore, but it isn’t as heavy and thick. Plus, it has a few vegetables in it rather than just cheese. That is, if you can call corn a vegetable. Sure, I’ll go with that.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip in blue bowl

The next day, I took some of the leftover dip, stuffed it inside a few stray soft taco shells, and nuked them for 1 minute since I was still avoiding turning on the oven.

This was my microwaved version of a quesadilla and made final work of the dip, not that we were struggling to finish it or anything.

Corn and Double Cheese Dip on crackers on wood

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Corn and Double Cheese Dip

Makes about 2 cups dip

1 cup corn (fresh, frozen, or canned – if using canned, about half of one 14.5 ounce can, drained)

1 10.5-ounce can Ro- Tel, drained or about 1 cup salsa (drain some of the liquid if your salsa is watery)

1/2 cup cream cheese, softened (sour cream, mayo, or plain Greek yogurt will work in a pinch)

1 to 1/2 cups shredded cheese (sharp cheddar, Monterrey Jack, Pepper-Jack, or similar)

Salt, pepper, garlic, onion, chili powder, cayenne pepper; optional and season to taste

Cooked black or pinto beans; other vegetables such as roasted or fresh red peppers, artichokes, carrots, tomatoes; optional and to taste

In a medium bowl, combine corn, salsa, cream cheese and stir to combine. Fold in shredded cheese and stir. Serve immediately or cover and refrigerate dip, allowing  flavors to marry and dip is better as time passes. Over time, the corn and other vegetables may release water; stir to reincorporate the water or drain off. Dip will keep for up to 5 days in the refrigerator.

Serving suggestions: Can be served Cold, Baked, or Broiled. Serve on crackers, bread, as a filling inside sandwiches, as a taco or fajita filling; serve cold or warm. If serving warm, bake in ramekins or in an oven-safe dish at either 400F for about 20 minutes or until bubbling; or under the broiler for about 5 minutes. Sprinkle on a top layer of cheese before broiling if extra cheesiness is preferred.

Gluten free; To keep vegan use vegan cream cheese and vegan shredded cheese; To keep no-fat or low-fat use fat-free or reduced fat cream cheese and shredded cheese

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Corn and Double Cheese Dip in bowl

Related Recipes:

Spinach Artichoke Dip (vegan, gluten-free, fat-free)

Spinach Artichoke Dip with crackers

Sweet Corn Salsa with Mango, Lime, Red Pepper (raw, vegan, GF)

Sweet Corn Salsa with Mango, Lime, Red Pepper
Sweet Corn Salsa with Mango, Lime, Red Pepper

Spinach Artichoke and Roasted Red Pepper Cheesy Squares – like the dip in portable squares

Spinach Artichoke and Roasted Red Pepper Cheesy Squares

Homemade Spicy Honey Mustard (GF, use agave to keep vegan)

Homemade Spicy Honey Mustard in bowl

What’s your favorite dip?

Feel free to link up any great dip recipes.

I love a good dip. Actually, I love most any dip.

  I can polish off a bowl of dip (or balsamic vinaigrette or peanut sauce) like nobody’s business and like to live in abundance with my dips and sauces; the more the merrier.

Thanks for the Zoku Single Quick Pop Maker and Chocolate Station Giveaway entries and have a great week!

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Comments

  1. There was something sort of similar to that that I had a recipe for eons ago. You put it all in a crockpot too and served it hot. I think it also had butter, and not rotel, but diced jalapenos, and tomatoes seeded and diced. But rotel totally would have worked of course.

    1. I knew I could count on you to know what Rotel is! And yes, that slow cooker idea would be perfect 1. in colder weather and 2. for making a bigger quantity …lord knows I don’t need a whole crockpot full of dip. Lol

  2. I’m not a huge fan of dips, though I do like salsa, homemade hummus, and veggie combos like your corn/red pepper mix :) Great photos as well

  3. Wow, looks amazing! I usually opt for hummus because I LOVE it so much, but it gets pretty boring to have the same thing all the time! There’s a pea and wasabi dip I have from time to time, and it’s pretty amazing!

    1. This is WAY more exciting than hummus. I like hummus, too, but I love texture, and crunch, and hummus just doesn’t hold my attention day in, day out.

    1. yes or just spooned directly on top of a salad, sort of doubles as your salad dressing with the cheesy mixture a little bit drippy. It screams midwest backyard bbq or potluck :)

  4. Yup, I’ve had one too many salsas this season, I’m definitely pining for some good old dip. Love this one!

  5. Those big chunks of salsa is what gets me. That and the fact that it’s corn dip and I loooove corn in the summertime (or, okay, all the time). Plus, no bake! You rock.

  6. We’re on the same mind set this weekend, Averie! I just made a goat cheese, jalapeno, corn dip last night for a party I threw. Love the idea of using shredded cheese; I’ll be trying cheddar next time!

  7. Dips are so good. Unlike dressings and sauces you get to choose how much dip you want PER bite of food. As a food separatist, haha, I adore this.
    I don’t know that I have a favorite dip, depends what I’m dipping! That being said I eat salsa with a spoon.

    1. The fact that you eat salsa with a spoon is awesome :) If it wasn’t soooo high in sodium, I would too (or make my own more – I just can’t hang with too much sodium)