Carolina Country Home
A guide to North Carolina's countrysideCarolina Country HomeContactAbout UsAdvertising

See NC Travel Guide
Carolina Cooking
Carolina Gardens

Country Store
Stories & How-To's
Current Magazine


Various links NC Electric Co-ops

Your Stories; Our Stories Your Stories; Our Stories Submit Your Story How-To's and Consumer Guides

NC folks laugh together

Your StoriesOur Stories
The Popcorn King of Yadkin Valley
By Carla Burgess

Cas in Shallowford Farms store Popcorn label Cas and his wife Mandy
Fresh corn Zach Brewer and the Yadkin Valley Popcorn Pontiac  
Click photos to enlarge and learn more.

Introduction

After Hurricane Hugo blew through the western Piedmont in September 1989, Cas Booe could barely walk among the mature cornstalks on his Yadkinville popcorn farm, let alone drive a combine through to harvest it. So he tested an idea. He hand-picked a few ears from the prostrate stalks, took them into the house and put a whole ear into the microwave. The kernels popped. Popcorn-on-the-cob.

With the help of an exporter that fall, Booe (pronounced “boo”) found a market in Japan for popcorn-on-the-cob. In the meantime, his grandfather picked sacks of ears to sell locally. The Booes managed to salvage some of their crop while cultivating a new specialty market overseas.

Today, Cas Booe, 36, sells his Yadkin Valley Popcorn all over the globe—on the cob, unpopped or already-popped and seasoned. It’s sold ready-to-eat in gourmet tins and pillow-sized plastic bags and ready-to-pop in 1-ton sacks that are forklifted onto trucks bound for wholesalers. You can go into a Winn Dixie or a Lowes Foods and find Yadkin Valley Popcorn from Shallowford Farms.

top

Next | Intro 2 3 4