Butter

Can You Really Make Movie Theater Popcorn at Home?

February 17, 2016

It shouldn’t be hard to make movie theater-style popcorn at home. Pop popcorn, mix it with melted butter, shower it with lots of salt, and there you have it: the perfect snack to eat while watching movies at home.

Not so fast: When I tried to recreate theater-style popcorn at home, I learned that I needed an ingredient not found in my pantry, not found in grocery stores, and not even found in the natural world.

Because—on top of recommendations for specific poppers and kernels—what really makes movie theater popcorn taste (and, very importantly, smell) like proper-noun Movie Theater Popcorn is something called "Flavacol."

And even when I tried to make the best batch of popcorn I could, it couldn't hold court with the Flavacol-flavored version. (Skip down to the read results of my test or read on for all the details.)

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“whirly pop. 4oz kernels (1/2 cup) 2tblsp cocnut oil, 1 tblsp sunflower oil, and a bit rounded of a 1/2 teaspoon scoop of flavacol. works killer for us. we get jolly time kernels from costco. 12# of kernels (13$) cant even hope to survive 6 months in our house, we eat a ton of popcorn. happy popping!”
— Andy C.
Comment

A creation of Gold Medal Products Co., Flavacol—which you can purchase on the internet—is the self-proclaimed “secret ingredient” to selling more popcorn (or, for consumers rather than theater attendants, to eating more popcorn).

Photo by Mark Weinberg

And the online community seems to agree. A 386-comment Reddit thread, tucked under the "You Should Know" Subreddit, is entitled "You can make movie theater popcorn at home, with this one ingredient.”

“Hearing the word makes me shudder,” writes user mayorbryjames.

I worked at a theatre for years. Flavavol would come in a 20lb bag inside a cardboard box [sic]. For a batch of popcorn (a 20fl oz cup of seeds) we would use a tablespoon of the stuff. It's designed to smell like "movie theatre popcorn" and draw people from the mall (or the street) inside. It's mostly sodium, but not technically salt. I used to get it under my fingernails. The smell of it raw in concentrated amounts...oh god.

Despite resounding evidence from food blogs (like this one and this one) and online consumer reviews (Amazon and other online retailers) that the flavor of movie theater popcorn is the flavor of Flavacol, I still wondered if I could make it at home.

Flavacol is composed, after all, of only four ingredients: “salt, artificial butter flavor, FD&C Yellow #5 Lake (E102) and Yellow #6 Lake (E110)”; the latter two “give popcorn a bright, appealing yellow color for maximum sales."

"Your sales will go up as much as 25%." Photo by Mark Weinberg

With no interest in maximizing my sales, I disregarded the yellow dyes. That left me with "salt" and “artificial butter flavor” and “salt.”

Salt is the primary ingredient in Flavacol (one teaspoon contains 2740 milligrams of sodium; for context, the 2010 USDA guidelines recommended reducing sodium to less than 2300 milligrams per day) and the product's unique flavor is attributed, at least in part, to how it's produced. The Alberger process, patented way back in 1915, yields fine flakes of multi-faceted crystals, which have "outstanding adherence, blendability and solubility compared to cube-shaped granulated salt." In other words, this salt sticks to the food better and releases a delicious, addictive flavor in your mouth more quickly than standard table salt.

"Cotton candy can make plenty of plus profits for you, too." Photo by Mark Weinberg

The second ingredient I had to tackle was the "artificial butter flavor" (A.B.F. for short). But there's almost no way to know what's in A.B.F., let alone recreate it at home. The company is permitted to list it on the packaging without disclosing its specific make-up. As Peter Kim, the Executive Director of the Museum of Food and Drink, where the current exhibit is all about flavor, explained...

Proprietary "recipes" [for flavorings] are quite valuable. That said, even if the flavoring were disclosed on an ingredient label, it would arguably be too much information for a consumer to digest. Dozens or even hundreds of chemicals can be used to create an "artificial flavor" or "natural flavor."

Basically, there's just no way to know what makes Flavacol taste good, said food scientist Harold McGee, without knowing exactly what's in it. And even if there were a way to figure out what is in Flavacol and somehow recreate it at home (rather than in a science lab), it might be even more off-putting.

Back in 2007, butter-flavored popcorn made the national news when the New York Times reported a relationship between vapors from the pungent yellow flavoring diacetyl (a naturally occurring organic compound that's added to some foods, like margarine, to impart a butter flavor) and a life-threatening lung condition in workers at flavoring factories. While Gold Medal assured a concerned consumer that Flavacol does not contain diacetyl, what "artificial butter flavor" is made up of remains a mystery to us consumers.*

Since A.B.F. and Alberger-processed salt were out of the question for a typical home kitchen, I explored alternative avenues to theater-style popcorn. I learned that others had success popping the kernels in coconut oil and using clarified butter (rather than standard melted butter) as the "dressing." And to recreate fine-flake salt that would thoroughly coat the kernels and dissolve quickly on the tongue, I used a tip from friend of Food52, Josh Dobson, and sprinkled my popcorn with salt that had been finely ground to a powder in a mortar and pestle.

And so, with these 3 tricks up my sleeve—coconut oil, clarified butter, and pulverized salt—I set out to make popcorn just as good as the theaters'.

The Test:

I made two batches of popcorn, the only difference being that, to one pot, I added 1/4 teaspoon of the neon orange Flavacol along with the coconut oil. But that 1/4 teaspoon made a marked difference.

Of the Flavacol-flavored popcorn (which was also darker in appearance), my tasters (the Food52 staff) said:

  • It's "everything I want in a movie theater popcorn."
  • "I love this."
  • It has "a deeper, more complex flavor profile."

Of the DIY, all-natural alternative, they said:

  • It would serve as "a good foundational popcorn," but needs more flavor.
  • "It tastes more salty and oily, whereas the other popcorn [the one made with Flavacol] tastes more like butter."
  • It's "saltier."

So both bowls of popcorn were made with the exact same amount of actual clarified butter, but the popcorn made with the fake butter tasted more buttery. And while many of my taste testers said they would gladly eat either bowl, multiple people asked me where they could purchase Flavacol (and someone, who will remain anonymous, called dibs on our office stash). I, too, was pleased—and amazed!—to have recreated such a landmark flavor (the taste of Monsters Inc. and Boyhood and Grizzly Man and all my other favorite movies). It tasted great. It tasted like a feature presentation.

Photo by Mark Weinberg

In the end, I had made a pretty good bowl of popcorn with the natural tricks, but the Flavacol-flavored popcorn tasted like the movies. And my DIY version—even though it was the best batch of popcorn I'd ever made—did not.

I think I'll save movie theater popcorn for the movies. But I might save myself a little bit of Flavacol, for when the craving hits.

* Curious about the difference between "natural" and "artificial" flavors? While artificial and natural flavorings may be chemically identical, and both may very well be manufactured in science labs, the difference is in the source of the chemical compounds. According to Peter Kim, artificial flavors "include chemicals that come from non-botanical sources," whereas natural flavors are generally derived from botanical sources. "The key fact," said Kim "is that this has no bearing on the actual chemical composition of the final product."

For more on the difference between natural and artificial flavors—and why natural is not necessarily better—check out this article from Scientific American.

Movie theater popcorn: Pure gold or purely gross? Tell us in the comments below.

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149 Comments

SirWired October 2, 2019
You can get just Alberger-process salt if you want it without the flavoring; it's sold as "nut salt". French Fry salt is also Alberger salt.
 
ChelseaAyn Z. December 12, 2017
I think the important part of the process is to put the seasonings you want (salt or nooch or sugar) into the oil before you pop the corn. That's how we did it at the theater - you always put the seasoning in to the drum with the seeds so that when they pop they are coated in flavored oil. I think this is why it's so much better to pop with butter in your oil rather than drizzle it over afterward.
 
Andy C. June 24, 2017
whirly pop. 4oz kernels (1/2 cup) 2tblsp cocnut oil, 1 tblsp sunflower oil, and a bit rounded of a 1/2 teaspoon scoop of flavacol. works killer for us. we get jolly time kernels from costco. 12# of kernels (13$) cant even hope to survive 6 months in our house, we eat a ton of popcorn. happy popping!
 
Carmen D. February 21, 2017
I have a question for everyone here. Which brand of popcorn poppers (like the whirly pop)? I'm looking to buy one because you need one of those for the glazes that you can buy from the makers of Flavacol. I really don't want to spend the money and then find out I bought the worst one. So, any help you guys can give me would be deeply appreciated! :D
 
zoumonkie February 18, 2017
I have a Whirley, but a glass popper with a silicone lid for the microwave works best and is easiest. I think it came from Bed Bath and Beyond
 
Carmen D. February 11, 2017
OMG movie theater popcorn is pure GOLD! That's the one thing I HAVE to have when I go to the theater. It's just not the same without it. The "Riverview Theater" in Minneapolis is the last single-screen theater from my youth and they are the only place I will get butter added to my popcorn. They only use real butter and trust me, it is SOOOO much better than the fake crap the other theaters use. And BONUS! They only charge $4 for a large bucket (I usually get 2 buckets. One to eat there and one to bring home)! I just love that place! :D

Almost forgot: There is a salt called "Popcorn Salt" and it's made by Mortons. You can buy it at the grocery store. It's super fine and I've been using it on everything at my house for years. It just makes everything taste better.
 
Jennifer R. October 21, 2016
I make popcorn frequently for my family and stick to my grandfathers method with one small change. I use xv olive oil to pop the corn, add melted butter, kosher salt and then bake it in the convection oven at 315 degrees for 10 to 15 minutes. It gets crispier and the milk solids brown in the oven. If you want to avoid artificial ingredients this method is awesome.
 
JustKatB October 25, 2016
How interesting - the popcorn doesn't get overdone? Would you say it's closer to the 10 or to the 15 minute mark? Also do you spread this on baking sheets in a single layer or is this done in a casserole dish?
 
SirWired November 1, 2016
Use "nut salt" instead of kosher salt; it's a fine-grained salt that will stick way better.
 
Jennifer R. November 1, 2016
Closer to 10 minutes. I use my giant roasting pan because we always make lots. Good luck!


 
Patty P. October 21, 2016
The volunteer fire department my husband belonged to also used this for the BINGO popcorn.. and a liquid "butter" named KOLA Gold. A restaurant I worked at also used the same products. Locally here near Syracuse, NY I have found BOTH products at our local MAINE'S store. They carry lots of stuff that is used in restaurants but open to us plain folks.. Make your popcorn and shake on your Flavacol with a regular salt shaker and "toss" well..ENJOY!!!
 
Carole H. July 18, 2016
When I Made popcorn to my kids I use hot air popcorn popper to make healthy popcorn like this man reviewed here http://www.popcornpopperpros.com
 
Jessica R. June 25, 2016
im confused, there are people saying they hate the way movie theater popcorn tastes, people saying they wont eat anything thats not natural... what are they doing here??? why google "how to make movie theater popcorn" if they know its not healthy?
 
joseph June 3, 2016
When I need a snack that is not calorie heavy, I pop my store bought popcorn in a microwave popper that uses no oil (That I bought at Aldi's for $5) and when popping is complete, I sprinkle Old Bay Seasoning on it. That is my version of a little bit of heaven.
 
BJ W. April 13, 2016
LOL so much snobbery in here! Last time I thought about it, I never really associated Serious Eats with strictly "real food" and "serious cooking," but I always thought of it as a sort of site where food science and curiosity were also explored. Please have a seat and relax.
 
Stacie B. March 9, 2016
Oh! And popcorn hack- add salt and a bit of sugar in the pan before it pops and you get a pretty good kettle corn substitute!
 
Stacie B. March 9, 2016
Love Movie Popcorn and Concession Stand Popcorn. What can I say? But I make a mean stove top home popcorn that's our go-to late night snack!
 
Joan March 9, 2016
I must say that I do not like Movie Popcorn. I always feel cheated that the aroma does not match the taste. I love to make popcorn at home with a locally grown"gourmet" popcorn and Smude's sunflower oil. No butter, no salt. It is wonderful! I know you may be thinking "weird" but the complexity of flavor is outstanding and satisfying!
 
JustKatB March 9, 2016
I totally agree with you on the movie theater popcorn. It smells wonderful but is always too salty and seems stale or something? I don't think they're making it the same way they used to?
 
Marion G. February 23, 2016
How sad to find this low a level of cookery on a food page! I actually hate to go to the movies now because the popcorn that smells so great tastes abysmal. And why pour butter onto popped corn? Soggy and gross. Simply place a high quality butter (European - Chimay is great), plus light olive oil and a bit of coconut oil if you like in a pot til melted over med/med low, and add your popcorn kernels in a close single layer across the bottom (the fat should just cover the kernels). When they start to pop, cover with a lid, keep th pan moving, and when there is enough popped to keep the corn from flying out when it pops, remove the lid to let the steam out. When the popping slows to singles dump into a bowl and toss with the finer pickling salt (Morton's green box) immediately, et viola! After a few times, you'll have it down to a science and your personal preferences for ratios. Sometimes I'll even toss in a few tbsp of sugar once the popping starts for some amazing kettle corn! It coat the corn with flavor without ever being soggy. Ridiculously easy.
 
Steven February 23, 2016
"Flavavol would come in a 20lb bag inside a cardboard box [sic]."
Why did you add [sic] to this? Looks straightforward to me.
 
Jess T. March 9, 2016
In the quotes Flavacol was misspelt as Flavavol.
 
Sarah J. March 9, 2016
Yes, that's the reason.
 
Michele O. February 23, 2016
We bought some locally grown popcorn at an independent butchers; it was pricier, but the taste made up for it. As for butter, I prefer using European butter for my popcorn, rather than the more watery American. And I never melt it in the microwave; it just seems to get soggier. Of course, it may never taste like movie popcorn, but I console myself with knowing that sleep-deprived teenagers didn't handle it.
 
Michelle February 23, 2016
I found myself grinning while reading this. The popcorn you get from places like move theaters, amusement parks, Target, etc. is a deliciously guilty pleasure of mine when I'm craving a salty snack. I am absolutely buying Flavacol, guilt free!
 
Mindy S. February 20, 2016
I'm a popcorn junkie. I normally pop my mix of white/yellow and red kernels in either coconut oil or organic sunflower oil. I melt butter. I love using "Simply Organic" dry ranch salad dressing- do not buy the ranch dip it is too flavor intense (I only sprinkle a few tablespoons at most all over the popped corn) and then I drizzle butter on top. YUUUUUUUUUM.
 
sabina February 19, 2016
Good thing I've always found movie theater popcorn to be off-putting. I love ghee or coconut oil or a combo, and finished with nutritional yeast and smoked paprika and salt, totally addictive.
 
Jenifer W. February 18, 2016
I love the taste of popcorn popped in coconut oil, salted with finely ground Himalayan salt and sprinkled with nutritional yeast, soooo good.
 
NotTooSweet February 18, 2016
We have a local theatre (second run house) that makes popcorn in canola oil and then gives it to you to add either real butter or "fake" butter and any salt or seasoning you want. We treat ourselves to their popcorn most of the time when we go to a movie and we use the real butter and a little kosher salt. It is so good and we just can't go back to anything else. So many reasons to love this theatre (LOW prices on everything for one) but our favorite has to be the popcorn and our ability to do what we think tastes best after it is popped.
 
Vladilyich February 18, 2016
Eileen: That's quite true in many cases. One theatre I worked in many years ago had the ventilation intake located in the snack bar above the popcorn machine.
 
Eileen February 18, 2016
I read (don't know if it's true) that movie theaters puff movie popcorn flavor (flavor is mostly smell) through the ventilation system to entice people to buy popcorn.
 
Caroline N. February 18, 2016
I find it amazing that Food 52 is even publishing this article since Falvacol isn't really even food. And what person who really likes food thinks that movie popcorn smells and tastes great? Anyone who has made their own popcorn using good natural oils or butters to cook in and for toppings will not eat overpriced and disgusting movie popcorn. There is a chapter in Fast Food Nation, a great book, that talks about a factory somewhere in the eastern US that spends all of it's time coming up with fake flavouring agents to make food taste better to consumers. McDonalds was at one time using one to make it's french fries taste like beef. No thank you.
 
Sarah J. February 18, 2016
Kenji thinks that movie popcorn smells great, too! http://www.seriouseats.com/2016/01/comfort-food-movie-theater-popcorn.html
 
Whitney February 18, 2016
To each his own!
 
Eileen February 18, 2016
Because our food has less flavor than it used. Between the way it is mass-grown and mass-produced, and the way it is genetically engineered or bred for characteristics other than flavor, it just isn't the same. Chickens don't taste like chicken when I was young (except a free range farmer's near me). Heirlooms that you grow yourself recapture some of this.
 
HalfPint February 18, 2016
I like the smell of movie popcorn too. I just don't care for the flavor. It's too salty.
 
HalfPint February 18, 2016
@Caroline, why are you amazed about this article? Food52 can't be just a bunch of recipes and techniques. It's good that we get information about what we consume and make our own choices. Then maybe others can make healthier choices for themselves. The more you know, the better, right?
 
Brenda February 18, 2016
I actually pop my own corn , zip-lock it and stick it in my bag to eat at the theater...$7 for really bad popcorn is ridiculous.
 
Mindy S. February 20, 2016
totally agree with you on the products being real ingredients. I love the smell of theater popcorn but unless it is cooked in coconut oil and they leave the seasonings on the counter and if they offer REAL butter I will just pass. My local theater is independently owned and they use coconut oil/no salt dumped on the popcorn and they use REAL butter...WINNER.
 
Negative N. January 31, 2017
So, you just stopped by to chastise us about enjoying what the article is actually about? Okay......
 
Ali S. February 18, 2016
Apologies if I missed this, but have you see anything about using Flavacol on other foods? I'm curious how it'd taste on buttered toast or in a stir fry or...have I lost my mind?
 
Sarah J. February 18, 2016
Its flavor is so distinctive that I think adding Flavacol to other foods will make them taste like movie theater popcorn. It also tastes best (I think) when heated and diffused,
So maybe you could add it to oil to fry your toast, but I wouldn't want to sprinkle it on "raw." I can also imagine adding it to popcorn-flavored desserts (like popcorn jelly beans).
 
Deborah J. February 17, 2016
OMG people, you must try this if you haven't already...
Get some "nooch"! It's nutritional yeast - found at a health food stores and Amazon! I love this stuff!! It gives the yummy umami taste to food and plus has vitamins in it! It' just golden flakes that melt into food. I make a popcorn topping and a fake parmesan by filling a coffee/spice grinder with it and adding just 1/2 te. salt. I make popcorn by popping in a pan with some oil and salt. Then, I drizzle olive oil and toss. Then I sprinkle on the salted "nooch" and toss and repeat until coated as I like. It gives it a buttery/cheesy taste. My son has converted from a white cheddar popcorn to this. We're hooked!
 
JustKatB February 24, 2016
I haven't tried it yet but I intend to! It sure sounds good. This, plus a few of the flavor combos that people have mentioned in this thread.
 
Dan February 17, 2016
Pop in a heavy bottom'd kettle in coconut oil. When popped, empty in a large bowl. In the still hot kettle, put in some coconut oil, chopped garlic and grind in some South African Smoked Red Pepper from Trader Joes. Let that combine in the still hot kettle for a bit then pour on the popcorn. Salt and pepper to taste. Yum!
 
Kenyon February 17, 2016
Wowwww. I eat whole foods most of the time too but jeez people it's not disgusting or toxic to eat some movie popcorn now and again. It doesn't make you superior to say it doesn't taste good tastes good (flavacol obviously tastes good to most people) and it seems to me that the stress of worrying about the whole world being filled with the ever-specific "toxins" has got to be worse for you than just doing your best most of the time and occasionally vegging in front of the tv with a big bowl of flavacol!
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
This has sparked quite the commentary hasn't it? Aside from that there have been some pretty awesome flavor suggestions for popcorn here.
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
I try to buy organic, non-GMO corn products when possible because I do not want Roundup in my food. Monsanto corn is "Roundup ready" and they pour it on the fields.
 
Brenda February 17, 2016
My sister & I make the best popcorn ever....one thing that will make a HUGE difference is the popcorn you buy. We ONLY use "BABY WHITES" (get it on AMAZON :http://www.amazon.com/Baby-White-Amish-Country-Popcorn/dp/B003ZFLOUW/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1455744177&sr=8-2&keywords=baby+whites+popcorn

OUR RECIPE: in a pot pour enough olive oil or cocnut oil to cover the bottom. add enough BABY WHITES to cover the bottom. place a paper towel across the top of the pot and then the lid. pop on high till no more popping sound. pour popcorn in a bowl and salt it. melt butter and pour over the popcorn and shake...EAT! Simple & amazing...but the secret is the popcorn...teen tiny kernels , very crispy and they all pop. :-)
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
Is this it? http://amishcountrypopcorn.com/50lb-baby-white-popcorn/
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
Why the paper towel?
 
KB February 17, 2016
To absorb the condensation, I guess.
 
Brenda February 17, 2016
yes...you can find it in smaller amounts...i buy the big amount and sack up gifts for friends :-)
 
Brenda February 17, 2016
The paper towel...when you use a small pot steam forms on the lid...the paper towel prevents the popcorn from getting moist as it pops up.
 
Eileen February 18, 2016
I think rather than Amazon I will support the source, Amish Country Popcorn. http://amishcountrypopcorn.com/2lb-baby-white/ Thanks for telling us about this!
 
Eileen February 18, 2016
It appears Baby White non-GMO is much cheaper (before shipping) from http://amishcountrypopcorn.com/2lb-baby-white/ than from Amazon.
 
Brenda February 18, 2016
so excited to find a non-GMO source...THANKS!
 
Thomas D. February 17, 2016
You don't have to buy Flavacol on the internet....its available at Sam's Club..about $5 for two cartons....enough to last anyone about 5 years.
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
I read it's at Costco too but have not verified.
 
Whitney February 17, 2016
I'm definitely getting some of that! Who cares if it's not derived from botanicals. These holier than thou commenters really never eat anything from a can or box? Really?
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
Not necessary. My choices have nothing to do with your choices.
 
KB February 17, 2016
The only "canned" food I have at home right now is sweetened condensed milk. That's it. But sometimes I make the same at home too. It is a very time-consuming process unless you have a slow-cooker. JFYI.
 
Whitney February 17, 2016
That's impressive! I have soup and cereal and mayonnaise and seasoning salt, bullion cubes (same thing as this popcorn stuff), curry paste... Grew up on tv dinners and canned soup. Alive and well so far! Good for you guys, though.
 
Anita104 February 17, 2016
My food choices are a work in progress. I'm trying to eat more in a way that will support health. Am I perfect? Of course not, but I when I slip, even my slips are not as bad as they might be. When we know something has toxic ingredients in it, why would we choose that?
 
Whitney February 17, 2016
What's "toxic" about it? I think it's great that almost every single person commenting here doesn't ever and has never eaten anything but whole, organic food (nothing from a box or a can or a package - no broths, no sauces, seasonings, nothing!) but the assumption that anything manufactured from non-botanical sources is "toxic" is simply ignorant. Did no one read the Scientific American article that linked to above ("Nature has no restrictions on using toxic chemicals")?
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
My issue with it doesn't really have anything to do with the additive so much as that movie theater popcorn just doesn't ever taste as good as it smells (to me) anymore and the past couple of times I've bought it I've wound up throwing out most of it so no way I'd want to replicate that at home.

This has sparked quite a thread though hasn't it? Some of the flavor suggestions people have made definitely have me intrigued like popping kernels in bacon grease.
 
KB February 17, 2016
Those "toxic" ingredients in canned foods or highly processed foods are not ingredients that will make you sick overnight. That IS THE problem! The side effects are slow and steady but certainly harmful for sure in the LONG RUN and accumulates with other factors taken in. Unless you consume organic, locally grown foods and cook your own meals from scratch - which is not always going to be possible. So stay away from those "toxins" as much as possible. For example, in this popcorn case, do you EVEN need Flavacol? Really?!!
 
jennifer February 17, 2016
Well, no. I admit that I *try* to eat a mostly whole foods diet....but I don't, and never have. But, I simply DO NOT LIKE the smell of movie theater popcorn - I literally feel ill when I smell it. That's a physical reaction to an artificial substance that my body is clearly telling me to STAY FAR FAR AWAY FROM - which is a bummer, because though I love to go to the movies, I literally cannot stand the smell of theaters because of their popcorn. And yes, I agree with another commenter that this has been such an interesting thread to follow! Popcorn has a HUGE place in the American story - and, in fact, after reading about it today, I made a big bowl for my girls after school - with all organic ingredients, BTW, and they practically licked the bowl clean.
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
I don't see where anyone said that. You don't have to justify your choices by criticizing other people.
 
Whitney February 17, 2016
I agree, Eileen! I think all of these angry comments are so strange on a site about the love of food! if you're talking to me when you said "I don't see where anyone said that" I'm not sure what you're referring to...
 
Anita104 February 17, 2016
Why do some people feel the need to call others names. We are expressing opinions here. Let's agree to disagree on some things. No need to call names. We aren't children on the school yard.
 
Whitney February 17, 2016
Who is calling anyone names? What names? I think the popcorn stuff sounds delicious (to each his own, of course!) and wonder where this "toxic" inference came from as it is not mentioned in the article. No problem. That's what discussion boards are for, no?
 
Negative N. January 31, 2017
So glad you stopped by to comment on an article about MOVIE THEATER POPCORN and tell us all about your healthy food choices. Jeez...
 
Vladilyich February 17, 2016
I grate my own Parmigiana Reggiano for everything. I won't even buy Kraft "imitation cheese food" in the cardboard container.
 
Anita104 February 17, 2016
Not to mention wood pulp.
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
I mean yellow dye, not die - of course. Sorry.
 
Eileen February 17, 2016
Why would I eat something so fake if I had a choice? Fake butter flavor? Yellow die? Please, no. This is good to know. Now I will never eat movie theater popcorn again. Real popcorn with butter and salt, or olive oil and Parmesan cheese, is food. This is not.
 
Linda R. February 17, 2016
The best popcorn is when you use a combination of butter and olive oil when popping it....yum!
 
Sheriann L. February 17, 2016
Personally, I like the taste of REAL butter and good salt. Those two things make pretty damn good tasting popcorn and that's how we make it at home- it's addictive. Leave the fake artificial flavors (chemicals) at the movie theater! I removed myself from artificial colors and flavors so long ago that I forgot people still consider ingesting them! Gross.
 
Annie February 17, 2016
Pop the popcorn in veggie oil. When finished toss with salt and REAL melted butter. Now what could be better than that.
 
d W. February 17, 2016
Wonderful article. Thank you for the information.
 
Kimberlee C. February 19, 2016
I am delighted to read all the great information. At 61 and ate everything boxed, canned and frozen, as a kid and young Mom. Rarely fresh, only a salad, and I'm not dead, yet. I do move closer to non-gmo foods now, when I can afford them. Organic I'm not so sold on. BUT Amish popcorn and the price is great, so thanks for that information and I will hit Flavacol too. Maybe that will kill me. LOL!
 
Alissa S. February 17, 2016
Now I know why my stomach always hurts after eating movie-theater popcorn, the Bad Boyfriend of Popcorn.
 
Pmerrich February 17, 2016
Sounds like poison to me. Now that I know what it is I will not get popped poison from the movie theater anymore.
 
Hannah February 17, 2016
Honestly using Engevita "Nutritional" Yeast is pretty similar (gives that golden colour) and adds a cheesy bold flavour! The bonus is that you get a hit of B12 and other nutrients! My favourite way to enjoy popcorn ;)
 
pestopasta February 17, 2016
Flavacol doesn't really have "only four ingredients": salt, artificial butter flavor, FD&C Yellow #5 Lake (E102) and Yellow #6 Lake (E110). Salt, yes, is a single ingredient. The other three consist of... who knows? Only the lab on the New Jersey turnpike that made them. They could each consist of dozens or even hundreds of ingredients.

I've always found movie theater popcorn to taste chemically. Now I know why.
 
Robin February 17, 2016
Why do you have to bring New Jeresey into it?
 
Eileen February 18, 2016
pestopasta - the lab on the NJ turnpike - is that the place that smells like strawberries all the time? Fermi?
 
pestopasta February 18, 2016
Because New there is a small handful of companies along the Jersey Turnpike that manufacture a lot of the flavors and odors in processed food in the US. See http://www.pbs.org/pov/foodinc/excerpt-fast-food-nation/3/. No offense intended to anyone from the Garden State.
 
pestopasta February 18, 2016
@Eileen - Not sure about that place. Sounds very curious. I bet that smell is not coming from actual strawberries!
 
KB February 17, 2016
NO, Thanks! Movie popcorn is way TOO salty and loaded with artificial stuff. I'd stick to good butter or olive oil or ghee and my own set of real spices to get the flavor I like. You can play around with multiple flavors each time you pop your own organic non-gmo corn. I hate fake foods. Maybe it's good for food porn and food magazines that offer the same.
 
Cynthia L. February 17, 2016
Can't stand movie popcorn way too salty and artificial flavored. Have an air popper will try macadamia nut oil Himalayan salt and brewers yeast. Will see if husband likes it he is addicted to movie theater popcorn(ugh). Thanks for all the good information.
 
suzanprincess February 17, 2016
About 13 years ago I had my first movie theater popcorn experience, and swooned. It was advertised as using 100% real butter as the topping. A few years later the 100% tag disappeared, and I eventually realized that the cough I developed was directly related to eating that popcorn. Had to be whatever artificial flavor was being added along with the real butter. It also smelled different, a bit nausea inducing. I've since stuck to homemade.
 
doug February 17, 2016
Don't bother with fake, but for real amazingness at home, pop in ghee then grind Maldon salt in a mortar & pestle until super fine and sprinkle -- hint of butter built in to the popping:) I have an amazing local ghee made from milk from grass-fed cows... AMAZING!
 
aleeda February 17, 2016
I have long used what I call butter oil, a mixture of canola oil (I now use coconut oil) plus a few shakes of Molly McButter, or Butter Buds, some salt and pepper for popping White Corn. We have hosted movie nights for years, and my friends and family claim my popcorn is the best they've ever tasted....and we NEVER put anything else on this popcorn. I've used the same formula for the basis of Doritos popcorn, siracha popcorn, and salt and vinegar popcorn.
 
Michael February 17, 2016
What a great article. The elusive quality of "movie theater" popcorn is something I've chased for years, but I've been pretty darn happy with my home method for some time now. Pop kernels in vegetable/canola oil, empty popped kernels into brown paper bag, and toss with kosher salt and melted/clarified butter. It's even better the next day!
 
Sarah J. February 17, 2016
Even better the next day?! Now THAT is fascinating.
 
S February 17, 2016
I grew up on popcorn popped on the stove in oil, drenched in butter and salt. Popcorn and Ed Sullivan were a Sunday night ritual in our house. Even as a kid I thought movie theater popcorn ran a very distant second. Now I know why! Thanks for the info, very interesting article.
 
LoAnn M. February 17, 2016
Hmmm, there's a product called dried butter powder, mostly used by spice blenders as an ingredient. It's very powdery, dairy based and pretty clean. Wonder what it would do? Personally, I use a Nordic Ware microwave popcorn popper, no oil needed, and just add butter and seasonings but I might try the dried butter powder as I have some on hand.
 
gabby February 17, 2016
I worked in a theater and I love popcorn but I never loved the movie popcorn over home. My mom used to make it in her revere ware. I do the same. Oil (canola or grape seed, can't do coconut) with kernels to cover the bottom (1/3-1/2 c). Shake to coat, leave it with lid on but cracked. I melt the butter in the hot pan, add salt and nutritional yeast. We do other flavors (cumin, nothing but soy sauce) but this is the home favorite. Start tossing the popped corn immediately as you add butter (don't dump it one spot). I never get soggy spots. Friends who have it marvel. It's the butter, I'm pretty sure. :) (if you use salted butter cut way back on the salt you add)
 
thelastmike February 17, 2016
I would lay odds that part of the secret flavoring is MSG. Not that there's anything wrong with that...
 
Kim C. February 17, 2016
My favorite was popped in bacon fat !
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
Oooh - I bet that's good!
 
Lori F. February 17, 2016
Flavacol. Coconut oil. Done. Get it at Amazon.
 
margothand February 17, 2016
Try sprinkling Nutritional Yeast over plain popped corn -- as a couple of other people recommended in the last hour. You may even find no need for butter or salt. It's our family's frequent afternoon perk-up trick.
 
Risa February 17, 2016
I'm mostly fascinated with that awesome old packaging of the Flavacol! Can't believe you can still purchase it in a fun retro milk carton :)
When it comes to popcorn, we all have our go-to's, but if you're looking for something new I highly recommend making a bit of a, shall we say, 'curry-corn'. Kernels popped in virgin coconut oil with turmeric, curry, nutritional yeast, salt and pepper. Super flavorful and beneficial! WELL worth the yellow turmeric fingers ;)
 
Colin February 17, 2016
SECRET TECHNIQUE - Pop stove top in oil, toss in salt, then immediately seal in a zip lock bag for 15-30mins. It gives it a deep roasty favour for some reason. Night and day.
 
jennifer February 17, 2016
Really? Putting it in a bag doesn't make it soggy?
 
Lizziemac69 February 17, 2016
I LOVE movie theater popcorn...But, here in ATL we have a restaurant called Local Three that has a popcorn snack on their menu. It's freshly popped, doused in butter, parmesan cheese, fresh parsley and truffle oil and it is treacherously addictive. I have successfully recreated it at home and think it's a pretty good alternative to using Flavacol...
 
Rachel February 17, 2016
I buy "popcorn salt" by Morton; very fine granules in easy to shake dispenser, one purchase will last a couple of years. I will also sometimes sprinkle on grated parmesan cheese (yes, the nasty stuff in the plastic bottle) and then the melted butter over that. Kind of messy, but really good.
 
Rachel February 17, 2016
...but I sort of want to try the flavacol ;)
 
Denise S. February 17, 2016
I'm with the majority here. I like it best popped in oil, real butter and salt added after, although any of the other additions mentioned by others would be fine too. I can't stand artificial butter flavoring, which is why I abhor margarine, even though, like most middle-aged Americans, it's what I we used at home when I was a kid. Artificial butter flavor has a sweetness that is so un-butter-like.
 
Barb February 17, 2016
I was about 14 and we ate dinner at my mom's best friend's house--she used butter and I thought it was weird tasting. FF a few years, I tossed my mom's fav margarine and haven't looked back!
 
purpleshiso February 17, 2016
I too don't care for the artificial movie stuff either! I'm addicted to my air popper home popcorn! Organic kernel then liberally add macadamia nut oil (tastes like a healthier version of butter -it's good for you!) Himalayan salt and finely powdered Brewers yeast. Friends crave it too!
 
Barb February 17, 2016
Oh please, the amount of oil is minimal, the salt is cheap, and how much yeast can you use on a bowl of popcorn. No, what's expensive is the medical conditions you develop over time from bad eating habits. High BP, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity, cirrhosis, etc.
 
gabby February 17, 2016
Try nutritional yeast before calling someone a nut bird. It's surprisingly good. I was a butter/salt purist only a local theater put out a tray off add-one (Parmesan, garlic, cumin). The yeast adds something awesome to the flavor. I haven't had anyone put off by it whereas other spice blends have had mixed results.
 
Erin A. February 17, 2016
We've done plenty of popcorn experimentation, and have settled on a generous glug (1/4 cup?) of extra virgin olive oil to 2/3ish cup popcorn, then add fine salt at the end as it's being dumped into a giant bowl. The oil helps the salt to adhere, and the popcorn stays edible and tasty for days. Used to use butter, but it inevitably browns before the popcorn is done, and pouring melted butter over finished popcorn makes some kernels a soggy mess and misses others. Flavacol will not be an option, but it's good to know why I can deny movie popcorn to my kids...
 
Lea February 17, 2016
Totally said what I thought...
 
jennifer February 17, 2016
I find the smell of movie theater popcorn truly nauseating - my stomach gets queasy and I cannot hang out in the lobby at all. Same goes for microwave popcorn - there is something about whatever they use that hits my system the wrong way. If I'm in Target and they start popping their popcorn, I cannot breath. I literally cover my mouth to keep out the smell because it makes me feel ill. However, at our house, we love popcorn popped in a bit of coconut oil and tossed with real butter and salt - though I hadn't thought to try it with clarified butter - may have to see how that tastes. I'm definitely going to try blitzing some sea salt in my Blendec to get it extra fine next time - I can see how that would make a big difference! As for Flavacol, I have to suspect that 'artificial butter flavoring' contains some form of MSG - that would enhance the flavor and increase consumption and sales for sure!
 
Erica G. February 17, 2016
I loved this article! I have no interest in making fake popcorn at home outside of a microwave bag, but I love learning the secrets behind what we eat. Thank you!
 
Barb February 17, 2016
I don't get this entire article. I grew up on real popcorn, popped in oil on a stove and find theatre popcorn and it's nasty fake 'butter' inedible. Why anyone would spend precious time and money trying to recreate it is unfathomable.
 
melissa February 17, 2016
Thanks for sharing this! I admit, sometimes I prefer going to a big cinema over the indie theaters because the indie places have such weak popcorn. Movie theater popcorn is one of my favorite (non)foods. I find it so funny how some people refuse to eat anything artificial yet pump their hair and skin full of beautifying chemicals.
 
Kathy H. February 17, 2016
If you visit the concession stand at my local theater, you can watch staff dumping huge plastic garbage bags of popped corn into the warmer trays of the poppers, then adding some kind of flavor concoction...no thanks!
 
Barb February 17, 2016
I find a huge difference in putting something on my hair (which is dead) and ingesting it into my body. Now your skin argument I tend to agree with, but I limit chemicals there, too, as much as I can.
 
Nat February 17, 2016
As long as what you put on your hair NEVER touches your scalp...not likely no matter how careful you think you are...therefore pretty much the same as putting something on your skin.
 
Cyndi February 17, 2016
Ick! I despise the taste of 'fake butter' and I find the smell of typical microwave popcorn BEYOND nauseating! Blech!
 
Anita104 February 17, 2016
This just goes to show how the food industry is getting us addicted to non food products. Flavacol is disgusting. I don't even want to think about what it is doing to the bodies of the people, especially children, who eat it.
 
Cyndi February 17, 2016
Exactly! My son and I were actually discussing how the food industry has duped so many into believing that the foods that we purchase are safe and/or good for us.
 
Kathy H. February 17, 2016
I'll pass on the artificial dyes and flavors, thanks. I use a crank-style stovetop popper and a teaspoon of coconut oil plus a quarter cup of kernels recreates theater popcorn perfectly for my palate. I don't want extra butter, but other family members choose to add it. Salt to taste.
 
Russ L. February 17, 2016
Albeit many are turned off by artificial ingredients it's not like most will consume large amounts, may be worth a try....
 
Vladilyich February 17, 2016
I used to be able to buy "theatre butter" at Sam's club in the '70s until it was pulled from the market after some bogus "health" warning from the AMA about coconut oil. It was basically solid coconut oil with flavacol added. You added salt after popping (theatres used their special salt).
 
Sasamama February 17, 2016
I actually think homemade popcorn tastes better than movie theater popcorn! I like it with lots of salt, pepper and nutritional yeast. Healthy and yummy!
 
Cyndi February 17, 2016
My favorite way is with pepper (black & cayenne), salt, garlic powder, basil, oregano, thyme, and Parmesan cheese!
 
ladychef February 17, 2016
I'd rather eat real butter any day as suppose to fake butter ...this article proves how much America does not know what real food taste like...watch out Big Food is making human lab rats
 
Cyndi February 17, 2016
Tell me about it!
 
smonfor February 17, 2016
It would be interesting if you expanded your test to include some of the other artificial butter flavouring additives that you can buy in a local store - and not the internet. I think Orville Redenbacher sells one. We also always used the Morton Popcorn salt - My Dad had actually worked at a Theater in the 50s and when it got bust - he got to keep the hot chocolate machine, boxes of salt (they apparently didn't use flavonal and we finally finished the stash in the 90's) and popcorn cups. We used our air popper and melted butter. Movie night was fun.
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
I guess I'm weird - the last two times I've gone to the movies (different theaters) I've ordered popcorn and then have been disappointed with it. It smells good which is tempting but it really doesn't taste very good and I've wound up throwing out 2/3 of it. My son wasn't even interested in eating more than a couple of handfuls.
 
Cyndi February 17, 2016
I don't think you're weird, at all! I'm the same way. That fake butter junk taste nasty, to me. Ewww!
 
JustKatB February 17, 2016
I know right? It doesn't taste remotely like butter. It tastes like yellow.
 
Robin February 17, 2016
Adding finely ground Sea Salt is the way to go. I use sea salt exclusively in everything I make.
 
Nancy February 17, 2016
Butter and nutritional yeast...not movie style but addicting!
 
Lori February 17, 2016
Flavacol... disgusting. Not surprising that there are altered substances (for lack of a better term) in movie theater popcorn. Here are some chemicals to make you want and buy more. Sounds familiar. Cocaine in Coca cola... Ammonia in cigarettes for free basting nicotine. And lots of sugar and fat and all kinds of other crap in foods. I
 
Jean February 17, 2016
I find if I add fine sea salt to my whirlypop along with the oil and kernels then the salt is evenly distributed and almost melted onto the popcorn.
 
Hans C. February 17, 2016
So basically, if one is allergic to coconut oil, there is no way to have movie theater-style popcorn. That's discouraging, so too is the fact that the companies refuse to release ingredient lists for the artificial butter flavoring; without knowing exactly what's in it, my wife won't eat it (she has extensive food allergies).
 
CM February 17, 2016
I know it's popcorn, but I don't see a list of ingredients with measurements anywhere in this post. Is there a recipe somewhere?
 
Chef L. February 17, 2016
I always thought the microwave "movie theatre butter" versions made due (coconut oil, I think). Regardless, popcorn is one of those foods smells that, to me, is irresistible, be it four a.m. or seven p.m. I smell, I seek it out, I eat!
 
Jeremy B. February 17, 2016
A faster option than using a mortar and pestle is just to dump some kosher salt into a food processor and give it a whirl for a little while until it is as fine as you want.
 
Sarah J. February 17, 2016
Good tip! I like the mortar and pestle because it's so much faster to clean (plus, you don't need a lot of the finely ground salt to make the popcorn taste VERY salty. I think I started with just about 1
tablespoon of kosher salt and didn't end up using it all!).
 
Catherine February 17, 2016
You can also buy fine popcorn salt online.