24 pieces dried corn husks – soaked in hot water until pliable
10 ears fresh corn on the cob – kernels cut from cobs
0.5 cups whole milk
0.5 cups lard – melted
1.5 teaspoons anise seeds – lightly crushed
0.5 cups granulated sugar
1 teaspoons salt
8 ounces queso fresco – cut into 12 sticks
Instructions
Soak the dried corn husks in very hot water until pliable, 25–30 minutes. Rinse well and drain; keep submerged until assembling.
Cut the kernels from the corn cobs to yield about 7–8 cups. Pulse the kernels in a food processor, adding the whole milk gradually, until a thick, coarse paste forms; do not puree completely, 1–2 minutes total.
Warm the lard just until melted. Stir in the lightly crushed anise seeds to bloom their aroma, 30 seconds off the heat.
In a large bowl, combine the ground corn paste, melted lard with anise, granulated sugar, and salt. Mix until evenly incorporated. The mixture should be thick but spreadable; let it rest 10 minutes to hydrate.
Remove the husks from water and pat dry. Tear a few husks into long strips to use as ties. Overlap two medium husks (or use one large) to make a 6–7 inch-wide surface.
Spoon about 0.5 cup corn mixture onto the center of the husks and spread into a rectangle. Place one stick of queso fresco in the middle, fold the sides over to enclose the filling, then fold the bottom up and the top down. Tie with a husk strip. Repeat with remaining mixture to make 12 humintas.
Set up a steamer with water just below the basket. Arrange the humintas seam-side down (or upright, snugly). Cover and steam over medium heat until the filling is set and the husks pull away cleanly, 45–60 minutes, adding hot water as needed to maintain steam.
Let the humintas rest off the heat for 10 minutes. Serve warm in their husks.