Oh, Monsieur Garlic, how dull life would be without you. You are warm, full of flavour, and every cook needs you!
The Plant
Garlic, or Allium sativum, comes from the onion family and is native to Asia. It grows as a bulb underground where each is separated into cloves. There are many types of garlic, from red to pink to green but they are all basically the same. Although in general we eat the cloves, the leaves and flowers can also be eaten.
You get wild garlic too, usually growing rampantly in the garden or woodlands, and often near bluebells. The long green shoots and white flowers look like Lily of the Valley, but when you snap the shoots you get an incredible aroma of fresh green garlic. Lovely.
Now garlic is a tough old thing and grows really easily all year round in pretty much all warm climates. And guess which country is the largest producer of garlic? France? USA? Nope, China. They knock out 66% of the world’s supply, amazingly.
Cooking
Garlic is used in cooking across the world and in all types of cuisines to make sauces, usually in partnership with onions and tomatoes. Garlic is used to flavour oils, breads, meat, gravies and vegetables. It can be fried, boiled, smoked, pickled, roasted and used to make condiments such as alioli. Garlic is also used as a food preservative for fish and meat and so on and so on.
Other Uses
Garlic, as with so many herbs, has a number of medicinal applications. From helping to fight the common cold and easing sore throats to having antiseptic properties. It was used in the war to prevent gangrene, it can be used as a disinfectant and helps to clear up infections. It works as a fungicide too and is even used in the treatment for thrush. And here’s one for the boys – garlic also boosts testosterone levels! As if they need more…
Daft Fact of the Month - sticky garlic juice is used in the production of adhesives and glue. Who knew that?!?
Garlic Issues
I suppose the biggest issue with garlic is the breath bit. When you eat it you don’t notice it and if the person you’re eating with has some too, then you’re all fine. But it is not the first choice on a first date.
This pungency is all down to something called AMS, or allyl methyl sulfide. This is a liquid that is absorbed into the blood when you digest garlic. This chemical then travels from the blood to the lungs and skin and it is then expelled from the body through the pores and mouth. The green centre of the garlic clove is particularly pungent and in many countries they remove this when garlic is prepped, which may help a bit.
BIG Garlic Issues
One thing that always puzzled me is the vampire/garlic thing. Who put those two at odds with each other? And how could something that can survive for thousands of years and fly be good at fighting fall apart when someone waves a bulb near them? Turns out, there’s a fairly good logic to all that.
Garlic’s reputation for doing good originally came from ancient Egypt. They believed that garlic held incredible healing powers (which as we’ve seen, it sort of does). As trading developed, the use of garlic spread and so did the stories of its strangely powerful benefits. Belief grew that is would protect you against plagues and illness and then, eventually, against supernatural evils.
This was latched onto as a good idea in southern Slavic countries and they believed a vampire could be identified by their unwillingness to eat the stuff as it was such a blessed/God-given thing. In fact, in the 1970s a Romanian church distributed garlic during service, observing those who refused to eat it and then pointing at them and yelling ‘Vampire’ before chasing them with pitchforks. Yep, in the 70s.
Top Tips:
To peel your garlic quickly, use the flat edge of your knife and squash the garlic. The skin will then peel off really easily. Garlic freezes really well so simply freeze the cloves whole in a plastic container. When you’re cooking, just throw the cold cloves into your sauce and they’ll melt into your sauce.
Or you can blitz peeled garlic in bulk, spoon into an ice cube tray and freeze. Then all you do is pop a frozen garlic cube into your cooking.
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Helene
Love garlic! But I noticed something you've left out - you can eat garlic sprouts! Whenever my garlic starts sprouting (admittedly this happens because I don't follow your advice on freezing them) I plant the sprouting cloves in a planter on my windowsill next to all my other herbs. They are super easy to care for and I've yet to have one die on me, which is more than I can say for any other herb I grow!
Once the sprouts are nice and long (about 20-30 cm) I cut them off and use them in the same way I would spring onion greens and I also add them to butter to make home made garlic butter! So delicious!
They are quite strong in flavour though, so for those less keen on the garlicky taste should probably use modestly.
Oh, and once you've cut them off, they regrow! I normally get 3-4 sprigs from the same clove before I dig it up and replace it.
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