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-
- I am including this txt file to tell all how to buy, store, and use
- garlic. I quote the author of Garlic who is Sue Kreitzman. All recipes in
- this file come from this cookbook.
-
- If you post this file to a bbs, please include this file so that she
- gets credit for her major work on the book.
-
- Hope this helps all in the quest to use garlic the right way.
-
- Enjoy.
-
- <<Rich>>
-
- Sysop of The Cook BBS
- 104/419
-
- ===============================================================================
- BUYING, STORING, AND USING GARLIC
- ===============================================================================
-
- There are several varieties of garlic, but those found in most American
- markets are the purplish-red and the white. Choose fresh garlic carefully.
- Try to avoid garlic packaged in boxes; you need to be able to lift the bulbs
- in your hand and squeeze them. Buy large, heavy bulbs that have not begun to
- sprout and have no shriveled or bruised cloves. (Remember a clove is one
- section and a bulb or head is the whole thing). If only small heads are
- available, increase the amount of garlic used in each recipe. Keep the garlic
- heads in a basket in a cool, well-ventilated part of the kitchen. Do not
- refrigerate them.
-
- Don't buy too much garlic at a time. As it loses its freshness, it
- begins to shrivel and sprout. Never use shriveled cloves or those that
- develop bad spots. If the cloves are frim but have begun to sprout, do not
- use them whole in long-cooked, mild dishes. They may still be crushed or
- minced, however, and used as a seasoning. Split each sprouting clove, remove
- and discard the green sprout, and proceed.
-
- Fresh garlic kept in a dry, well-ventilated place will last about a
- month. If necessary to store garlic longer, peel the cloves, cover them with
- olive oil, and store them in the refrigerator, where they will keep for three
- months.
-
- To store garlic conveniently for any length of time without the use of
- oil, Madelene Hill from Hilltop Herb Farm in Texas suggests using the freezer.
- Her advice: "buy only the freshest head. Separate the heads into cloves (no
- need to peel) and place in plastic bags. Tie the bags closed and freeze. The
- garlic will keep indefinitely in the freezer, and your freezer will NOT smell
- like garlic. To use, simply remove as many cloves as you need, peel while
- still frozen and use as you would unfrozen garlic."
-
- Braids of garlic are very attractive and an ornament to any kitchen,
- but in many parts of the country they may be far from fresh. If the heads
- contain some shriveled cloves, use the braids for decoration and buy your
- cooking garlic loose. If you live in a garlic growing area and can purchase
- fresh braids, use the bulbs quickly.
-
- UTENSILS:
-
- Serious garlic lovers should have on hand the following equipment:
-
- A SHARP KNIFE AND A WOODEN CHOPPING BOARD for mincing and chopping
- garlic cloves. Keep the wooden board well scrubbed to prevent bacteria and
- odor. Keep the knife sharpened.
-
- A RUBBER MALLET for crushing. Using this utensil for whacking garlic
- cloves gives the cook a marvelous sense of release. It is almost as good a
- tension reliever as whacking bread dough.
-
- A FINE MESHED SIEVE OR STRAINER AND A "PUSHER" ( a wooden pestle,
- spatula or spoon). You will use this time and time again for straining soups
- and sauces containing long-cooked garlic cloves. Pushing them through the
- mesh reduces them to a puree. If they were cooked unpeeled, the skin stays
- behind as the pulp goes through.
-
- A PERFORATED POTTERY "GARLIC CROCK" or a loosely woven wire basket to
- store the bulbs.
-
- A FEW "NONREACTIVE" POTS--pots that will not chemically react with
- acid ingredients such as wine, citrus juices, or tomatoes, causing the color
- or flavor of food to turn. Stainless steel, glass, ceramics, and enamel are
- nonreactive materials, while copper, cast iron, and aluminum are considered
- reactive.
-
- GARLIC HINTS:
-
- Don't forget that the old way of using garlic as a pungent seasoning
- is still wonderful. Some hints follow to help you season splendidly.
-
- In its raw form, garlic is powerful. Those misguided souls who
- persist in thinking of garlic as vulgar, and even inedible, are usually
- thinking about it in its raw state. Pungency can be tempered by marinating
- raw garlic in an acid solution, using citrus juice, vinegar, or wine. But
- remember raw garlic has an excitement all its own. It may not do as an
- everyday food, but it provides an occasional exhilarating jolt to jaded taste
- buds.
-
- Avoid garlic presses. They will reduce garlic to an evil-smelling
- mush. Instead mince the cloves with a sharp knife or -- for maximum garlickly
- flavor -- crush they by whacking them with a rubber mallet (available in all
- hardware stores). Crushing raw garlic releases its oils and the flavor will
- be at it strongest. The mallet method has the added advantage of facilitating
- the peeling. Hit the unpeeled clove lightly with the mallet to loosen the
- skin, remove the skin, and then hit the clove several times to crush it. No
- mallet? Until you get one, use the flat side of a chef's knife or cleaver to
- press down on the clove. The remove the loosened skin and proceed.
-
- Raw garlic, if allowed to saute until brown, becomes bitter,
- unpleasant, and inedigestible. Instead, saute it very gently and at the very
- most, allow it to turn a very pale golden color. DO NOT let it brown, or the
- dish will be spoiled. However, whole garlic cloves that have been gentled by
- simmering or boiling can be browned and even carmelized with delicious
- results.
-
- Garlic powder, garlic salt, and granulated garlic impart an acrid,
- rancid flavor to foods. Avoid these products by using fresh cloves instead.
-
- A salad without garlic is like a hug without a kiss, a day without
- sunshine; in fact, it's a damn shame. One of the best ways to permeate a
- salad with the flavor of garlic is to split a clove, then rub the salad bowl
- thoroughly with the split clove. Let the bowl dry for a few moments, then add
- the salad ingredients, the dressing, and toss. Add an additional scent of
- garlic by rubbing the heel of a stale loaf of French bread thoroughly with a
- split clove. Toss this CHAPON with the salad. Whoever gets to eat the
- crunchy, flavorful morsel is very lucky indeed.
-
- iIf you want to add garlic flavor to a sauce or saute, but want no actual
- garlic pieces in the finished dish, put some cloves of garlic on toothpicks.
- Saute them, simmer them, and then--before the dish is served--pluck them out
- by their toothpicks. They make perfectly delicious little treats for the
- cook.
-
- If you want to add zest to your favorite fried chicken recipe, try
- Andrea Smith's method. Andrea, an Atlanta cooking teacher and food consultant,
- recalls her mother's secret of delicious fried chicken: "the use of garlic
- and onions to flavor the frying oil." Heat oil, add sliced onion and chopped
- garlic and cook until golden. Discard solids and proceed with your recipe.
- This works well for frying fish and shellfish as well.
-
- A FEW WORDS ON INGREDIENTS:
-
- BUTTER Nothing compares with the taste of sweet, unsalted butter. Do
- not use salted butter, whipped butter, or margarine for the recipes in this
- book. To clarify butter heat it slowly in a heavy pan. Skim off the foam and
- let the sediment settle on the bottom of the pan. Slowly pour the butter
- through a strainer that is lined with several thicknesses of cheesecloth,
- discarding the sediment. The clarified butter will keep in the refrigerator
- for months.
-
- CHEESES. Buy the best available. Do NOT substitute danish fontina
- for the superior Italian kind, for instance, if you can possibly help it.
- Never use those horrible gluey triangles of processed cheese, misguidedly
- labeled Gruyere, in place of the real thing from Switzerland. And avoid those
- dreadful jars of domestic sawdust passed off as Parmesan. More and more
- supermarkets across the country are carrying quality cheeses these days and
- many cities and towns have excellent cheese shops. Use them well. Your
- cooking will suffer if you settle for inferior cheeses.
-
- STOCK. Many of the recipes call for stock. It is easy to make your
- own and store it in the freezer, but should you have none on hand, there are
- various canned broths available. For best results, buy a broth that does not
- need diluting. Avoid bouillon cubes.
-
- HERBS. Fresh herbs are ideal, of course, but they are not always
- obtainable. If you must use dried herbs, buy them in small quantities, store
- them in a cool, dark, dry place (NOT on a shelf above the stove), and throw
- them away if they start to lose their fragrance and grow musty. The rule of
- thumb is to use three times as much fresh herb as dried, but be careful; too
- much dried herb in a dish can be disastrous. When using dried herbs, crumble
- them between your fingers to release the flavor before dropping them into the
- pot. Dried herbs are best added toward the beginning of the cooking process,
- fresh toward the end.
-
- SALT. The desirable amount of salt is very much a matter of taste, so
- please your own taste. I believe less is better for both palatability and
- health. Too much salt will mask the delicate play of garlic and seasonings in
- most dishes. You will find, on the whole, that you need much less salt than
- usual in these particular recipes; the garlic, whether mild or pungent,
- provides a lot of flavor.
-
- PEPPER. Keep a pepper mill by the stove, and use it. Preground
- pepper is just sharp, black dust; its flavor does not compare with the freshly
- ground.
-
- BAY LEAVES. Two kinds are available on your grocery shelves: Turkish
- and California. If the recipe calls for a bay leaf, use a whole Turkish leaf
- or half of the much stronger California one.
-
-
- Think of garlic as more than seasoning. It can be at its best and
- most interesting when used by the handful. Long, gentle cooking renders the
- cloves sweet, mild, and utterly surprising.
-
- ===============================================================================
-
- I included the section on Ingredients because it has some very good
- advice in it and some very helpful hints.
-
- <<Rich>>
-
-
-
-