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#1 Posted : Monday, September 16, 2024 7:44:14 PM(UTC)

I subscribe to Purple Carrot which is like Blue Apron but for vegan recipes. I've tried them all and Purple Carrot will make you work the hardest and the recipes are the best. However, I get a box from them every other week and even if the recipes only call for a clove or two of garlic, they will send you a whole bulb. I have been accumulating them at an alarming pace and I hate to throw out perfectly good garlic because I can't use it. Yes, I have a freezer full AND a counter full. So, I need some recipe recommendations that call for a bulb or more. I live in a fairly large city so if I don't have the cookbook, I can probably get it from the library on one of my regular trips. Any suggestions?

#2 Posted : Monday, September 16, 2024 9:25:32 PM(UTC)

Well there is the classic French dish, roasting a lot of cloves of garlic alongside a whole chicken. It is usually named as chicken with 40 cloves of garlic but sometimes with 20 cloves. Other suggestions are to roast whole heads whenever you have the oven on then mash up the cloves and freeze - great for adding a  flavor boost to stews, soups, dressings,, etc. Or make confit of garlic where you poach then store the cloves in oil. They last for ages that way.

#3 Posted : Monday, September 16, 2024 11:24:11 PM(UTC)

Toum, black garlic... might also interest you

#4 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2024 1:44:27 AM(UTC)

The chicken with 40 cloves of garlic is really nice ;-) The toum sauce goes with anything; aioli, pistou... and here's a link that has garlic heavy recipes for vegans

#5 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2024 8:10:56 AM(UTC)

I'm not sure if you are a canner, but pickled garlic is a lovely treat to have stashed away (I made 2 different recipes this year) and I also am planning a batch of an onion/garlic jam this week. I'm also not sure what you froze (whole cloves? minced garlic?) but I also freeze roasted garlic in roughly 2 tsp portions that I use for lots of different recipes.

#6 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2024 3:20:19 PM(UTC)
The French classic of "chicken with 40 cloves of garlic" has created a furore at times. The British press panned Nigella Lawson for cooking it on one of her programmes despite other British chefs like The Hairy Bikers, Rick Stein, Nigel Slater to many but three have also cooked it on their shows. It is bias against Lawson for no reason at all.
#7 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2024 3:25:00 PM(UTC)

I always keep garlic confit in refrigerator  (keeps 5-6 weeks refrigerator in a jar) and in freezer (as far as I am concerned, keeps over 1 year) using zip lock after first refrigerating so it is spoonable into a zip lock. This recipe uses 8 heads of garlic.  I use garlic confit for everything needing garlic except desserts and Asian recipes where olive oil is distracting. 


https://nocrumbsleft.net/2016/01/04/garlic-confit/

#8 Posted : Wednesday, September 18, 2024 6:59:26 AM(UTC)

Bias against Nigella?  That would never happen in the states!  I will try her 40 cloves chicken recipe.


The pickling and confit ideas could be Christmas gifts since I also have too many jars.  I love a good condiment recipe, especially things like chutney and onion jam so, I did a search and found a garlic jam recipe from Emeril.  


Thanks for all the great ideas!

#9 Posted : Wednesday, September 18, 2024 12:11:46 PM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: Churchim808 Go to Quoted Post
The pickling and confit ideas could be Christmas gifts since I also have too many jars.


We do this all the time, and all year round. It makes for a happy sphere of friends, neighbors, and family. It allows us keep two jars of something one year and not eight jars of something for five years.

#11 Posted : Friday, September 20, 2024 6:21:33 PM(UTC)
Cooks Illustrated/America’s Test Kitchen has a delightful pasta aglio e olio recipe which calls for 12 cloves per pound of pasta. It’s in both “The Science of Good Cooking” (book) and “Cook's Illustrated Magazine Special Issue: All-Time Best Italian Recipes (2013): 20th Anniversary Special Edition”.
#12 Posted : Saturday, September 21, 2024 9:59:00 AM(UTC)
Another thought: depending on where you live, there may be a Little Free Pantry in your community where you could share some of your surplus? I wouldn’t put it in a LFP in really hot weather, but when temperatures are mild to cold, garlic bulbs would do fine in a Little Free Pantry until someone else could use them.
#14 Posted : Tuesday, October 1, 2024 10:56:20 PM(UTC)

Roasted Garlic! Make the au gratin or scalloped potatoes from My Paris Kitchen by David Lebovitz. 


Roast a bunch and use it thusly: in pastas like lasagne, alfredo, pastisio, or spread on sourdough toast with avocado, or toss in stir fries, or make a dip, I have made a good one with random roasted veggies and cream cheese, that would be improved with some roasted garlic and then spread on bagels. 


Don't forget making aioli or pesto either. I have a jar of homemade hazelnut pesto that I put a lot of garlic in, it is keeping really well because I may have added a lot of garlic ;) 


There is also a French Recipe for Garlic Soup where you use up whole bulbs of garlic at a time making it. Not sure where I saw, maybe in My French Kitchen? It's a cookbook by the gal the wrote the book that turned into the movie Chocolat', cannot remember her name. Joanne something?? 


Just ideas of the top of my head, I spend too much time leafing thru cookbooks. 

#15 Posted : Wednesday, October 2, 2024 2:49:13 AM(UTC)

It's Joanne Harris who wrote Chocolat!

#16 Posted : Wednesday, October 2, 2024 2:34:41 PM(UTC)

In the following book you also have the recipe for garlic soup:  the Basque Country by Marti Buckley

#13 Posted : Thursday, October 3, 2024 8:25:47 PM(UTC)
Originally Posted by: KCKB Go to Quoted Post
Another thought: depending on where you live, there may be a Little Free Pantry in your community where you could share some of your surplus? I wouldn’t put it in a LFP in really hot weather, but when temperatures are mild to cold, garlic bulbs would do fine in a Little Free Pantry until someone else could use them.


I live in North Carolin and we are in the midst of Summer Jr. But this is a great idea for when the weather cools!
#17 Posted : Sunday, October 6, 2024 4:57:47 PM(UTC)
If I have a large pile of garlic I mince it in the food processor and then freeze it in 1/2 inch deep blocks using plastic food containers. You can then cut it into 1/2 inch cubes and keep them in a bag in the freezer for whenever you want garlic. And it defrosts really quickly - guess it is the high oil content.
#18 Posted : Monday, October 7, 2024 1:31:47 AM(UTC)
Originally Posted by: neridaandroger Go to Quoted Post
If I have a large pile of garlic I mince it in the food processor and then freeze it in 1/2 inch deep blocks using plastic food containers. You can then cut it into 1/2 inch cubes and keep them in a bag in the freezer for whenever you want garlic. And it defrosts really quickly - guess it is the high oil content.


I tried this once with a tiny ice cube tray meant for freezing chopped garlic. I chopped it all by hand and once frozen, the garlic was damn near impossible to get out of the tiny tray. Your approach makes so much more sense!
#10 Posted : Tuesday, October 15, 2024 12:05:44 PM(UTC)
Originally Posted by: Churchim808 Go to Quoted Post

Bias against Nigella?  That would never happen in the states!  I will try her 40 cloves chicken recipe.


The pickling and confit ideas could be Christmas gifts since I also have too many jars.  I love a good condiment recipe, especially things like chutney and onion jam so, I did a search and found a garlic jam recipe from Emeril.  


Thanks for all the great ideas!



I have made Nigella's and it was very good. Now it's getting colder I should make it again!
#19 Posted : Sunday, October 27, 2024 2:28:14 PM(UTC)
Everything you ever wanted to know about garlic and then some:

https://www.gourmetgarli...-garlic-last-a-long-time

Goes through the pros and cons of different methods of preserving garlic. I came across this information when my pickled garlic turned green (the next day stored in a cupboard) and the question was, of course, if it was still safe to eat.

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