Cubist
Still wavin'
- Location
- Ovver 'thill
We use a hell of a lot especially in curries, but would never dream of using a crusher. Just flatten the clove with the side of a decent knife blade, peel and chop roughly. Sorted, low tech.

Slightly disagree here: garlic in mussels sauce, oh yes (mussels livorneseGarlic mayo, yum. Improves many things. Moules & Frites are impossible without it.
) mayo on mussels ... maybe not, you stop tasting the mussels for the mayo.The real chef's methodWe use a hell of a lot especially in curries, but would never dream of using a crusher. Just flatten the clove with the side of a decent knife blade, peel and chop roughly. Sorted, low tech.
Crush, mash, chop or slice, it all brings out different aspects, in the same way that with a chili you might put it in whole, deseed it, dry it first, and so on.The real chef's method
A pinch of salt speeds up the mashing if you like your garlic to blend in the dish.
I like mine roughly chopped, you get more taste!
Marshmallow Fluff, you forgot onions![]()
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In the spring time you can buy a Wild Garlic pesto at one of the farmers markets which is absolutely fantastic. (Now I want it to be spring time).Love it and it goes in most things I cook. I'm also very fond of Ramsons or Wild Garlic...
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In the spring time you can buy a Wild Garlic pesto at one of the farmers markets which is absolutely fantastic. (Now I want it to be spring time).
We use a hell of a lot especially in curries, but would never dream of using a crusher. Just flatten the clove with the side of a decent knife blade, peel and chop roughly. Sorted, low tech.
http://www.cyclechat.net/threads/cc-recipe-thread.28404/post-558543I always liquidise garlic for curries - whole cloves in along with onion, fresh coriander, chillies, curry paste and double cream (optional). This liquid, added to lamb, chicken or whatever already lightly fried in various spices, brought to the boil slowly and stuck in the oven for as long as possible on a low heat, preferably in a Le Creuset or something similar.
I find the flavour is better this way than when you fry the meat with the garlic...
I've bought it from the farmers market on Whiteladies Road, but I suspect they probably go to other markets as well. There are recipes on the internet but I've no idea what his one was.I imagine it would be lovely, and would be good to get a recipe as there's a serious abundance of the stuff on our mutual doorstep, Summerdays. Roll on the spring.
At a rough guess:I imagine it would be lovely, and would be good to get a recipe as there's a serious abundance of the stuff on our mutual doorstep, Summerdays. Roll on the spring.
I had a colleague like that thirty years ago. Your colleague, I think, made the same mistakes as my colleague Raymond.
Mistake number one - mistaking cloves of garlic with oil of cloves, a known analgesic and home remedy for dental pain.
Mistake number two - confusing heads of garlic with cloves of garlic - Raymond had eaten two heads of garlic and not two cloves as advised by someone else who had made mistake number one.
Raymond could be detected thirty paces away and his pathways through a vast warehouse could be followed even when wearing a gas mask.