forum: Food, Wine and Gardening
#1 Sun 27 Jan 13 8:25am
beerforyorky
- Member Occupation Retired
- From Surin, N.E. Thailand
- Member since Mon 29 Dec 08
Granulated garlic powder
This note following an internet recipe I found amusing:
"If you don't have granulated garlic powder, you could use fresh garlic"
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#4 Sun 27 Jan 13 1:16pm
koukouvagia

- From New York
- Member since Fri 12 Dec 08
Re: Granulated garlic powder
What's so funny? There are certain applications where granulated garlic works much better than fresh garlic, sorry to say. I always use it in meat rubs for example, fresh garlic just burns.
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#5 Sun 27 Jan 13 2:09pm
Thistledo
- Member Occupation Retired something or other
- From English immigrant in S. Wales
- Member since Fri 07 Dec 12
Re: Granulated garlic powder
Hate any garlic that's been processed almost beyond recognition. I can always taste if it's not fresh. Fresh garlic wouldn't burn if you mixed it with a little oil first and maybe your heat's too high. I crush my garlic which comes out as a fine mince and works perfectly well as a rub. In fact you could also halve a clove and rub the meat with the cut side.
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#6 Sun 27 Jan 13 11:26pm
koukouvagia

- From New York
- Member since Fri 12 Dec 08
Re: Granulated garlic powder
Thistledo wrote:
Hate any garlic that's been processed almost beyond recognition. I can always taste if it's not fresh. Fresh garlic wouldn't burn if you mixed it with a little oil first and maybe your heat's too high. I crush my garlic which comes out as a fine mince and works perfectly well as a rub. In fact you could also halve a clove and rub the meat with the cut side.
If it's for a steak or for getting a good sear then fresh garlic most certainly does burn, there's no way around that if you're want a good sear.
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#7 Mon 28 Jan 13 4:02am
Ashen
Occupation Why is the Rum always gone???!
- From out to lunch
- Member since Sat 07 Jan 06
Re: Granulated garlic powder
I usually buy large sliced dehydrated garlic and then grind it in my spice grinder to a powder when I need it. It is certainly a different flavour profile to fresh but also one I love in certain applications. Often I will reinforce different levels of garlic flavour with a combos of fresh, roasted and powdered.
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#8 Mon 28 Jan 13 6:46am
mummza
Occupation avoiding housework
- From The land of song.
- Member since Tue 04 Oct 05
Re: Granulated garlic powder
koukouvagia wrote:
What's so funny?
Granulated Garlic Powder !
To me granulated is like tiny nibs as in granulated sugar
And powder is another !
That's what made me laugh
it did not make sense to me before the obvious was stated .. If you don't have any you could use fresh garlic .
I only use fresh garlic but I can see Ashen's idea of having dried sliced garlic and grinding it at home as a handy idea to go into things like dry rubs for meat.
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#9 Mon 28 Jan 13 12:34pm
koukouvagia

- From New York
- Member since Fri 12 Dec 08
Re: Granulated garlic powder
Ashen wrote:
I usually buy large sliced dehydrated garlic and then grind it in my spice grinder to a powder when I need it. It is certainly a different flavour profile to fresh but also one I love in certain applications. Often I will reinforce different levels of garlic flavour with a combos of fresh, roasted and powdered.
I've never seen sliced dehydrated garlic. I wonder if it's possible to make it myself. I don't particularly like the idea of having to use garlic powder but it definitely comes in handy for rubs and I'd rather do that than have burned garlic.
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#10 Mon 28 Jan 13 1:45pm
MsPablo
Occupation Just being me
- Member since Fri 28 Mar 08
Re: Granulated garlic powder
Try Asian grocers for sliced, dehydrated garlic. It has a more fresh flavor to me than powdered or granulated.
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