Saturday, 17 February 2024

Roasted Garlic!

Not a lover of garlic because it can be too strong or even bitter?

If you roast garlic it becomes sweet and delicious – here's the science!

It all boils down to the presence of allicin, the sulphur compound responsible for that instantly recognisable garlicky taste. Those all important garlic enzymes are inactivated by heat, and the allicin compound is destroyed during cooking. Garlic mellows as it cooks and is most pungent in its fresh, raw form.

Some may recognise “Allium” a genus of flowering plants which includes the cultivated onion, garlic, scallion, leek and chives. Allium is the Latin word for garlic.

Moving on, you might think this recipe is a faff in itself since you have to “pop” the garlic cloves from the bulb and box, preferably in tiny pots – messy I know - I can only say it's worth it.


Roasted Garlic


2 bulbs of garlic

olive oil/rapeseed oil for drizzling

2-3 sprigs of fresh thyme - optional

salt and black pepper


Pre-heat your oven to 200c/180f/Gas 6.

Slice the tops off the bulbs or not, as you wish and place in a small ovenproof dish, garlic roaster or foil dish so that they fit snugly. Drizzle with oil and season with thyme, salt and black pepper.

Roast in the oven for about an hour – until the garlic has softened.

Squeeze the garlic cloves out of the bulb. It's a good idea to wear gloves and to have a compostable bag ready for disposal. To store in the fridge, add a little more oil and keep in a screw top jar.

You can use the paste in the same way as you'd use fresh garlic – the difference is that the roasted version is sweeter and ready to use!

The paste will keep in your fridge for one to two weeks or you can freeze in tiny pots.


If, like me, you forget to take stuff out of the freezer another plus here is that because the pots are so tiny they don't take long at all to defrost!

Speaking of freezing and tiny pots ...

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