Slowly caramelized, this unpeeled garlic has a fleshy texture and a sweet taste resembling fruit paste. Healthy and digestible, it can replace regular garlic and enhance many everyday dishes or be enjoyed on its own.
In the kitchen, ANYTHING can be done with black garlic. It revolutionizes cooking with astonishing ease.
Although its flavor is more complex and delicate, black garlic is used in the same way as regular garlic. Its enveloping and perplexing sweetness will surprise many!
It pairs well in soups and salads, on toasted bread, or as aioli with poultry or fish. Black garlic mixed with tomato sauce for pizzas or pasta will delight your taste buds. You can also add it to a mushroom risotto or stuffed mushroom preparation. Indeed, black garlic pairs perfectly with mushrooms, especially shiitake mushrooms.
It blends beautifully in sauces, marinades, or in the cooking juices of meat. Pressed into mashed potatoes, black garlic will delicately enhance the potato.
The sweetness of black garlic allows it to be combined with sweet preparations of all kinds. It subtly flavors all your chocolate-based desserts and homemade jams or fruit-based preparations.
Below are some recipe ideas with black garlic:
To enjoy the sweetness of black garlic, you can use its cloves:
Smelling black garlic reveals an enveloping sweetness. In the mouth, its texture is velvety, like butter, but black as coal. Its slightly sweet and tangy notes give the impression of eating fruit paste. The exceptional and complex flavor of black garlic may remind you of licorice, balsamic vinegar, or even prunes.
As a result, it can appeal to both "sweet" and "savory" palates!
To obtain this famous product, fresh garlic heads are used, which are placed in a special cooking bag, then in a steel box to prevent overheating. Cooking is carried out in a controlled humidity and temperature oven: this eliminates the excess sulfur compounds in the plant, the main cause of the strong odor of garlic.
During this process, which takes 3 to 4 weeks, the cloves gradually take on the characteristic brown color and soft texture of black garlic, and the product develops its aroma and sweet taste. At the end of the "cooking" period, the heads are removed from the bags and allowed to dry for another 2 to 3 days.
The origin of black garlic does not seem to be clearly identified and is the subject of several hypotheses. Some suggest that black garlic has been used in Korean cuisine for more than 4000 years, while others believe it is the result of a chemical reaction in a scientific experiment conducted in 1999.
The benefits of black garlic are well known. Thanks to black garlic, Koreans take care of their bodies and, most importantly, do not experience the drawbacks of fresh garlic (strong breath and lingering odor). Moreover, it is easier to digest...
Allergen | Sulfites / Sulphites |
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Native country | FRANCE |
Genus and botanical species | Allium sativum |
Ingredients | garlic (SULPHITES) |
Nutritional Info | VN Energie pour 100 g (energy for 100g) : 538 kj /127 kcal VN Matière grasse (fat) : 0.5 g Dont acide gras saturés (of which saturated fat) : 0 VN Glucides (carbohydrate) : 23.8 g Dont sucres (of which sugars) : 1.2 g VN Protéines (protein) : 5.56 g |
TRACES EVENTUELLES D'ALLERGÈNES | céleri, sésame, moutarde, fruits à coques. |