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Garlic Powder

Our garlic powder has the unmistakable pungent aroma and flavor of fresh garlic!

Garlic Powder

This garlic powder is finely milled to 500 microns, or 500 millionth of a meter, similar in consistency to powdered sugar.

 


Our powdered garlic can easily be substituted for fresh garlic cloves using 1/8 teaspoon of our finely milled garlic powder for every medium clove of fresh garlic called for in a recipe!

 

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4 oz. garlic powder only$3.97

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8 oz. garlic powder only$5.47

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16 oz. garlic powder only $9.97

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Uses of Garlic Powder, Garlic Powder Recipes
Garlic powder is a very popular ingredient with cooks throughout the world, but is especially popular in Chinese and Mediterranean cooking.

 

Garlic powder is a good match with lamb, especially leg of lamb.

 

The flavor of garlic matches well with all kinds of meats, but is a perfect combined with seafood.

 

Garlic powder also livens up the flavor of all kinds of vegetables, but is particularly well suited for combination with carrots and sweet potatoes.

 

Roasted garlic is easy to make by placing unpeeled cloves in a dry frying pan until the skins are browned in several places. They now should also be easy to remove. Be careful not to burn garlic, which causes it to become bitter and unusable.

 

Powdered Garlic
The aroma of garlic, which some people find to be objectionable, can be covered with fresh parsley, or mint.

 

Easy Cheese Garlic Bread
Mix 1/4 cup each of softened butter and Parmesan cheese, one tablespoon olive oil, and one teaspoon garlic powder. Spread on French bread; broil just a few minutes until golden brown.

Garlic Salt

Mix equal parts garlic powder and salt. Blend in a food processor or blender to make the mixture more consistent.
Garlic Sauce
Mix:

1/2 cup water
1/4 cup vinegar
1-1/2 teaspoons garlic powder
2/3 cup sliced almonds
4 slices trimmed white bread
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup olive oil

Blend in food processor or blender all ingredients except oil until well mixed. While the food processor /blender is running, pour olive oil in a thin, slow stream until fully incorporated.
Garlic Sauce- Aioli
Mix:

3/4 teaspoon garlic powder and two, room temperature, pasteurized egg yolks in a bowel (or food processor). Slow drizzle in one cup olive oil while stirring or whisking vigorously.

The mixture should be a consistency similar to mayo. Add two tablespoon lemon juices, salt & pepper to taste just before serving.

Serve with eggs, steamed vegetables, poached fish, or cold meats.

 

Benefits of Garlic

Garlic has been grown and used for thousands of years making it one of the earliest cultivated plants. During that time it has been attributed with many medicinal properties including increasing strength and stamina, which is why soldiers, athletes, and laborers often ingested garlic. Although this attribute of the plant is questionable, garlic does have some well-documented medical properties. 

It is an effective antiseptic, antifungal, antiviral, and antibiotic, which is why garlic juice had been often used to clean the wounds of solders until World War II when penicillin replaced it. During the First World War it helped save thousands of lives. Some recent claims say garlic may be useful in lowering blood pressure, lowering cholesterol, as an anti-inflammatory, and regulating the blood sugar levels of diabetics. The fresher the garlic the more potent its medical properties are thought to be.

Garlic also contains several vitamins and minerals including C, B1, B2, Iron, Calcium, and Phosphorus.

 

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FRESH mixed peppercorns!

 

The Garlic Plant

The garlic plant, Allium sativum, is a member of the Onion family (Alliaceae) and is thus not surprisingly a close relative of plants such as onions, shallots, chives, and leeks.

Garlic is a bulb that has numerous segments called cloves, each clove is wrapped in its own papery shell called a sheath. The bulb grows below ground and sends up edible, dark green foliage that is flat and comes to a point at the end. A garlic plant looks very similar to long grass with extra wide, fleshy, blades. In mid to late summer the plant blooms by sending up a flowering stalk.

This strange stalk often forms a loop just below the flower causing it to face the ground. Once matured, the flower produces edible seeds very similar to tiny little garlic cloves. After flowering, the foliage temporarily dies off.

 

The Garlic plant to the left is a second year plant in early spring.

Young garlic plant

Planting & Growing Garlic

To plant garlic, separate bulbs into individual unpeeled cloves and plant at least one inch below the surface of the soil. Plant them in a sunny spot that drains well. This is best done in the fall as with other bulbs, or in the very early spring. Harvest the garlic just as the plants start to send up their flowering stalks the following year. If allowed to flower, garlic plants will produce a cluster of seeds called head garlic.

Head garlic is edible, and has a flavor, aroma, and consistency just like the cloves, but only about the size of a kernel of popcorn. It can be planted, but will take two seasons to form a decent sized bulb of garlic. After flowering in mid to late summer, the foliage of the garlic plant will die off until fall when it will return. Garlic over winters well and is amazingly hardy, it will remain green well after everything but the evergreens have died away. I have often seen the garlic tops popping up out of the snow in the middle of the winter!

Harvested garlic can be eaten immediately while its flavor is still much more potent and complex than any which can be purchased at a grocery store, or the bulbs can be dried for long- term storage. Dry for about a week and store in a cool, dark, dry place.

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Spice of Life Gourmet Peppercorns

Northwoods, IL.

60185

 

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