How to Roasting Garlic.
Garlic is a delicious ingredient that adds flavor to a wide variety of savory dishes. Fresh garlic is most commonly roasted or sautéed. Both of these methods draw out garlic’s sweet natural flavors, while cutting back on the potent taste and smell of raw garlic. If you’re roasting garlic, you can leave the entire head of garlic whole until you begin to prepare it for roasting. If you’re sautéing the garlic, you’ll need to remove the skin and chop or dice the garlic before adding it to the frying pan.
Ingredients.
1 head of garlic.
2 teaspoons (9.9 mL) olive oil.
Purchase a head of fresh garlic at a local grocery store. Garlic heads will be sold at nearly every grocery store. If you’d like fresher, organic, or locally grown garlic, check a health-food store, a natural grocery store, or a local farmer’s market. Fresh garlic is in season from July to early October.
A head of garlic comprises 8-10 individual garlic cloves clustered together into a large clump.
Preheat the oven. Before you begin preparing the garlic for roasting, set your oven for 400 °F (204 °C).
Peel off the outer layer of the garlic shell. Use your fingers to break and peel off the outermost layers of the garlic peel. It’s okay if the thick shell-like layers of the garlic stay in place around the cloves; you just want to remove the loose, papery peel.
Leave the head in 1 piece; do not break off individual garlic cloves.
Trim the heads of the garlic cloves. Use a sharp kitchen knife to cut off about 1⁄4–1⁄2 inch (0.64–1.27 cm) of the tops of the individual cloves. Do this while all of the cloves are still attached together at the base of the garlic head. This will allow the garlic to cook through and allow the olive oil to soak through the roasting garlic.
As always, put safety first when using kitchen knives. Always cut away from yourself and never touch the cutting edge of the blade.
Place the garlic cut-side up in a muffin pan. Set your peeled and trimmed garlic head in 1 of the muffin indentations inside of a muffin pan. If you don’t have a muffin pan, you can also place the garlic in a baking pan. The baking pan won’t support the garlic on the sides, though, so it may roll over while cooking.
Drizzle 2 teaspoons (9.9 mL) of olive oil over the garlic. Do this slowly, so that the oil soaks in to the garlic and doesn’t pool in the bottom of the muffin pan. After you’ve poured the olive oil over the garlic heads, use your fingers to rub the oil into the cut-open ends of the individual cloves.
This will ensure that your roasted garlic is saturated with oil and rich in flavor.
Wrap the garlic heads in foil. Once you’ve rubbed in the olive oil, tear off a small piece of aluminum foil. Wrap this tightly around the garlic head to keep the oil inside while it’s roasting.
Bake for 35 minutes. Place the muffin tin in the oven. Once the time has passed, check to see if the garlic is fully cooked. Using a hot pad, squeeze the garlic head. If it feels soft when squeezed, it’s fully cooked.
If the garlic doesn’t feel soft, bake it for another 5-10 minutes.
To confirm that the garlic is fully cooked, stab through the center clove with a kitchen knife. The knife should slide in easily, with hardly any resistance.
Open and serve the garlic. Once the garlic has cooled for a few minutes, unwrap and discard the foil. Use a small knife or spoon to pull the roasted garlic cloves out of their skins. They should pop out easily. If a few cloves do stick in their skins, use the spoon or knife to gently pry them loose. You can eat the roasted garlic cloves immediately if you’re hungry, or add the roasted cloves to a dish.
Roasted garlic can be mashed and spread over a warm baguette, or mixed in with savory pasta dishes.
Save leftover roasted garlic in an airtight plastic container. The garlic will keep in your refrigerator for 3-4 days.
Tips.
If raw, minced garlic is brought into contact with an acidic food (e.g., lemon juice or vinegar), it will take on a blue-green hue. Some novice cooks are concerned by this change in color, but the garlic is still good to eat and its taste won’t be effected.
Things You’ll Need.
Roasted Garlic.
Kitchen or chef’s knife.
Baking pan or muffin pan.
Aluminum foil.