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How to Dry Your Garlic for Homemade Garlic Powder!
One of our locak stores sells a commercial roasted garlic powder as well as the "regular" garlic powder. If they are put side by side, the roased is definitely a little darker. I notice that the flovor of the roasted is a little more mellow. And I find I use both in different ways. Any suggestions on how to make the roasted garlic?
How exactly to you go about sealing the jars? Does this mean just covering them tightly, or do you have process them in any way?
OMG - Garlic is so very easy to peel ! Got this from a friend of mine whose father was a restaurant cook: Cut off the bottom end of the garlic bulb's clove, then strike or squash the clove by using the flat side of a knife or cleaver ... and voila ... the garlic clove's jacket just pops off ! So Very Simple !!! Oh, and I do know that you leave the skin on the garlic bulb if you are roasting the garlic ... so yummy and healthy, too. Since I don't have a very big yard, I am going to head over to my local farmer's market to purchase my garlic. Making my own garlic powder is a wonderful idea.
I made my own garlic powder by putting fresh garlic cloves through a garlic press. I put the pressed garlic on parchment paper and put it in my toaster oven on the lowest setting. Once it dried, I put it in a glass jar for storage. Depending on how I plan to use it, I either puree it in the blender or (usually) use a mortar and pestle to grind it up.
I do grow my own hardneck garlic but have yet to try making my own garlic powder. I do have a dehydrator so I will try that method. And here's a tip for peeling garlic cloves. Using 2 stainless steel mixing bowls, place up to about 10 unpeeled cloves in one of the bowls. Place the second bowl upside down on top of the bowl with the cloves, hold the rims of the two bowls together and shake vigorously. Voila! Garlic cloves peeled and when you remove the peeled cloves, all the skins are left in the bowl for easy disposal.
I peel & slice mine like tater chips and then put them in a dehydrator. After a few days when they are dried enough, I run em through a coffee grinder. Far better than any store bought.
I wish you would include a way to process using a stove (or air fryer?) - not everyone has a dehydrator…. Thoughts? Thank you!
Hi, Cindi. If you want to use your oven, preheat it to 175 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, then place the sliced garlic on top. The garlic is ready after anywhere from 1 to 2 hours. Test it by seeing if a pieces "snaps" when you break it in half. Then you need to let the garlic cool completely. Grind it into a powder by using a high-speed blender or coffee grinder.
Dehydrators can be gotten for really cheap these days. The electric or gas expense of an oven can end up higher than the dehydrator itself.
Thx CW: it’s less a matter of expense & more a matter of countertop or cabinetry “real estate” & how much I’d use it otherwise. I hoped there is a way to dry the garlic w/ things like ovens that everyone has
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