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In defense of granulated garlic


Fat Guy

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During my middle period, when I was going from novice to more experienced cook, granulated garlic was an ingredient I banished from my kitchen. Why would you use granulated garlic when you can use fresh?

Well, the other day I was reminded of one reason: when making a rub for meat. A friend and I were cooking a boneless ribeye roast, about 8 pounds, on the grill. We wanted garlic but knew if we rubbed the meat with fresh garlic we'd have acrid, smoky, burnt garlic two hours later. Whereas, mixing granulated garlic with salt and pepper and then rubbing the meat with that gave us nice garlic flavor without burning.

This can't be the only good use of granulated garlic. Any other ideas?

Steven A. Shaw aka "Fat Guy"
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
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Mostly I use it as you used it -- for rubs when grilling and barbecuing. But it also works really well in old-school fried chicken coatings, as does granulated onion. It's just... right in a way that "real" garlic isn't, quite.

John Rosevear

"Brown food tastes better." - Chris Schlesinger

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Granulated garlic is just about the only kind I ever saw my grandmother use...so I use it. (shh dont tell her)Its a must for dry rubs and seasoning burgers and other meat for grilling and also for last min reseasoning of a dish that might just need a little something.

Jeff I soemtimes just boil a few garlic cloves with the potatoes for mashing

T

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I sometimes add it to salad dressings and always on the occasional frozen pizza (plus some Italian herbs). Rubs etc of course. I used to use it a lot more but I love cutting garlic and mostly use fresh nowadays.

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I use it for meat dry rubs as well, mainly because that's what my mom did. I really think of granulated garlic as a different animal than fresh garlic. It tastes different to me, and adds a completely different flavor dimension to food. My immigrant Chinese mother would never use anything but fresh garlic for traditional Chinese dishes, but minced garlic on "American" meat just didn't have the flavor she desired. Hence the granulated garlic. If you're not a big fan of, say, beef ribs, try salt, pepper, and granulated garlic which I think gives it a great flavor.

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I use it on rubs, fry coatings, chip seasoning, and so on, but I always pound the Penzey's grains to dust in a mortar before adding. Makes absorption on meat or tongue easier, and the flavor of the garlic blends more effectively.

Chris Amirault

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I think of granulated garlic (as well as onion powder) as a different condiment from the fresh stuff. Each has its place. It's not as extreme as asking why not use raisins when you can have fresh grapes, or dried vs. fresh tomatoes, but is a muted version of those comparisons. You can distribute the granular form easily in a dish if you want to add a garlic touch compared even to garlic-pressed fresh stuff, the granular is not as harsh so tht if you want more garlic taste in a dish that is already prepared you can add it without spoiling the dish. Same with onion powder. Turning one's nose up at using these granulated products is simply decreasing one's culinary armamentarium for faux "authenticity".

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I use it in rubs all of the time. One summer, I took some up to the cabin. For dinner, we scrounged (we stayed later than we thought), and pasta with ragu (using leftover meat) was on the menu. We had a baguette (not a crusty one) and the kids wanted garlic bread. We had butter, and garlic granules. Mixed them up, spread on the split loaf, added some salt, and voila! It was great.

I'd never think of not stocking them up at the cabin. The nearest market is 30 long miles, one way (long because most of it is a gravel logging road).

Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"
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As others have said, I do not use it instead of fresh, but in different applications. To some people, garlic bread entails granulated garlic, and never fresh. The kids always preferred it to fresh in ground beef preps like taco meat and spaghetti sauce. The latest favorite is beef chunks massaged with garlic powder, seasoned salt, black pepper and a bit or Maggi and worcestershire and quickly cooked in a hot pan with butter. It is also a great emergency stand-by flavor adjuster.

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How about garlic powder?

That is what I grew up with. There were frequent outburst from the kitchen when a cloud of garlic powder erupted. I prefer the taste of the granulated, plus it is easier to control amounts when using the

shake" method.

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I used my Penzey's both last night and tonight in a spice mix for savory pancakes: sauteed onion, red bell pepper, and fresh corn added to a simple flour/egg/milk batter in which I whisked in salt, cumin, oregano, paprika, cayenne, and the aforementioned granulated garlic. Tonight they were served unadorned with Sriracha on the side; yesterday they were topped with butter-poached shrimp seasoned with salt, a spritz of lime juice and a quick shake of smoked Spanish paprika.

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I'm a fan. Like other's have said, it's got a whole other flavor profile, and simply goes where fresh garlic can't. I went through the same "middle" phase, where I banished it. I've come full circle, at this point. My chicken salad and barbecue rubs would be bland shadows of themselves without granulated garlic.

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Exactly - it's a different beast to fresh garlic (with somewhat more limited useage). Just like ginger powder has it's use - just not to replace the fresh.

I have made some filthy mistakes in the past trying to use it instead of fresh garlic though - combination of inexperience and limited cupboard space!

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They are delicious.

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I'm a fan! It lives in the desk at work, along with its' cohorts, onion powder, a pepper mill, (sorry) shaker cheese, kosher salt, salt free lemon and dill seasoning, and seasoned salt. It's a come-one-come-all seasoning opportunity for everyone in the office. :laugh:

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