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nextguy

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Hi all I was wondering if any of you think it would be feasible to make black garlic in a temp controlled water bath? I understand from reading an article on ehow that you need to pack the garlic loosely in a jar and heat them for 40 days at 140 degrees and that the garlic should remain humid. I was thinking of putting them in a sealed bag (not vacuumed) and then floating it on a 140 degree water bath for 40 days.

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Hi all I was wondering if any of you think it would be feasible to make black garlic in a temp controlled water bath? I understand from reading an article on ehow that you need to pack the garlic loosely in a jar and heat them for 40 days at 140 degrees and that the garlic should remain humid. I was thinking of putting them in a sealed bag (not vacuumed) and then floating it on a 140 degree water bath for 40 days.

I'd say it's worth a try. But how about putting them in a mason jar instead of a bag so they can be held more easily under water?

I'm thinking I need an old microbiology incubator for these experiments! Here's one that should work

Edited by Kerry Beal (log)
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How many waterbaths do you have??? I'd hate to tie mine up for 40 days at 140F!!!

Ya I only have one and would hate to lose it for 40 days but I can't think of any other way. I am also a bit concerned about food safety. I know very little about microbiology but I would think that after 40 days I would achieve pasteurization but not sterilization. I am also concerned about the humidity. In the traditional process the garlic is heated in a container in an oven which would still allow more airflow than a sealed bag in a water bath. I don't know how this process would work with the garlic basically steaming in its own vapors.

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I'd say it's worth a try. But how about putting them in a mason jar instead of a bag so they can be held more easily under water?

I'm thinking I need an old microbiology incubator for these experiments! Here's one that should work

I thought about using a jar but I think the garlic needs to be in a single layer. A mason jar would not be as wide as a good sized bag.

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I'd say it's worth a try. But how about putting them in a mason jar instead of a bag so they can be held more easily under water?

I'm thinking I need an old microbiology incubator for these experiments! Here's one that should work

I thought about using a jar but I think the garlic needs to be in a single layer. A mason jar would not be as wide as a good sized bag.

True - so you might want to sink it.

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  • 1 month later...

Hello all. I should have been posting updates on this little project but, well, life sometimes gets in the way. In any case, today I have finally hit the 40 day mark and my garlic is nice and black. It has been tough not having my water bath for such a length of time. For the first few weeks the smell was quite strong but now is pretty mild. I haven't opened the bag yet because of one concern. Does anyone have ideas on how I should store the garlic? I have 6 whole heads and thought about just storing them in a jar unpeeled but I am still concerned about food safety. And even though I cooked these things at 140F for 40 days I am still worried eating them at all. Does anyone have any thoughts?

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Hello all. I should have been posting updates on this little project but, well, life sometimes gets in the way. In any case, today I have finally hit the 40 day mark and my garlic is nice and black. It has been tough not having my water bath for such a length of time. For the first few weeks the smell was quite strong but now is pretty mild. I haven't opened the bag yet because of one concern. Does anyone have ideas on how I should store the garlic? I have 6 whole heads and thought about just storing them in a jar unpeeled but I am still concerned about food safety. And even though I cooked these things at 140F for 40 days I am still worried eating them at all. Does anyone have any thoughts?

The ones I buy seem to be packaged with a silica drying pouch. I'd probably put them in a jar with one or two of those.

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  • 1 year later...

The process of making Korean Black Garlic is long. Traditionally it is fermented for 40 days at 140degrees. I wouldn't want to tie up my sous vide cooker that long and also worried about developing botulism. Would using a pressure cooker to over carmelize the garlic work? Any other ideas on a modernist take on making black garlic?

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A pressure cooker would only burn and not ferment the garlic. It would "look" black, but it wouldn't "taste" black.

I've read that you can do black garlic in the oven, too. So you could just SousVide it, and when you need to use the machine just move the garlic to the oven to keep the fermentation process going.

Ciao,

L

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  • 5 months later...

Hi,

I'd like to give black garlic a go, does anyone have a tried and tested process? Based on what I read on internet, I am inclining towards using my rice cooker in warm setting, just need to double check the temperature it runs at. I have seen temperatures mentioned from 60 to 66C, I guess lower temp will mean longer "cooking" time. How about the drying step afterwards, is 20 days really necessary or can it be done in 2-3 days to get it fully dry and safe for spoilage?

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Here's a link that was post a year or so ago. Black Garlic process.

I tried it in my Excalibur dehydrator - the results were just so-so so I am buying mine because I do not need a large supply.

"There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don't think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!" Terry Pratchett

 

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I've looked at this a year or so ago since I can't find the stuff anywhere (yeah, could order, but there's no "hunt" in that) but I gave up quickly on the idea of doing this at home. From what I read the long time is a key ingredient and I'm not inclined to run a machine for 40 days to see if it works. This is one of the things (like fish sauce) that I leave to the pros with the right machines.

But if you do manage to make this at home, please let us know, I'm sure there'd be some interest!

"And don't forget music - music in the kitchen is an essential ingredient!"

- Thomas Keller

Diablo Kitchen, my food blog

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Did using your dehydrator ... dehydrate it too much? I would imagine 40 days - even wrapped in foil - would be enough to dry them out.

Not just in foil, I first put it in a glass container with a vacuum-sealed lid and wrapped that in foil. There were no problems with the dehydrator and it runs off a solar panel so no electric cost.

It was as moist and soft as the commercial stuff but did not have the flavor. I bought the best garlic (a hard-neck variety) from an organic grower but the flavor just was not as complex as I like.

"There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don't think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!" Terry Pratchett

 

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Thank you for the replies. I tested my rice cooker overnight, it can maintain 57C. My plan was to fill in with few cm of warm water, then put in a wrapped jar with garlic in and let it run. In a different articles I found, the process was described as first steam the garlic for one day ( but no temperature specified), then let it sit warm and humid for 30 days. Other sources claim 10-14 days in rice cooker is sufficient. I guess it depends on what you are after.

While this can be fun to do, I am not sure it will be worthwhile, if I can only achieve average home results compared to the commercial garlic, and risk killing my rice cooker or even starting fire. Hmmm...

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  • 1 month later...
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  • 3 years later...

I'm currently a few days short of finishing my first black garlic experiment. This is in aid of coming up with a novel product for the Toronto Garlic Festival this fall.

 

I'm working with this sous vide method suggested on the ChefSteps Community forum.

 

I started with peeled garlic cloves, sealed and cooked at 75C for 48 hours. Then removed from the bag and placed in dehydrator at 60C for another 48 hours. It was supposed to be 24 hours - but...

 

Sealed again and back in sous vide at 75C where it has been bathing for a week so far.

 

After the first bath and drying it was a dark caramelized brown - now back in the bath it's getting quite inky black.

 

Doesn't smell quite as distinctive now - but still glad it's in the garage.

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