Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2005 6:35 pm
I'll have to try that with a few modifications. A friend of mine will be alone when her parents go on vacation in about a week, maybe I'll cook that with her when I go to keep her company.
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For the same reason as your tomatoes, if I had to use a fresh clove of garlic every time I wanted garlic, I'd spend a few hours a day preparing garlic for my cooking.
And you know? It's even quicker and easier if you don't use a crusher! I find garlic crushers laboriously tricky to clean. It is easy and quick enough to chop garlic, if you leave the tip end of the knife on your chopping board, and just pivot the knife up and down rapidly on it, with practise, it'll come. (I can peel and finely chop a couple of cloves of garlic in about a minute, tops.) To peel a clove of garlic quickly, just press hard on it with your thumb. The skin will all crack off instatly, and it leaves you with a peeled clove.Georgi wrote:Jars/tubes of garlic are not only lazy, but a really expensive way to buy garlic, IMO. Even if you want several cloves for a recipe, it doesn't take that long to crush/chop, especially if you have a decent garlic crusher. Not that I'm judging you, that's just why I don't buy the stuff.