Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumAdvice requested re. garlic
I'm making pesto by hand.
The garlic I want to use is the cache my SIL gave me. (Homegrown in her garden)
The garlic is fragrant.
But the cloves are uniformly but partially discolored. Ivory and cafe-au-lait.
Should I throw them away and use other garlic that's entirely ivory?
With ignorance, I'm considering that maybe the discolored part will be bitter and will ruin the pesto.
Your thoughts please?
Trueblue Texan
(2,925 posts)I would cut off the brown parts, unless the color is part of the variety. If it's and indication of oxidation, aging, I'd use something fresh.
no_hypocrisy
(48,782 posts)Think. Again.
(17,957 posts)...not just slice it, if you want a stronger garlic flavor.
magicarpet
(16,512 posts)A blender or food processor is a good idea. Make a nice paste.
Bon appetite.
no_hypocrisy
(48,782 posts)It's done. Took 2-3 hours of mashing in a large mortar and pestle.
The garlic was fine. However, I think I should have purchased new pignoli (pine nuts). I used the ones in the frig, but they were more than six months old. I ruefully discern a certain bitterness.
No, I'm not going to throw it out.
Easterncedar
(3,522 posts)I had pesto last night on basil linguini. It was great! I use a food processor. It doesnt take any time, and I get the nuts more like ground than paste, which is how my mother in law taught me to make and like it. She also used walnuts and more parsley than basil. But for her it was because she had walnut trees!
erronis
(16,827 posts)However black garlic is delicious as a spread - like fig jam. (I don't think useful for cooking.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_garlic