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Remove clove from bulb, cut root end off, bash with the side of a knife, skin comes off easily.Or, if you're in a rush, just cut the whole of the root end off the garlic bulb, lightly bash the bulb with the heel of the hand, and as above for each individual clove.
I make it all the time, just my own view but I'm not keen on using pre-bought pastes, including spice pastes, it's just a step too close to using Lloyd Grossman sauces for my liking. I know people way say yeah but restaurants use them and that's fine but it's just not for me.
All the gg pastes that I have seen in the videos are really bright white but whenever I have blended it with just water, within no time at all, it turns green, and I mean proper green.
Oh, and that greeny/blue aged GG mix is perfectly safe to eat.
Hi SS,I agree, a light bash, does help with the peeling. I can't remember who it was that suggested giving them a bit of a soak in boiling water but I tried it, and it's even better than the 'lightly bash' method. The skin almost slips off in one, once the root end has been cut away.Still, would the restaurants do it though? I just wonder that's all. I'm thinking, how long does it take to knock up a nights service worth, half an hour - an hour. Even if the guy doing it, is on minimum wage, it still works out cheaper to buy jarred than to make fresh!Remember, I'm not asking which is best, only which is more likely to be used.Ray P.S, I also agree with Stephen SS, pastes are bad, way too tart and shouldn't have a place in BIR or TA cooking, but unfortunately, this way of commercial cooking seems to be the way.
Mick that's the sort of eye-witness experience we need here.Why don't you post more often?