South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
Never store garlic in oil, ever! Never make garlic oil, ever!
Hoekom? Lots of restaurants have the additional garlic in oil aside the main dish.
Also, making garlic oil is bad even if you're going to use it soon after making it?
They make it fresh before it's served, or they at least should. With the number of covers they serve, they would run a huge liability risk to knowingly serve old garlic oil...
Well you can do a hot infusion which would be fine to get the flavours in the oil, but storing garlic oil is just asking for trouble...
Garlic will also reject poisonous mould build ups...
I use to chop garlic fine and store it in olive oil for months at a time. Seems I need to reconsider my salad dressing recipe.
Natures antibiotic.
Absolutely. Garlic in the presence of fats and oils will, regardless of cold storage, become the perfect breeding ground for clostridium botulinum, which can be deadly. Rather just do a warm infusion just before using the oil...
we're tired of the iphone 5 vs galaxy sIII threads of late![]()
Shot. Yeah, was talking about an infusion to use almost immediately.
Absolutely. Garlic in the presence of fats and oils will, regardless of cold storage, become the perfect breeding ground for clostridium botulinum, which can be deadly. Rather just do a warm infusion just before using the oil...
You're fine there. Clostridium botulinum bacteria require time to develop, so using it immediately would be good. A word of advice here - do a warm infusion, not a hot one, as heat breaks up the fat's hydrocolloid structures and changes the flavour considerably, and can reduce it's efficacy of holding flavours. Basically you're changing the chemical structure of oil when heating it (which is why the viscosity changes) and it can reduce it's ability to absorb soluble flavour compounds at high temperatures. Think of it's ability to absorb volatile flavour compounds as being on a bell-curve, with the y-axis being heat and x-axis being flavour solubility...
I wonder if DJ.. studies like mad each time before he posts or if he knows these things off hand.
I wonder if DJ.. studies like mad each time before he posts or if he knows these things off hand.
What culinary school teaches these things?
I can only think that a department of Food Sciences at a university can impart this knowledge to someone.
I wonder if DJ.. studies like mad each time before he posts or if he knows these things off hand.
What culinary school teaches these things?
I can only think that a department of Food Sciences at a university can impart this knowledge to someone.
Well considering I've been studying food science in my spare time over the course of a few years, the vast majority of it is knowledge I already have. When questions are posed when I can't recall the names of the active chemicals involved, then I do a quick google for it to be sure. In fact the science of oils was sparked by a question on this very forum about truffle oil infusions a few years ago...
Many have food science modules but they're very basic. They deal in dispelling myths from what I've heard, but I've never completed an actual culinary course to answer in detail...
They certainly can but you can also learn it through a lot of reading and watching lectures and food science shows, which is what I've done...