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Re: Thai Fire garlic

By: capt_nemo in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (0)
Fri, 24 May 19 12:09 AM | 20 view(s)
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Msg. 32719 of 62138
(This msg. is a reply to 32714 by hydro_gen)

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YUM............Ya ever eat elephant garlic? They are real big and mild. They are great cutting off the tops and slather with olive oil and bake in the oven. Makes a great garlic spread...

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The mature bulb is broken up into cloves which are quite large and with papery skins and these are used for both culinary purposes and propagation. Also, much smaller cloves with a hard shell grow on the outside of the bulb. Many gardeners often ignore these, but if they are planted, they produce a nonflowering plant in their first year, which has a solid bulb, essentially a single large clove. In their second year, this single clove then, like a normal bulb, divides into many separate cloves. While it may take an extra year, it is desirable to plant these small bulbils (several can be produced by each bulb) and the harvest increased, though delayed a year.

Unlike many garlics, elephant garlic does not have to be harvested or divided each year, but can be ignored and left in the ground without much risk of rotting. The plant, if left alone, will spread into a clump with many flowering heads (one stalk and flower from each clove, once the bulb divides). These are often left in flower gardens as an ornamental and to discourage pests. Of course, once they get overcrowded, the plant may not do as well, and growth is stunted, with some rotting.

Elephant garlic is not generally propagated by seeds.

The immature plant tops can be topped off (cut) when the plant is young and they are still tender, as can be done with onions, and chives, along with the very immature flower bud, and are called scapes. They can be pickled, lactofermented, stir fried, added to soups, etc. The scapes (whether elephant garlic, garlic, onion, chive, or garlic chive) can also be frozen without any cooking, and generally remain fresh for a year or so without freezer burn, to be added to any soup, stew, stir-fry, etc. Topping the plants off also helps more of the plant's energy to be directed toward the bulb. Since seed is not generally gathered from elephant garlic, this is the best use of resources and helps the bulb, though it does detract from the aesthetic value. A few scapes can be left to mature into stalks to flower.

Like regular garlic, elephant garlic can be roasted whole on the grill or baked in the oven, and then used as a spread with butter on toast. Fresh elephant garlic contains mostly moisture and foams up like boiling potatoes, whether on the stove or in a glass dish in the oven. Drying in the basement for a few months reduces the moisture content, and also brings out a fuller flavor.

Properties
When crushed and then analyzed using a DART ion source, elephant garlic has been shown to produce both allicin, found in garlic, and syn-propanethial-S-oxide (onion lachrymatory factor), found in onion and leek, but absent in garlic, consistent with the classification of elephant garlic as a closer relative of leek than of garlic.[1]

Cultivation
Elephant garlic can be planted at two different times of the year: spring and autumn. In warmer areas, it can be grown over winter for a late-spring harvest.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_garlic




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Thai Fire garlic
By: hydro_gen
in POPE 5
Thu, 23 May 19 10:34 PM
Msg. 32714 of 62138

OK - first garlic harvest of 2019 went very well. "Thai Fire" Rich complex flavors with heat that builds from first to last bite. Thai Fire is a Turban garlic from Bangkok with rich complex flavor. Nut brown to royal purple colored bulb covers give way to cloves that gradually increase in heat intensity from first bite. Turbans are among the earliest harvesting garlic but will sprout quickly, within a couple months of harvest. They will store for 4-6 months yet in my house they rarely last that long!! All of the ones in the photo are the largest and avg 2 1/2 inches +/- and are considered jumbo seed so I save the largest from this years crop to plant for next year. After curing for roughly 4 weeks I will trim the tops and cut the roots - store seed stock and then eat and share the rest.


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