Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Hot on HuffPost Food:

See More Stories
Tell us what you think for a chance at $1000!

"green garlic" news and stories

Green Garlic and Fava Wheat Berry Salad - Feast Your Eyes


Put some spring into your whole grains, and kick off the season with a healthy one-dish meal. This salad from blogger delamentals is nutty and crunchy with wheat berries (the entire wheat kernel). Then add some new garlic, which has a milder flavor than you'll find in the mature bulb. Blanch and peel some gorgeous green fava beans to add fresh flavor and texture, and toss in some crumbled feta cheese for a bit of creamy saltiness. As a food critic pal of mine used to say, "It has everything you need, and nothing you don't." Well, maybe a cold glass of Prosecco to go with it, and a toast to all the vets on this Memorial Day. Cheers!

Become a member of the Slashfood Flickr pool for a shot of having your photos featured in Feast Your Eyes.

Filed under: Feast Your Eyes

Green Garlic, Chopped Liver and Vegas: The L.A. Times In 60 Seconds


  • Even garlic is going green -- and adding nice mellow flavor as it does.
  • "Zinfandel's like Beyonce"... and these wines are Zin's sexy backup singers.
  • For the Vegas-bound, here are tons of great new restaurants.
  • If you're thinking more about China than Vegas, try out Yu Garden -- a taste of Shanghai without the 12-hour plane trip.
  • What is this, chopped liver? Why, yes, it is actually.

Filed under: Newspapers, In 60 Seconds, News

Sponsored Links

A bounty of spring green garlic

Several rubber-banded bunches of green garlic
Until last year, I had never heard of green garlic. I was certainly familiar with regular old garlic, it was ever-present in my childhood kitchen, but I generally didn't give much thought to the younger, spring version of that familiar, stinky bulb until it started appearing all over the media. It (along with ramps) was the springtime darling. I actually missed out on it last year because the large Headhouse Square Farmers' Market didn't open until the beginning of July and the smaller markets I frequent didn't carry it, but I was intrigued by it.

But this year, there was an abundance of green garlic, in all of its purple, white and green glory. The first weekend of the market I picked a bunch up (even though I didn't really know what to do with it) and brought it home. That week I chopped up several of the bulbs and their leggy greens and sauteed them with onions and sausage for a quick pasta topper. I've used it in place of regular garlic in lots of things and have also tossed thin slices with some early tomatoes, salt and olive oil for a tasty salad (eat it with toasted pain au levain). I'm enchanted by the idea of making pesto with them like Sarah Gilbert has done.

How do you use green garlic?

Source

Filed under: Ingredients

Great green garlic

green garlicIn the New York Times Magazine, chef Daniel Patterson, owner of Coi in San Francisco, admits to a massive kitchen taboo - he doesn't like garlic. Well, he doesn't like eye-stinging, cutting-board ruining radioactive garlic, that is. What he does like is green garlic, the young stalks of the garlic plant plucked before they reach maturity. Also known as spring or new garlic, it goes perfectly with springtime dishes like lamb, peas and fava beans. Patterson likes to turn it into a aioli-like sauce by pureeing it with egg, oil and vinegar and using it as a sandwich spread and an artichoke dip.

The story includes a great-looking recipe for linguine with green garlic sauce, which I'll have to try next time I get my hands on four pounds of Manila clams. If you try it, please let me know how it is!

Source

Filed under: Magazines, Ingredients

Most Popular Stories

  • FDA Still Struggling to Define

    FDA Still Struggling to Define "Gluten-Free"Read More

  • This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg Itself

    This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg ItselfRead More

  • Why Jewish Food Disappoints

    Why Jewish Food DisappointsRead More

Latest Flickr Feed


Sponsored Links