![]() Ancho chili powder is best for making adobo. Now feel free to use whatever chili powder you prefer, but I like to make my own. It’s super easy and much cheaper than buying store bought. The other day I showed you How to Make Dried Chipotle Peppers if you wanted to make them from scratch. It’s mainly known as the sauce poured over chipotle peppers. This was originally used to flavor and preserve meats and is fantastic in so many Mexican and Tex Mex dishes. What is Adobo Sauce?Īdobo Sauce is made from chili powder, vinegar, sugar, garlic and herbs. A traditional Mexican sauce made with ground ancho and guajillo chiles that has the consistency of a thick BBQ sauce, I’ll show you how to make it using simple pantry items and spices. Please read my disclosure policy.Īdobo Sauce is a rich, reddish brown, earthy flavored sauce synonymous with chipotle peppers. And along for that ride, in the side door of my refrigerator, is a jar of homemade garlic paste.This post may contain affiliate links. That lesson launched me on a culinary trajectory that I could not have predicted and that continues to evolve. Sautéing garlic in oil to cook rice is the first thing I learned from my mom, in her kitchen, some four decades ago. Homemade garlic and oil purée will keep refrigerated in a sealed container for a week, or frozen for up to six months.ĭespite the science, the convenience, or pros and cons of puréeing garlic in oil, there’s another reason why I do it-nostalgia. Onwuachi purées ginger and garlic with grapeseed oil, while Sharma told me he prefers to grate raw garlic cloves with a Microplane. To make garlic paste, my mom would simply put peeled garlic cloves in a small container, pour in enough olive oil to just cover the cloves, then purée it all in a blender. But sauté it in cooking oil to make rice or stir it to an aderezo base of sautéed chopped onion and tomato for a stew and it’ll become milder and sweeter. Add it raw to a sauce and it will pack some serious bite. The ultimate intensity of the flavor and aroma garlic paste adds to a dish depends on your next steps, too. That neutralization of flavor occurs whenever an acid (garlic) is combined with a base (calcium). “If you take garlic and mash it up in a marble mortar and pestle, you’ll have less garlic flavor." Perhaps you're not breaking as many cells open, but also, "because marble is alkaline in nature, it's basically highly pressurized calcium carbonate,” says Sharma. ![]() ![]() It also turns out that the tools we use to prep garlic make a difference. Sharma explains how processing garlic creates its intense aroma, “The more you chop garlic, the more the tissue breaks down, which means a larger number of cells keep breaking down and release an enzyme which produces flavor molecules.” But there is a drawback, adds Sharma, “The con to that is that because you're breaking it down so much, the surface area increases, which means that a lot of those flavor molecules are very volatile.” This means that, unless you use (or jar) the garlic paste quickly, flavor molecules will float away instead of making it into the food you are cooking. But what about the flavor? How is puréed garlic different from minced garlic? An exception, perhaps, is when you want a strong textural or visual element for the garlic, such as when slicing and frying garlic slivers for a salad. ![]() Garlic is a popular booster of savory flavors in many cultures, and cooking with homemade garlic paste, or ginger garlic paste, is certainly more convenient than having to peel and mince garlic cloves. “When I grew up in India, it was more of a convenience thing that people would blend ginger and garlic together,” he explains. There’s a whole half cup of GGP in a marinade for braised oxtail in Onwuachi’s book, two thirds cup GGP is reduced with sugar and ketchup to glaze over fried fish, and two teaspoons GGP are in the onion sauté for the charred eggplant stew that is baigan choka.ĭespite the popularity of GGP in Indian cuisine, Nik Sharma, food science expert and author of the 2020 cookbook The Flavor Equation, believes that puréeing ginger and garlic is relatively new.
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