Food Reference Website Logo

Foodreference.com - Articles & Features Section
Articles, Essays, News & Interviews about food & beverages -  History, Culture, Science and More

. Home . . Articles & Features . . Food Trivia . . Cooking Tips . . Recipes . . Quotes . . Who's Who . . Food Timeline . . Food Videos . . Food Trivia Quizzes . . Crosswords . . Humor & Poetry . . Cookbooks . . Food Posters . . Magazines & Catalogs . . Flowers . . Key West . . Gourmet Tours . . Cooking Schools . . Festivals & Shows .

You Are Here > 

 HomeArticles & FeaturesChuck Hayes Articles & Recipes >  A Rose by Any Other Name >

Next

Bookmark and Share 

 

3 Young Chefs
Click on the
3 Young Chefs
for the best
Culinary Schools
Restaurant, Hospitality & Hotel Management Schools

Get a Free Trial issue!
SAVEUR
SAVEUR
The Award-Winning magazine that celebrates the people, places and rituals that establish culinary traditions

 

See Also: Trivia/Facts & Cooking Tips  

A Rose by Any Other Name

Chuck Hayes, Newborn, Georgia - garliclover101@gmail.com

 

“A rose by any other name….”


Its smell can be subtle or pungent.  Its taste can fluctuate between astringent & hot or sublimely mellow and creamy.  There is no guessing  when its scent is wafting through the air—you know what it is.  Oh yes, you know!   FAB-U-LOUS for those of us that love this thing.  It’s known by many different names.  Some of the least familiar and foreign may be:  ajo, knoblauch, look, alho, knoflook, ail, fokhagyma, aglio, or “The Stinking Rose”.   I’m talking about garlic.  It’s a love or hate thing mostly.  I don’t mostly love it.  I REALLY love it---just look at the top of the column to see how to reach me.

It has been attributed to help with:  heart disease, hypertension, cancer, immune system support, ear infections, as a gas reliever, flea repellant, helps get rid of athletes foot, aids in digestion, AND the taste of metabolized garlic in mother’s milk helps stimulate the nursing baby—thus aiding in his/her potential benefits from “natural” food.

Garlic (when roasted) is not the “stinky breath” memory maker that you might think.  You probably had it in a restaurant and didn’t even know it.  You probably had it mixed in with mayonnaise in a savory dip, and wondered where that ‘certain’  flavor came from that you couldn’t quite put your finger on.  I would bet that garlic was the culprit.  Try this recipe.  Mix a few cloves of the roasted garlic “squished” out of the clove into a few tablespoons of mayo.  Spread it on a sandwich for a lunch fete’,  and I bet that your guests will be perplexed as to what you did to make their lunch so special.

 

ROASTED GARLIC

--Preheat oven to 375 degrees
--Remove as much paper from two whole heads of garlic as you can without breaking apart cloves
--Cut of stem (pointed) end of head deep enough to expose the garlic cloves
--Place garlic heads in Ό cup water in small baking dish
--Drizzle 1 Tb olive oil over exposed head
--Bake until garlic is soft when easily pierced with a thin-bladed knife (approx 1 hour cooking time)
 

TOP


 

•Chuck Hayes Articles & Recipes• •Coney Sauce• •Greek Chicken• •Serbian Salad• •The Nose Knows• •Abject Failure• •Shrimp Scampi Done Right• •Surprise, Surprise, Surprise• •Japanese Soup• •Potato and Ham Soup• •Kildare Pork Roast• •Brining 101• •Kim Chee• •Killer Steak Marinade• •A Rose by Any Other Name• •Stuffed Jalapeno Peppers• •S.O.S.• •Viva La Revolution•


. Home . . About & Contact . . Cooking Tips . . Facts & Trivia . . Website Bibliography . . Food Links .



Please feel free to link to any pages of FoodReference.com from your website.
No permission is necessary to link to our pages.

For permission to use any of the content on FoodReference.com please contact:  james@foodreference.com

All contents of this website are copyright © 1990 - 2009 James T. Ehler and FoodReference.com unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved. You may copy and use portions of this website for non-commercial, personal use only. Any other use of the materials in this website without prior written permission is prohibited.
 



 

OTHER FEATURES

• Recipe Contests
• Food Festivals
• Holiday Features
• Football Food
• Today in Food History
• Food Trivia Quizzes
• Recommended CookBooks
 

Food Posters & Art

 

Unique Food Posters

 

Free Magazines