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TEST YOUR G.Q. - YOUR GARLIC I.Q.
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We are continuously
amazed by how interested people are in garlic. The "stinking rose"
or perhaps more elegantly, "the fragrant pearl," has a long
and interesting history. We have prepared a compendium of facts and figures
on garlic which we hope you will enjoy. So the next time you are engaged
in a stimulating evening of conversing about garlic (what else could be
finer?), you should have plenty of clove factoids to sprinkle into
your chatter to demonstrate your "garlic breadth."
Do you have
some garlic facts, trivia or tidbits you would like to share? If you would
like us to consider adding your clove of information to this compendium,
just send your contribution to
TheChief Clove.
IF YOU WANT
TO LEARN MORE ABOUT GARLIC, SEE ALSO
How To Grow Garlic,
Garlic Books,
Garlic Quotes,
The Garlic Bibliography
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How Many Kinds of Garlic are There?
According to Ron Engeland, author of
Growing Great Garlic
there may well be over 450 identifiable strains of garlic.
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What are Cloves, Bulbs and Bulbils?
The mature garlic plant produces a bulb, sometimes called a head of garlic,
with numerous individual cloves inside the paper-like wrapper. An individual
clove when planted will reproduce an entire bulb after about nine months.
Some varieties of garlic also produce bulbils on top of their tall stalks
(scapes). These are not true seeds, but can serve the same function. Bulbils
are secondary cloves often produced in the flower cluster.
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What is Hardneck Garlic?
Technically, it is allium sativum ophioscorodon, which some people
call "ophios" because it's a darn site easier to say. Unlike the
softneck garlic grown commercially, especially in California, this garlic
subspecies produces a hard, woody flower stalk. The flower (topset or umbel)
often contains bulbils. Many varieties develop partial or full coils in
the stalks (scapes). Some growers pop the top of their hardneck garlics,
that is, they cut off the stalk in order to increase the size of the harvested
bulbs. The results vary from variety to variety. Many of the hardnecks,
also called topsetters have very rich and distinctive flavors, including
the much prized Rocamboles. Many chefs praise the various hardneck varieties
for their true garlic flavor. The cloves are also relatively easy to peel.
They do tend to have a shorter shelf life than softneck garlics.
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What is Rocambole Garlic?
Rocamboles are a specific group of ophio or hardneck garlics. They are argued
by some to have the best flavor of all. They are also distinguished by their
unique curling scapes, coiling 360 degrees or more. Rocamboles are therefore
sometimes called serpent garlic. As the plant matures, the coil straightens
out and the scape can extend to a height of five feet or more. A field of
Rocamboles waving their scapes in the early summer wind can be a wondrous
sight. The uncoiled scapes are increasingly used in flower arrangements
(Garlic Flowers).
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What is Softneck Garlic?
The are two basic types of garlic, hardneck and softneck. You can easily
tell them apart in the store. If the stem at the top of the bulb is soft
and papery, it is a softneck. Most of the commercially grown garlic, especially
from California, is of the softneck variety. It is technically called allium
sativum sativum. It does not produce a flowering stalk. Hardneck, as
the name implies, has a hard stalk almost as thick as a pencil. The softnecks
tend to have longer shelf lives than the hardnecks. They also tend to have
more, but smaller, cloves per bulb, and are somewhat harder to peel than
hardnecks.
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Can You Grow Garlic from a Bulbil?
Bulbils are small secondary cloves, though not true seeds, that are formed
in the flower cluster (umbel) atop the scape of hardneck garlics. Bulbils
range in size from that of rice grains to peas, depending upon the variety
of garlic. They can be planted either in fall or spring and will produce
small garlic plants the first year. Harvestable bulbs will result in years
two or three.
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What is a Scape?
Hardneck garlic developes an impressive flowering stalk, called a scape,
which can grow from 24 to 48 inches in height. At the top is the "seed"
pod (a.k.a. topset), more properly called the umbel, which contains the
flowers and bulbils. The umbel pod is covered in by the spathe, which often
has a pronounced beak. Some garlic varieties give improved yields if the
scape is cut before umbel development. The scapes on Rocamboles form beautiful
circular curls. These are prized by floral arrangers in some countries,
especially Japan. See our
Garlic Flowers section.
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What is Elephant Garlic?
Technically elephant garlic is more closely related to the leek. In the
past it has also been called "giant garlic" and "giant leek."
The huge bulbs, with several cloves which can individually be the size of
regular garlic bulbs, are famous for their rich but milder flavor. The largest
bulbs can sometimes reach a weight of a half pound or more. They have tall
scapes, which can reach five feet in height, with a beautiful purple flower
on their top (see Garlic Flowers). This
variety was first commercially grown in Oregon, but its origin is probably
from central Europe from which it was brought by immigrants. Yucca Ridge Farm
grows a Rocky Mountain elephant which we call
Buffalo Garlic. They are ideal for roasting (see
Garlic Recipe of the Month).
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What is Spring Baby Garlic?
When the shoots from a fall-planted clove start growing again in the spring,
they look somewhat like green onions, but they taste just like garlic. If
you harvest the plant, which at this stage has no really identifiable bulb,
it makes a marvelous addition to many recipes. It can be used whenever the
texture of scallions and the taste of garlic are desired.
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What are the Most Commonly Grown Garlic Varieties in the U.S.?
Most commercially grown garlic is produced in the interior valleys of California.
Two varieties, California Early and California Late, make up the bulk of
the production. This is the kind of garlic you are most likely to find in
the supermarket. However, there are an abundance of other garlic types known
to gourmets and fine chefs, including the prized Rocamboles. See our
Bulbils section for how to buy bulbs
and seeds in order to grow many of the interesting varieties that thrive
around the country, even in the cold north.
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What U.S. City is Named after Garlic?
While Gilroy, CA is famous for growing and processing garlic, the answer
is Chicago, that toddling town. French explorers who first came to the region
in 1687 asked the local Native Americans what their name for the placeChicaguoaactually
meant. They said it was named for a pungent plant that grew in the woods
that they used for cooking as well as to treat wounds. The plant was most
likely wild garlic (although some claim it really was onions or leeks).
In any case, because the French didn't speak the local dialect very well
(they expected the Native Americans to learn French, what else is new),
the name eventually becameChicago. And of course there is Ajo, Arizona.
Ajo is Spanish for garlic, so that little city is quite literally "Garlic
USA"<
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Where Was the First Garlic Festival Held?
There are dozens of Garlic Festivals springing up around the United States
as the "garlic revolution" continues. Remember, as recently as
the 1950s, only "they" ate garlic. The Gilroy Garlic Festival,
the first and most well-known of the large-scale bulb bashes, was started
in 1979. It in turn was patterned after a festival held for decades in Arleux,
France. The ever-so nice Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, CA may have
hosted the nation's first all garlic occasion in 1976. See our links to
Garlic Festivals.
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How Do You Say "Garlic" Around the World?
When traveling and dining out in interesting new restaurants, perhaps the
most important word to know is "garlic", so your server knows
what you want to eat:
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French
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Italian
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Spanish
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Bostonian
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Polish
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ail
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aglio
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ajo
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gaahlick
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czosnek
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German
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Arabic
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Hebrew
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Olde English
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Japanese
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knoblauch
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thum
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shum
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garleac
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ninniku
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Turkish
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Norwegian
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Greek
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Portugese
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Armenian
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sarmisak
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hvitløk
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scortho
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alho
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sekhtor
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Of
course, when dining out in a foreign land, it helps to know more than one
word. There is the story of the missionary couple in pre-communist China
who went to a country restaurant for dinner, and took their pet dog along
with them. They pointed to the dog when they ordered so that the waiter
would also get some food for their precious puppy. The waiter led the dog
into the kitchen, presumably, the missionaries thought, to be fed dinner.
You can pretty well figure out the rest of this sad story. The pooch was
apparently served with a spicy garlic sauce, however.
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How do you Grow Garlic?
See our section, How to Grow Garlic, or
if you really want to dig deep into the topic, read the standard text for
the garlic gardener, Growing Great Garlic by Ron Engeland, available from
Garlic Books at TheGarlicStore.
Garlic can be grown almost anywhere in the country, including the northernmost
states.
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key item to remember. Garlic, which is a bulb, is best planted in the fall
(September-October) in most parts of the country. Plant about 6 weeks before
the ground freezes. Cloves should be planted about 4-5 inches apart at a
depth of 2 -3 inches. The pointy side should be up, or conversely, the scab,
or root side, should be down. [Note: You can plant bulbils both in spring
and fall.] In colder climates it is very important to mulch the garlic bed
to a depth of three inches or more. Grass clippings or seed free straw are
best. It is not unusual for leaves to sprout in the fall. They will even
grow slowly during the winter. They can survive unusually cold conditions
with little more than tip damage. Water heavily in the fall and again in
the spring when growth is fastest. Cut watering rates substantially in the
four weeks or so before harvest (July into August). Nitrogen fertilization
at planting should be applied at a rate of 40 - 60 pounds per acre. Foliar
applications of nitrogen in the spring are very helpful. Garlic likes fertile,
deeply cultivated soil, but does well in a rather wide variety of soil types
and conditions. The soil should be neutral to slightly acidic with a pH
of 6.2 to 6.8. Keep the garlic patch weed free. Garlic does not compete
well with weeds. |
How Much Garlic Do You Need for Planting?
Typically you should save one-seventh of your crop for planting stock. Break
up your garlic bulb and plant the individual cloves. The bigger the clove
the bigger the resulting bulb will be at harvest. Different varieties have
different numbers of cloves per bulbs. One rule of thumb says that one pound
of bulbs yields about 50 large cloves suitable for planting. This works
out to about 40 pounds of garlic to plant a thousand square feet.
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When Do You Harvest Garlic?
Our experience on the hot, dry prairies of eastern Colroado is that garlic
typically matures in mid-July to early August. While some people claim one
should wait for all the leaves to all turn brown, we do not find this to
be the case. Typically harvest should be after the bottom-most leaves have
browned but there are still five or so green leaves on the stalks. Waiting
longer does not improve bulb size since growth has already stopped by this
time. It is better to harvest earlier than later. Using a pitch fork facilitates
the process of loosening the soil so the bulbs can be more easily pulled.
Limit the exposure of the harvested bulb to strong sunlight. The bulbs can
be scalded and lose quality if they get "sunburned." Do not harvest
when the soil is wet, or the bulb wrappers may be dirty and discolored.
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How Do you Cure Garlic?
Freshly dug garlic is not quite ready for the table. It should be cured
for several weeks. The ideal is to place the bulbs in burlap sacks or onion
bags and let them dry in a well ventilated shed, with temperatures in the
60s or 70s, outside of the direct sunlight. Garlic bulbs should not be allowed
to freeze. Most people leave the stalks and leaves on during curing and
drying.
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Where Should You Store Garlic?
Just like bananas and bread, garlic should never be stored in the refrigerator!
After harvest, keep bulbs in well aerated bags or baskets. The humidity
should not be too high or germination will start. Relative humidities in
the 30-50% range are best. Cool temperatures a little below 60 degrees are
ideal. In the kitchen, keep the bulbs at room temperature in a well ventilated
container. Many kitchen stores have garlic keepers. A simple cloth sack
will do the job though. After harvest, bulbs will keep for several months,
depending on the variety. If cloves begin to shrivel inside the wrapper,
or if humidity causes sprouting, this bulb is way past its prime.
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Where did Garlic Originate?
Horticulturists argue a lot about this one. But one of the better theories
is that wild garlic was first domesticated in the Kirgiz desert of southern
Siberia. It certainly grows there. People tend to think of garlic as a warm
weather plant. In fact many varieties don't do well unless they experience
cold winter weather (like tulips and daffodils). Many varieties produce
hotter bulbs after colder winters. So Siberians could grow garlic and during
the last century they were allowed to pay their taxes with garlic. I think
if Congress ever does anything with tax reform, sending cloves to the IRS
sounds like a splendid idea!
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Did Ancient Peoples such as the Egyptians Use Garlic?
In large quantities. The builders of the pyramids were often paid in fresh
garlic, in part to maintain their strength and stamina. Garlic was found
in King Tutankhamen's tomb. Egyptian men were reputed to chew on a clove
after a night of dalliance lest their wives get a whiff of their rival's
perfume. Egyptian medical manuals from 1500 BCE list almost two dozen treatments
using garlic.
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Where was Garlic First Domesticated?
There
is evidence that garlic was placed in ancient Egyptian tombs as early as
5000 years ago. There are numerous references to garlic in Chinese literature
as far back as 2000 BCE. Chinese sacrificial lambs were spiced with garlic
to make them more appealing to the gods. You can find garlic praised in
ancient Sanskrit writings. By 1500 BCE, garlic was old hat, having spread
to virtually every civilization in Europe, Asia and North Africa.
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Is Garlic mentioned in the Bible?
Of course! We read in Numbers 11:5 " We remember the fish, which
we did eat in Egypt freely; the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks,
and the onions, and the garlic". There is also a Muslim legend claiming
that when Satan stepped out of the Garden of Eden, garlic sprang up from
his footsteps.
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How Much Garlic is Consumed in the U.S. Each Year?
In the 1930s, less than 16 millions pounds of garlic were grown in the United
States, mainly to serve the needs of recent immigrants from the "old
country." Back then, for the most part, garlic was shunned in "polite
society," probably a relic from the Victorian era. My, how times have
changed. According to the Fresh Garlic Association, more than 300 million
pounds were consumed in the U.S. last year, and the amount is growing each
year. Much of the supply comes from California. Old Mexico, Chile and China
are also major producers. Many small growers (like Yucca Ridge Farm) of
varietal garlics, such as Rocambole, are popping up all around the nation.
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How Should You Cook Garlic?
Chefs
recommend that you dice garlic finely with a sharp knife. It is not necessary
to crush garlic to release the flavor. Saute garlic at low temperature so
it does not burn and takes on an acrid, unpleasant taste. The garlic does
not need to brown, but should remain translucent in the pan. The garlic
will also continue to cook slowly after the other ingredients are added.
Some cooks also rub a sliced clove all around a warming pan to add the essential
flavor, or rub the sides of the salad bowl.
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How Should You Roast Garlic?
Roasted
garlic cloves on toast or French bread with cheese such as a brie or a camembert,
and perhaps some sliced almonds or capers, are one of life's great pleasures.
While garlic roasters can be purchased in cooking stores, aluminum foil
can do the job nicely. Just trim the upper quarter inch or so off the bulb,
exposing the cloves. Drizzle with some olive oil and, if desired, some salt
and pepper. Especially for elephant/buffalo garlic, a little cooking sherry
mellows the taste. Wrap the bulbs in foil and slow cook them in a 325 degrees
F oven for about an hour and a half. The treat is ready when you can easily
pop the clove out of its wrapper and spread it on the bread like butter.
Enjoy.
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What Gives Garlic its Pungent Odor?
Fresh garlic is generally odor-free. Only when cut or crushed do chemical
reactions take place which produce the glorious scent. The garlic odor results
primarily from a chemical called diallyl disulphide, which is a breakdown
product from allicin.
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What is a Simple Remedy for Garlic Breath?
Chewing on several sprigs of raw parsley can significantly cut back on garlic
breath. Of course, if everyone else has had garlic, problem solved. Besides,
it's now chic to reek. The French claim red wine can also eliminate garlic
breath. We are not sure about that, but we keep experimenting anyway.
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How Can You Get Rid of Garlic Odor on Your Hands?
Its hard to cook with garlic without getting some on your hands. After exposure,
scrub your hands with salt and lemon juice, using cold water. Then rinse
off with soapy warm water.
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What is the Nutritional Breakdown of a Clove of Garlic?
Everyone
wants to know what they are eating these days. Reading food nutritional
labels has become a national fad (well, maybe). But here is the official
U.S. Department of Agriculture breakdown of a single garlic clove:
2-7
Calories, 0.2 grams protein, 01 grams fat, .05 grams fiber, 1.0 grams
carbohydrate, 1.4 mg calcium, 10 mg phosphorous, .07 mg iron, 0.9 mg sodium,
26 mg potassium, .01 mg vitamin B1, .004 mg vitamin B2, .02 mg niacin,
.75 mg vitamin C
Each
clove is also rich in many trace elements including zinc, manganese, germanium
and especially selenium plus numerous sulfur compounds. These latter are
where the real health benefits may lie
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What are the health-promoting chemicals in garlic?
Aside
from being low in calories at well under 10 calories per clove, being low
in fat and having no cholesterol, the garlic clove may be a veritable medicine
cabinet of beneficial compounds. In 1858 none other than Louis Pasteur noted
the antiseptic properties of garlic. In the 1940s, a Nobel Prize winning
chemist by the name of Dr. Arthur Stoll discovered the compound allicin
which he felt was key in garlic's bacterial battling capabilities. As a
clove is crushed or sliced the enzyme allinase triggers a series of complex
chemical reactions. One of the resulting chemicals, allicin, is generally
regarded as one of the key players in garlic medicine. Other substances
such as adenosine and ajoene also may be of great significance. This is
an area of very active research and new findings are being released almost
daily.
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What Ailments Has Garlic Been Claimed to Prevent and Correct?
There are numerous medical claims about the benefits of garlic. The claims
range from highly controlled clinical studies all the way to borderline
quackery. But there is little doubt that garlic has many therapeutic properties
and nutritional science is gradually beginning to sort out the benefits.
Among the ailments that garlic has been proposed to alleviate to one degree
or another are:
acne,
asthma, high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, heart disease, diabetes,
dysentery, baldness, arthritis, cancer, earache, eczema, emphysema,
digestive disorders, heavy metal poisoning, hives, infections, intestinal
worms, insomnia, evil eye, colds, influenza, allergies, toothache, warts
and vampires.
Ancient Romans
were reputed to use a paste of crushed garlic to try to cure hemorrhoids.
During the Black Death in Europe some doctors stuffed garlic cloves into
their face masks to help ward off the plague. Even during World War I,
in the pre-antibiotic era, garlic juice was widely and effectively used
as an antiseptic on the wounds of Allied soldiers.
The National
Institute of Health has conducted a major research project on the cancer
fighting properties of garlic. In 1990, Washington, DC hosted the First
World Congress on the Health Significance of Garlic and Garlic Constituents.
In order
to sort out the many claims we have provided sections summarizing the
various books, medical literature and news stories on garlic. We here
at TheGarlicStore take our daily garlic supplements and we feel just fine,
thank you.
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Does Garlic Lower Cholesterol?
A
number of medical studies have pointed towards garlic being "the aspirin
of the 90s". It has been reputed to lower blood pressure and bad cholesterol
as well as sporting anti-microbial and anti-carcinogenic properties.
The director
of the world famous cardiac health project, the Framingham Study, includes
garlic in his listing of foods that may contribute to the prevention of
heart disease.
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Do Cultures that Consume Large Amounts of Garlic Enjoy Greater Health?
Separating
out the impact of a single food on the health of a population is a very
difficult scientific task. High garlic consumption has been claimed to be
one reason there is relatively less heart disease in China. But there are
a multitude of other influences. There is one famous study, however, of
an Indian religious cult, the Jains. The members of one branch ate copious
quantities of onions and garlic (over a pound of onions plus 17 cloves)
each week. As a group they enjoyed low levels of blood cholesterol and triglycerides.
A more orthodox branch of Jains, who never ate onions or garlic, had significantly
higher cholesterol and triglycerides.
This may
not be news. According to Jean Carper, the popular nutrition writer, Indian
doctors prescribed garlic as a heart disease preventative almost 2000
years ago.
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Is there Really Such a Thing as Garlic Ice Cream?
Yes. We even have a
recipe for you! It is actually very good.
Next time you are in San Francisco, make reservations ( a must) at the Stinking
Rose Restaurant. They serve only garlic dishes. And the garlic ice cream
dessert is a refreshing and very appealing treat. Garlic ice cream is also
one of the mainstays of the Gilroy Garlic Festival.
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And What About the Vampire Thing?
It
must work. We have not seen one here at Yucca Ridge since we started growing
garlic. Garlic has also been reputed to fend off the "evil eye."
And it was once believed that by carrying garlic on one's person, one could
drive away snakes and scorpions and other critters with an unpleasant tendency
to bite. |
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