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Q&A

Comments on Freezing garlic: to peel or not to peel?

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Freezing garlic: to peel or not to peel?

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I have heard that one way to preserve fresh garlic cloves is to freeze them. I've seen some places that say that a frozen clove will be a little mushier when it's thawed later but is still fine for cooking with. But I've seen conflicting advice about peeling first.

What are the effects of peeling, or not peeling, the cloves before freezing? Assume they will then be frozen in an air-tight, but not vacuum-sealed, container. (I'm open for suggestions on what's best there -- plastic or glass jar with screw-on lid, zipper bag, something else?)

I want to save some of my current garlic overflow for use in cooking later. Usually this means slicing or mincing it, but if one of the options lets me roast whole cloves later, I'm interested in that one.

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2 comment threads

Freeze the roasted garlic (2 comments)
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Freeze the roasted garlic
dsr‭ wrote over 3 years ago

If your real desire is roasted garlic to use later, why not roast it now and freeze it when it has cooled? Storing a paste in freezer-grade ziplocs should do well. I use this method for extra pesto.

(How does one get extra pesto? The local farmshare has invited people to pick as much as they can use of certain overflow crops in certain years.)

Monica Cellio‭ wrote over 3 years ago

dsr‭ it never occurred to me to freeze the roasted garlic, thanks! I somehow had the idea that the free-thaw cycle would affect it negatively, though now I don't know why I thought that.