Translations:Garlic/44/en: Difference between revisions

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Message definition (Garlic)
Green garlic imparts a garlic flavor and aroma in food, minus the spiciness. Green garlic is often chopped and [[stir-fried]] or cooked in [[soup]] or [[hot pot]] in Southeast Asian (i.e. [[Vietnamese cuisine|Vietnamese]], [[Thai cuisine|Thai]], [[Burmese cuisine|Myanmar]], [[Lao cuisine|Lao]], [[Cambodian cuisine|Cambodian]], [[Singaporean cuisine|Singaporean]]), and [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese cookery]], and is very abundant and low-priced. Additionally, the immature flower stalks ([[scape (botany)|scapes]]) of the hardneck are sometimes marketed for uses similar to [[asparagus]] in [[Stir frying|stir-fries]].
[[File:Warzywa czosnek002.jpg|thumb|Garlic plants]]
Inedible or rarely eaten parts of the garlic plant include the "skin" covering each clove and root cluster. The papery, protective layers of "skin" over various parts of the plant are generally discarded during preparation for most culinary uses, though in [[Korea]] immature whole heads are sometimes prepared with the tender skins intact. The root cluster attached to the [[bulb|basal plate]] of the bulb is the only part not typically considered palatable in any form.

Green garlic imparts a garlic flavor and aroma in food, minus the spiciness. Green garlic is often chopped and stir-fried or cooked in soup or hot pot in Southeast Asian (i.e. Vietnamese, Thai, Myanmar, Lao, Cambodian, Singaporean), and Chinese cookery, and is very abundant and low-priced. Additionally, the immature flower stalks (scapes) of the hardneck are sometimes marketed for uses similar to asparagus in stir-fries.

Garlic plants

Inedible or rarely eaten parts of the garlic plant include the "skin" covering each clove and root cluster. The papery, protective layers of "skin" over various parts of the plant are generally discarded during preparation for most culinary uses, though in Korea immature whole heads are sometimes prepared with the tender skins intact. The root cluster attached to the basal plate of the bulb is the only part not typically considered palatable in any form.