Bouchon’s Garlic Confit Recipe

Posted by on Apr 21, 2009

Welcome to another installment of Thomas Keller’s Building Block. On the agenda today is a demonstration on making Garlic Confit. *chuckle*

As you may know, confit is the method of slow cooking and storing an ingredient in oil, such as duck confit. Garlic confit is an essential element in the Bouchon kitchen and is used throughout many of the recipes. While the process is not complicated, it does require some time so I make a big batch and store it in the fridge so I always have it on hand. To put it into perspective, his recipes often require 20+ cloves at a time!
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Garlic is without a doubt one of the most popular ingredients and flavors utilized in cuisines all around the world. As with mangoes, garlic is one thing I’m also obsessed with but thankfully, it’s available year round. Garlic chips is my most recent favorite. Proper preparation is essential in order for garlic to fully enhance the dish. Otherwise, it can sometimes end up too sharp, bitter, or bland.

Before encountering this Garlic Confit recipe, I used to make roasted garlic often and would pop a couple caramelized cloves into my mouth before incorporating the rest into my dish. While I love the sweet, nutty flavor and its creamy texture, it can be tedious when trying to ease them out of the bulb without breaking them. Often times, they came out too soft and disintegrated into the dish. These problems are solved by making Garlic Confit instead and you also get garlic infused oil as a bonus!


Ingredients

Peeled garlic cloves
Canola oil


Directions

I find garlic cloves easier to peel if I cut the root ends off first since it needs to be trimmed off anyways. A simpler solution is to buy pre-peeled garlic cloves at the Asian supermarket. I bought a tubful for $2.00 at a Korean supermarket, which is even cheaper than buying whole bulbs. How do they do it?!
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Place the cloves into a saucepan and submerge them in oil by 1 inch. Turn the burner on to medium-low heat. Keller instructs to place the saucepan over a diffuser but since I don’t have one, I placed the saucepan over a sauté pan to evenly distribute the heat.
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Set your timer to 40 minutes and check on it every 5 minutes and give it a gentle stir. Adjust the heat so you only see tiny bubbles rise from the cloves. It should not be steaming or sizzling and the garlic cloves should remain white. It should, however, make your whole place smell like a cozy bistro. *breathes in twice as hard*
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At around 40 minutes or when the garlic cloves are tender, remove them from the heat and store them in the oil for up to a month. Smear them over a toasted baguette with some anchovies for a quick and smelly snack.

I added these soft, juicy cloves in abundance to some Bouchon recipes that I will share soon, such as the slurp-worthy Clams Marinières with Soffritto and a spring-inspired Lentil Soup, so stay tuned!


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  • http://www.three-bowls.com Leslie

    Holy cow, those sound amazing, and I can’t believe I haven’t seen this before. I mean, I haven’t read Keller’s stuff yet, but this seems so simple and delicious that I am surprised garlic confit-making has not swept the nation. Will be getting a bunch and trying it soon.

    Once the cloves are used up, is the oil usable for something or is it pretty cashed at that point?

  • http://www.bouchonfor2.com/ Mel (admin)

    That’s part of the beauty! The oil is incredibly garlicky and tasty and will make a great addition to many dishes and salads. I would use it to saute greens or in a salad dressing.

  • http://lisaiscooking.blogspot.com/ lisaiscooking

    I love garlic in any form, and now I think I need a large quantity of garlic confit in my refrigerator at all times!

  • http://www.mattikaarts.com/blog matt wright

    Love garlic confit. Ever since getting the Bouchon book a couple of years ago now, garlic confit has been something that I am rarely without. It adds a lot of depth and character to so many dishes – and is great on toast :D

  • http://www.bouchonfor2.com/ Mel (admin)

    lisaiscooking: I must have it in my fridge now at all times. The best thing about it is you can add a ridiculous amount to any dish and it won’t be over powering.

    matt wright: for sure! I wonder if you’ve tried some of his recipes?

  • http://theworldtastesgood.blogspot.com Sapuche

    This post just proves that I really need to get Keller’s book. This looks amazing, and I love that you can keep it refrigerated for later use on whatever you please. Loved the photos, too, as always. I can’t wait to check out your forthcoming clam recipe!

  • http://tanglednoodle.blogspot.com Tangled Noodle

    I am so going to make this! I love garlic, I love garlic-infused oil, and I love garlic! Thanks for the tip re: pre-peeled cloves; I’ll check for it next time. And also for the ‘diffuser’ idea – I wouldn’t have know what that was in the first place but your pic and explanation spells it out. Excellent post!

  • http://stumptownsavoury.com Stumptown Savoury

    Love your diffuser idea! I’ll definitely use that tip myself when I make this recipe. Thanks for coming up with a great solution.

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