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🧄 What If You Want to Cook Garlic That Long?
Good question. There’s a big difference between burning garlic and slow-cooking it properly.
If you want to cook garlic for an extended period — like 15 minutes — you can do it, but you must lower the heat and change the method:
✅ Low and Slow: Garlic Confit
✅ Roasted Garlic
Wrap a whole garlic bulb in foil and roast it at 400°F (200°C) for 30–40 minutes. The result is sweet, mellow, and utterly delicious — not bitter at all.
👨🍳 Pro Tips to Avoid Burning Garlic
- Add garlic later: If you’re sautéing onions or other ingredients, let them cook first before adding garlic.
- Use medium or low heat: Garlic burns fast in hot oil.
- Stir constantly: Don’t let garlic sit at the bottom of the pan.
- Watch color carefully: Once it starts turning golden, get ready to move fast.
The Bottom Line
Garlic is a culinary superhero — but it has a weakness: high heat for too long. After 15 minutes on the stove, garlic doesn’t just lose its charm — it can sabotage your dish.
So whether you’re making pasta sauce, stir-fry, or soup, remember this golden rule:
Garlic needs attention. Or it will turn on you.
Burnt garlic horror story or rescue hack? Share your experience with us using #GarlicGoneWrong!
Would you like this turned into a social media carousel, printable kitchen tip card, or video script? I’d be happy to format it for that!
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