Safe from 6 months. One clove of garlic provides 2% of the daily value of manganese, vitamin B6, and vitamin C (USDA FoodData Central). It also contains allicin, a sulfur compound studied for its antimicrobial properties. Small amounts add big flavor to baby meals.
Raw garlic is intensely sharp, pungent, and sulfurous, with a heat that lingers. Cooking transforms it dramatically: sauteing produces a warm, savory depth, while slow roasting turns the cloves sweet, nutty, and almost caramel-like with no sharpness at all. It pairs naturally with olive oil, lemon, tomato, white beans, potato, broccoli, and butter.
Use as a flavor ingredient - roast a whole head and spread the soft cloves into purees or soft foods. Adds flavor without being overpowering when roasted.
Roasted garlic spread on toast, mixed into soft foods. Raw garlic is too strong.
Any preparation. A staple flavor in family cooking.
Ingredients
Steps
Red lentils dissolve completely when cooked, making this a naturally smooth, iron-rich base. The garlic adds savory depth without any raw bite.
Garden notes
Plant cloves in fall, harvest the following summer. Easy and rewarding. Great for flavor layering in baby food.
Plant cloves in fall for harvest the following summer - one of the longest-growing crops.
Harvest for baby
Harvest when lower leaves brown but upper leaves are still green. Cure for 2 weeks before using.
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