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  2. The Secret To Peeling Garlic Quickly And Easily - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/secret-peeling-garlic...

    Place your garlic cloves in a small bowl, then fill it with with hot, just boiled water. After 30 seconds or up to a minute, remove the cloves. The skins should pop off or peel off more easily.

  3. The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_Cookery_Made...

    The book contains a recipe "To make Hamburgh Sausages"; it calls for beef, suet, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, "a great Quantity of Garlick cut small", white wine vinegar, salt, a glass of red wine and a glass of rum; once mixed, this is to be stuffed "very tight" into "the largest Gut you can find", smoked for up to ten days, and then air-dried; it ...

  4. Garlic sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlic_sauce

    Garlic sauce is a sauce prepared using garlic as a primary ingredient. It is typically a pungent sauce, with the depth of garlic flavor determined by the amount of garlic used. The garlic is typically crushed or finely diced. Simple garlic sauce is composed of garlic and another ingredient to suspend it via emulsion, such as oil, butter or ...

  5. Bolognese sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolognese_sauce

    The earliest documented recipe for a ragù served with pasta dates back to the end of the 18th century in Imola, near Bologna, from Alberto Alvisi, cook of the local Cardinal [7] Barnaba Chiaramonti, later Pope Pius VII. In 1891, Pellegrino Artusi published a recipe for a ragù characterized as bolognese in his cookbook. [8]

  6. Fry sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fry_sauce

    Pommes-Soße or Frittensoße (fry sauce) is a lightly spiced mayonnaise similar to the Dutch Fritessaus. A condiment similar to the American fry sauce is known as Cocktailsoße, but it is more often used for döner kebab than for French fries. In Iceland, a condiment similar to fry sauce called Kokteilsósa (cocktail sauce) is popular. [16]

  7. Sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sauce

    In cooking, a sauce is a liquid, cream, or semi-solid food, served on or used in preparing other foods. Most sauces are not normally consumed by themselves; they add flavour, texture, and visual appeal to a dish. Sauce is a French word probably from the post-classical Latin salsa, derived from the classical salsus 'salted'. [1]

  8. American cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_cuisine

    Traditionally, Kansas City uses a low-and-slow method of smoking the meat in addition to just stewing it in the sauce. It also favors using hickory wood for smoking and continual watering or layering of the sauce while cooking to form a glaze; with burnt ends this step is necessary to create the "bark" or charred outer layer of the brisket.

  9. French mother sauces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_mother_sauces

    Tomato sauce (sometimes Tomate or Tomat): As well as tomatoes, ingredients typically include carrots, onion, garlic, butter, and flour, plus pork belly and veal broth. Velouté sauce: Light coloured sauce, made by reducing clear stock (made from un-roasted bones) and thickened with a white roux. Velouté is French for "velvety".