What Does Fresh Garlic Taste Like?
Fresh Garlic in Every Indian Language
| Language | Name | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| English | Fresh Garlic | |
| Hindi | Lahsun | |
| Tamil | பூண்டு — Poondu | |
| Telugu | వెల్లుల్లి — Velluli | |
| Malayalam | വെള്ളുള്ളി — Velluli | |
| Kannada | ಬೆಳ್ಳುಳ್ಳಿ — Bellulli |
What Is Fresh Garlic?
Fresh garlic — lahsun — is the bulb of Allium sativum, used in virtually every Indian savoury preparation outside of Jain and some Sattvic cooking. Alongside ginger, it forms the two-part aromatic foundation of most Indian curries.
Garlic's flavour comes from allicin — formed when the garlic cells are crushed or cut, triggering an enzyme reaction. This means freshly crushed garlic has dramatically more pungency than pre-crushed garlic that has been sitting. The ginger-garlic paste used in North Indian cooking is typically made fresh or stored refrigerated for maximum potency.
- Ginger-garlic paste is the non-negotiable foundation of North Indian curry masala — without garlic the masala lacks depth and savouriness
- South Indian tadka uses garlic in preparations across Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh
- Garlic-based preparations (lahsun chutney, garlic rasam for cold) are among India's most effective home remedies
- Jain cooking's prohibition on garlic (and onion) requires asafoetida as a substitute — demonstrating garlic's importance by its absence
Fresh Garlic Through History
One of the foundational aromatics of Indian cooking with thousands of years of cultivation history. Appears in ancient texts as both culinary and medicinal ingredient.
The Science of Fresh Garlic
How to Store Fresh Garlic
How to Buy Good Fresh Garlic
How to Use Fresh Garlic Correctly
- Use fresh for maximum flavour
- Add at appropriate cooking stage
- Amounts vary by preparation and taste
What Fresh Garlic Pairs Well With
Dishes That Use Fresh Garlic
Where Fresh Garlic Matters Most
| All Indian Cuisines | Essential |
| Jain Cooking | Varies — see notes |
| Sattvic Cooking | Common |
Fresh Garlic in Indian Cooking
| Feature | Fresh Garlic | Dry Alternative | Other Fresh |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form | Fresh | Dried/powdered | Related herb |
| Aroma | Full, vibrant | Diminished | Different |
| Cooking stage | Varies | Often early | Varies |
| Jain? | Check notes | Check notes | Varies |