ground beefgarlicgreen peppers
Minced garlic is cut into very small pieces. Garlic puree is smashed or ground until it is a paste.
A garlic plant looks a lot like a green onion attached to the top of a garlic bulb. The bulb stays under the ground, and the leave come out of the ground and the leaves part on either side of the stalk.
Garlic comes from a bulb that forms at the bottom of the plant. When you plant a single clove of garlic, it sends up tubular leaves, like large green onions. As each new leaf is added, it forms a clove of garlic inside the bulb, and a "wrap" around the entire garlic bulb.
ground beefgarlicgreen peppers
You drop it on the ground
ground beefgarlic
No. Crushing results in a fine pulp. Mincing gives you finely diced pieces. The difference shows up when you cook it in oil. Since crushing results a more moist product, it will make the oil spatter more than with the minced garlic. Also, when mixing garlic into other ingredients, crushed garlic distributes more evenly.
Stem
I guess so, as both of them are garlic based. Garlic powder is just that. Dried garlic that is finely divided. It doesn't have any salt in it. Garlic salt is an admixture of salt and garlic powder. In theory garlic powder is very simple: it's just dehydrated garlic cloves that have been ground to a powder. Some of the high quality brands you can buy are just that, pure garlic. Not all of the garlic powder on the market is pure. Sometimes artificial ingredients are added to "improve" the colour or flavour. As always, it's worth checking the ingredients before you buy. Sometimes garlic powder is included in other dried spice blends in the stores. The most common of these is garlic salt which is usually just salt plus powdered garlic. Obviously if you're using the powder as an alternative seasoning in order to cut down on your salt intake, there isn't much point using garlic salt
They are the same. A "bulb" of garlic is a collection of "buttons" or "cloves". One clove, is one of the many "buttons" also known as "cloves" which make up the "head" or "bulb" of garlic. This is one of the many reasons that the English language is the most difficult language, in the world, to learn. We have so many ways of saying the EXACT same THING! I thank God, that I was raised speaking English, because I don't think that I could learn this language, today! ;-D
As in Hummus? Ground up chic peas, and garlic I can't see why that wouldn't be good for you.