Garlic has long been touted as a health booster, but it’s never been clear why the herb might be good for you. Now new research is beginning to unlock the secrets of the odoriferous bulb.
In a study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers show that eating garlic appears to boost our natural supply of hydrogen sulfide. Hydrogen sulfide is actually poisonous at high concentrations — it’s the same noxious byproduct of oil refining that smells like rotten eggs. But the body makes its own supply of the stuff, which acts as an antioxidant and transmits cellular signals that relax blood vessels and increase blood flow.
In the latest study, performed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, researchers extracted juice from supermarket garlic and added small amounts to human red blood cells. The cells immediately began emitting hydrogen sulfide, the scientists found.
The power to boost hydrogen sulfide production may help explain why a garlic-rich diet appears to protect against various cancers, including breast, prostate and colon cancer, say the study authors. Higher hydrogen sulfide might also protect the heart, according to other experts. Although garlic has not consistently been shown to lower cholesterol levels, researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine earlier this year found that injecting hydrogen sulfide into mice almost completely prevented the damage to heart muscle caused by a heart attack.
“People have known garlic was important and has health benefits for centuries,'’ said Dr. David W. Kraus, associate professor of environmental science and biology at the University of Alabama. “Even the Greeks would feed garlic to their athletes before they competed in the Olympic games.'’
Now, the downside. The concentration of garlic extract used in the latest study was equivalent to an adult eating about two medium-sized cloves per day. In such countries as Italy, Korea and China, where a garlic-rich diet seems to be protective against disease, per capita consumption is as high as eight to 12 cloves per day.
While that may sound like a lot of garlic, Dr. Kraus noted that increasing your consumption to five or more cloves a day isn’t hard if you use it every time you cook. Dr. Kraus also makes a habit of snacking on garlicky dishes like hummus with vegetables.
Many home chefs mistakenly cook garlic immediately after crushing or chopping it, added Dr. Kraus. To maximize the health benefits, you should crush the garlic at room temperature and allow it to sit for about 15 minutes. That triggers an enzyme reaction that boosts the healthy compounds in garlic.
Garlic can cause indigestion, but for many, the bigger concern is that it can make your breath and sweat smell like…garlic. While individual reactions to garlic vary, eating fennel seeds like those served at Indian restaurants helps to neutralize the smell. Garlic-powder pills claim to solve the problem, but the data on these supplements has been mixed. It’s still not clear if the beneficial compounds found in garlic remain potent once it’s been processed into a pill.
2007
10:21 pm
Didn’t I read here in the Time recently that there is no proof that garlic is beneficial?
I’ll see if I can find that and post.
Are these sorts of medical articles a waste of time?
— Posted by Tom Fitzsimmnons
2007
1:43 am
I drink garlic water every day and it is delicious…taste colder and quenches my thirst. Don’t know what if any health benefits but is satisfies my taste buds. Also, at the very beginning of a cold, I chop fresh garlic into pieces small enough to swallow without chewing (about the size of a baby aspirin) and take approximately 5 to seven cloves daily. I find that the cold doesn’t take hold and the symptoms of the cold go away with a day or two. Before I started doing this colds would last for two to three weeks. Now I seldom get a cold and when I do, I am fine within three days.
— Posted by Joi Hays
2007
2:02 am
Of course these articles aren’t a waste of time! There are people out there who actually want to know/verify their knowledge about alternative remedies. If you don’t, I would suggest you not read the articles under “alternative remedies” in the first place.
— Posted by Tina Marie
2007
3:17 am
Have been having raw for years with early morning tea and had no artery blockages though had to undergo heart Surgery four years back for leaky aortic valve and aortic root had to be replaced by Bentall procedure!Garlic is wonderful!
— Posted by HGOBHRAI
2007
5:09 am
thank you for this article. the thing is i really love garlic. i have hey fever and once i started eating garlic i felt so much better. and i am the kind of person who wants to go natural and minimise the drugs i take. the only problem was that everyone around me seemed to mind the garlic smell. i finally gave in and stopped taking it. i guess i will have to try the fennel seeds and see if it works. or rather just go to the pill. thanks for the article.
— Posted by cherish
2007
9:35 am
I have found that consuming one large garlic, chopped into tiny pieces and spread on toast with something tasty (like mayonnaise or butter) three times a day will combat colds. The symptoms are practically gone 24 hours after eating three-four such sandwiches.
I’ve read that eating fresh parsley is an antidote for garlic-y breath but have never tried it.
— Posted by frimet roth
2007
9:50 am
I have to ask the skeptics why *wouldn’t* garlic have some beneficial effect? Lots of foods are being shown to be helpful. They’re not curealls, but important pieces to the overall puzzle of health. Garlic is no magic bullet, unless you’re a vampire hunter, but with its strong chemical profile, it’s bound to have some beneficial effects. Remember, most of the early “miracle drugs” were plant based.
— Posted by Janet V
2007
10:11 am
I love garlic! Nevermind the health benefits - it’s so tasty!
— Posted by Caroline
2007
10:16 am
Garlic have been used for over centuries in India & Eastern countries for many health benefits.
If you decide to use garlic for personal health benefits one of the easy & most tasty way is via using a clay garlic roaster ( $ 5 to 10 )
- Take a whole or portion of garlic bulb
- tske away the outer skins …but not the last
skin covering the cloves
- cut the top tip of the cloves
- add olive oil …few drops or 1/4 spoon only
- add salt & pepper ( oregano etc if you like
- put the garlic roaster in the microwave for 1
min to 1.15 min for the whole bulb.
Cooking it this way also does not give heavy garlic oder, smell & breath.
Try it … it may help.
BC
— Posted by BC
2007
10:44 am
I buy the chopped stuff in the big jar at the supermarket. Every now and then I shovel down a small bowl full. It’s FAR from the most pleasant way to ‘enjoy’ garlic, but my cholesterol has gone from ‘Danger Will Robinson’ to ‘not even remotely an issue’ over the last couple of years. Direct corelation? Hard to say, as I’ve made other changes to my diet as well (almost no meat) but the garlic sure hasn’t hurt.
Other times I splurge and buy the pre-roasted stuff from the cold counter at the supermarket deli. I put a TON on a lightly toasted sandwich with a blob of cottage cheeze to help hold it all together and *WHOOHOO!* tasty fun.
The chopped stuff is raw, though, and so I think has a great health benefit.
— Posted by skipkent
2007
10:45 am
They forget to mention one of the primary benefits of garlic consumption.
It’s tasty. Eating tasty things is important.
— Posted by Rowan
2007
11:12 am
Eating 1-2 cloves of raw garlic when you feel a cold coming on is a good way to prevent it. This really works. One method is to crush or slice the garlic, let it sit for 15 minutes, then add it to some salsa, making it more palatable.
— Posted by Alan
2007
11:20 am
Does anyone know if cooking garlic reduces its health benefits?
— Posted by willis
2007
11:24 am
From my understanding about the use of Garlic, It is good in lowering blood pressure, help reduce gas pain and kill some toxic out of certain food that you cook and many more. If our ancestors were using garlic for centuries and they benefit from it there is no way for me to see why there would be doubts about the usage.
— Posted by Lynnette
2007
11:45 am
Simple scientific facts should be known or checked. Hydrogen sulfide can not be an “organic substance” since it contains no carbon. Words have meaning; Scientific words have very specific meaning.
Eds note: Andy : Thanks for your post. You are correct. I agree with you on the importance of being precise, particularly when writing about science and health. Thanks for catching this one. tpp
— Posted by Andy P
2007
11:49 am
Does the garlic have to be consumed raw
to help with colds? Would it work if cooked into a dish
— Posted by Curious
2007
12:04 pm
I always use garlic when I cook vegetables. If I don’t use it, I feel like not that much tastier. I have already known some benefits of garlic though this article made me more clear. Ofcourse, cooked garlic or uncooked they have some benefits but which one is more I have no idea.
— Posted by minu
2007
12:48 pm
Roman soldiers put slices of garlic between their toes to combat athletes foot…
— Posted by Jacques René Giguère
2007
1:48 pm
“Hydrogen sulfide is actually poisonous at high concentrations”
How much is too much garlic for humans? What happens if one eats too much? What is too much in one session, and what is too much over decades? Has anyone studied that?
A study showed that garlic fed to animals (horses) kills red blood cells. However, I know many supplelment pet food with garlic. Are those processed pills a placebo for the owner ?
— Posted by still dreaming
2007
2:12 pm
Have heard that chewing garlic is good for the gums. If tomato juice will get rid of skunk smell it might work on garlic.
— Posted by Peggy
2007
2:21 pm
Garlic is extremely easy to grow. It does reasonably well even in Oregon’s mixed weather. Just stick some individual cloves in the ground anywhere on your property this fall and dig them up next summer when their foliage has turned mostly brown.
— Posted by Karen Berry
2007
2:35 pm
Believe it or not, raw garlic can be made palatible by slicing the cloves thin and putting them on bread with peanut butter…
— Posted by Ross
2007
3:10 pm
Garlic, onions, red wine and sparkling wines give me a violent sick headache. Trace amounts in soup simply give me stomach cramps. Is these symptoms due to the hydrogen sulfide?
— Posted by Janice Wood Williams
2007
3:12 pm
Thank you. Now I understand why people crush garlic at room temperature and let it sit for 15 minutes before cooking. I still believe garlic is useful to one’s health.
— Posted by Kevin Shum
2007
3:12 pm
Parsley DEFINITELY kills the sulphuric odor of garlic. I eat garlic and chew parsley after it. Voila! No smell. Cinnamon or clove (chewed) will also have the same odor-killing effect.
— Posted by Indga
2007
5:03 pm
Garlic makes me very sick when I eat it. It may be good for “your” health but it is not good for my health. I protest the intrusion of garlic in public food.
It makes me crazy to hear all of this. It can only mean that there will be even more garlic out there.
I hate the stuff.
— Posted by Ernie
2007
5:08 pm
Like Ms. Williams I also get sick when I eat garlic. It gives me a migraine headache if consumed in quantity and severely upset stomach/intestines in lesser quantities. Since I am so sensitive I can’t eat out much. I pretty much have to stick with sushi or burgers. Garlic and onions are in almost all savory dishes and also hides in things like ketchup as a “spice.” The FDA does not require garlic or onions to be specifically listed as an ingredient but allows them to be included under generic reference to natural flavorings and spices. It took me years to find out why I was always so sick and losing weight; I am naturally thin and so losing weight was not a good thing for me. I was also having migraine headaches about 25% of the time. I like the taste of garlic and onions but avoid them at all costs and now I have amazing energy and no headaches. I wonder how many others are also affected by garlic/onions in this way?
— Posted by Stephanie
2007
5:10 pm
i love garlic! i put it in almost all of my homecooked dishes. i have read that to get the most benefit (and flavor) from garlic, it should be added after a dish is cooked and just before serving.
one needs a garlic press, which costs just a few dollars, to make the best use of garlic. with such a press, regular garlic eaters will find that adding a few cloves (not to be confused with the whole flower, from which the cloves are separated) is almost always a tasty and zesty augmentation to almost any dish.
when i have a cold, i press quite a few cloves of garlic into a cup of hot water and miso, making a delicious and healthful tea/soup. it clears the sinuses and (i have read) has antibiotic properties as well.
garlic is great!
— Posted by anonymous
2007
5:36 pm
Additionally, garlic cloves are an excellent way to cure a yeast infection. Consuming is one way to help, but simply nicking a clove to get the juices running and inserting the clove as a suppository can clear the yeast right out.
— Posted by Nicole
2007
6:18 pm
Looking at some comments above- it seems that garlic “spurs the natural release of hydrogen sulfide” - not that it actually contains the chemical.
— Posted by Sandya
2007
6:32 pm
Perhaps those who have adverse reactions to garlic are simply too Celtic or too English as is Queen Elizabeth. I’m mostly Celtic by birth but decided to become Italian when I was very young. I have loved garlic ever since.
— Posted by steve
2007
7:11 pm
Thanks 4 this inf
— Posted by Pratik
2007
7:16 pm
About Garlic this is helpful information.We will eat garlic everyday
— Posted by Jaga
2007
7:27 pm
Eating a generous handful of parsley after eating raw garlic does prevent dragon breath. I learned this from a friend who liked it raw but whose husband objected to the smell. After she started using parsley, he never knew.
Also, pickled garlic is a delicious snack - crunchy and not as strong as raw garlic. Yum! If you find you like it, you won’t want to buy it in the teeny expensive bottles. If you can find them, DeLallo brand’s larger bottles are very good.
— Posted by Maria C.
2007
7:32 pm
I was diagnosed with high cholesterol, triglycerides and low good cholesterol HDL. I was prescribed a cholesterol lowering prescription drug. This did lower the bad cholesterol LDL but, not to the level of accepted medical values. I decided to begin taking garlic capsules/tablets/gelcaps at about 600mg per. My cholesterol, triglycerides are all within normal lab limits. I therefor believe it works, at least for me. I do not have garlic breath or garlic perspiration.
-Posted by Tom
— Posted by Thomas E. Mangus
2007
7:47 pm
I never had a problem with my own child’s ears but my sister’s kids had persistent ear infections. After many doctor visits and much medicine that didn’t work, the only thing that cleared up her kids’ infections were cut cloves of garlic stuck in the ears!
— Posted by Janine
2007
8:24 pm
I also chop cloves of raw garlic into small pieces and swallow with water, as soon as I feel as if I’m coming down with something. I may do this up to three times during the day. I’m usually fine by the next morning, or the following day.
— Posted by Grace
2007
9:03 pm
Instead of Peanut butter, butter or mayonnaise on your garlic sandwich try Olive oil, which also lower your bad Cholesterol.
— Posted by Tony
2007
9:07 pm
Is PICKLED garlic just as healthful as raw garlic?? Whole cloves are sold by the pound in the deli section of my supermarket-Surprisingly it does not have a strong garlic taste but seems almost like eating a water chestnut–However I’m a little concerned about what the salt content might be.– Is it actually raw or has it been boiled–Does anybody know? Thanks!
— Posted by Brigid
2007
9:30 pm
My grandmother has been eating garlic for many years and it seem to be very part of her diet.Since she had started her blood perssure has been at reasonable standard.This article worth reading.
— Posted by pat
2007
12:35 am
I am also very interested in hearing about scientific evidence of garlic’s efficacy in various forms of preparation and preservation. Intuitively, it seems obvious that fresh and raw is best. This is certainly borne out in the sensual realm. I eat lots of garlic regardless, as it is so Tasty.
— Posted by Stephen
2007
1:00 am
Comment #15 contains a supposed editorial response, thanking the poster for catching an error. However, the article itself contains no assertion that hydrogen sulfide is an “organic substance” , so unless the article has been subsequently edited, the comment is pointless, even though true. Therefore the “editor” has nothing to answer for.
By the way, HS2 is emitted as a gas during organic decomposition, so it is involved in organic processes.
Eds note: Yes I removed the word “organic” which had appeared in an earlier version of the article. Reader 15 was correct. But you are also correct about H2S being emitted during organic decomposition. Who would have thought that a little article on garlic would turn into a chemistry lesson?! Thanks to all for keeping us on our toes. — tpp
— Posted by Stephen
2007
1:04 am
Dear,
Thanks for searching the benefits of pld remedies.We wisdom filled people totally ignored what our ancestors discovered in centuries and followed the path of pain and wasting money and resources by depending totally on modern drugs.Time has told that health is now more a business than cure.May God grant us the courage to get out of the tentacles of this trading snake
Grateful
jalees
— Posted by jaleeskhan
2007
1:07 am
For those of you using it as a cold remedy: It can’t hurt, but colds almost always last 2-3 days. Saying garlic is shortening the symptoms is nonsense. If you are having symptoms for two weeks you aren’t having a cold - or at least not just one cold. Anecdotal evidence has been shown over and over again in medicine to be worse than useless - it distorts peoples minds, it lead to wasteful spending on pointless cures (including Western medicines) and I believe generally undermines a society which supposedly prides itself on reason. Imagine the same language used regardign garlics’ benefits but now in the context of race -” in my experience, ….” or “those people (of a certain nationality, color, etc) always do this or that…” Or what if I just say that by carefully avoiding all garlic, my cold symptoms are shorter. Also, I don’t get chest pains, now that I don’t eat garlic. I am more productive at work, ever since I fastidiously avoided all contact with garlic. What? You don’t believe me?
— Posted by Joshua
2007
1:08 am
Interesting that at last someone can study garlic without the Pharmaceutical industry putting presure on the people doing the research.
Garlic is probably the best natural product and is on par with vitamin C especiall when it comes to colds. At the first sign of getting a cold or flu take three garlic raw, crushed and and chopped, do not cook as the Alicin and aliin will be killed or at least the best part of it. this will kill the flu or cold in its tracks. my friends and I have been trying it and it works every time. and in combination with vitamin C about 3000mg straight away, it will get rid of the flu. If you leave the flu or cold to get hold by leaving it a few hours, it is very difficult to get rid of it. The more vitamin C you take the better, on one occasion I didn’t get rid of it quick enough and I took 27,000 mg of vitamin C in one day and didn’t get the squitters.
Kind Regards,
Brian
— Posted by Brian Jones
2007
2:02 am
I love garlic, have eaten it all my adult life for great taste and appreciate the health benefits. BUT 99 per cent of garlic sold in USA, especially all processed garlic (granulated, minced in oil, etc.)is imported from CHINA, where it is often heavily laden with outlawed pesticides. I am buying all my garlic online from organic, grown and processed in USA sources. Plan to grow it also, thanks to tip from Karen Berry, #21.
— Posted by Diana
2007
2:18 am
Marinate garlic cloves in a bottle of apple cider vinegar.
Add tablespoon of the vinegar to a cup of hot water and raw honey.
Drink of it daily. Lessens arthritis pain, also will banish infections. I believe it’s called “Vermont Medicine”
— Posted by vesta
2007
2:36 am
Wow! I love garlic so much. It is so delicious!! ahhh!
— Posted by Aaron Beasley
2007
8:14 am
A note about “bulk” peeled garlic: the peeling process uses fermentation, which may degrade the healthful components. Note also: most cheap garlic is imported from China, at such low prices as to prompt speculation that it couldn’t be produced without massive doses of heavy-metal fungicides.
Third note: the more processing goes into a food product, the less of your food dollar reaches the farmer, the one indispensable participant in the suppply. Whether for health reasons or enjoyment, your best bet is to buy whole fresh bulbs of garlic from a local organic or sustainable grower.
— Posted by Nancy
2007
8:18 am
For the BEST quality garlic, don’t buy the MADE IN CHINA garlic which is overpowering. Try buying Italian garlic - or the red/purple skinned garlic. It is so much more flavorful and delicate - you will never want another kind after using this quality of garlic.
— Posted by greatgarlic
2007
8:21 am
I heard that garlic used daily can prevent mosquito bites. Has anyone else heard this?
— Posted by Susan
2007
8:59 am
I’ve been taking garlic pills daily for several years and find that my colds don’t last as long now. After taking garlic pills, colds last 2-3 days, compared to at least 1-2 weeks before !
— Posted by Susan
2007
9:30 am
Thanks for these great articles!
How are the University of Alberta tests of dichloroacetate as a cancer fighter going, please?
Kevin
— Posted by Kevin L. Simms
2007
10:21 am
I have heard of garlic powder pills for genital herpes- any news about this..i.e. how much to take? one writer says 4000.i.u.(?) i don’t know what it means- garlic is our friend.
— Posted by Curious
2007
10:34 am
Susan, garlic doesn’t prevent mosquitoes from biting me. What works for me is taking a B1 (thiamine) supplement daily and using a dab of catnip oil (diluted in fractionated coconut oil or jojoba oil) on my skin on bad days.
— Posted by speedwell
2007
10:41 am
silly and educational information for rainy-day reading!
— Posted by Jasmin
2007
11:06 am
There is a lot of confusion and contradictory statements about garlic. The Garlic Seed Foundation (www.garlicseedfoundation.info) has been working with garlic growers and consumers to educate all of us on the importance of including both raw and cooked garlic in our diets. Please3 visit our website for links and much information!
— Posted by bob dunkel
2007
11:29 am
A fried rice(1-cup) with 3-5 cloves of crushed garlic, sauteed in 1-tsp vegetable oil has been my main staple daily and carb source ever since I was diagnosed as type-2 diabetec. Aside from being flavorful, it is also very delicious and with my pills it helps maintain my blood sugar readings. For whatever its worth, garlic I think has benefit to be derived!
— Posted by Pol Villanueva
2007
11:44 am
i have been using Garlic for long time sinces about 1980’s and i have gain lots benefits is not a new things..that garlic help to reduce of coronary heart disease..i islam..our holy prophet has mention in his saying that garlic is good for your health 1400’s year ago. And even lots muslim scientitis has wrote articles in garlic througout the islamic world so it not new thing, why is not mention about muslim side of the story. i have been using for many other reason it help to recyle the blood and clear the blood and help to circulate the blood from head to toe and help the blood to travel quick. and keep healthy my self healthy as possible.
many thanks
muhammad ruhani-London, U.K
— Posted by Muhammad Ruhani
2007
12:43 pm
Eating even raw tomatoes with garlic helps with the bad breath aspect
— Posted by Crystal
2007
1:27 pm
At first sign of a cold, I cut up or crush 1-3 cloves of garlic and add it to whatever food I am eating. Sometimes I will saute it with onions and add it to chicken broth.
By the next day, the symptoms are gone and do not return!
— Posted by Linda
2007
1:30 pm
Sounds like everybody is a believer, including my daughter, who has consumed raw garlic daily for years. Here’s the problem though…despite daily showers, she really stinks. Garlic oozing from the pores can really be offensive. Sometimes it can even be embarassing to be with her. Don’t get me wrong, we love her, but raw garlic consumption really has a downside.
— Posted by TElmer
2007
1:41 pm
Bam! Another notch!
— Posted by Sean
2007
1:54 pm
Tina:
You need to chill out, your bossyness is showing.
— Posted by Jon
2007
2:27 pm
Raw vs. cooked garlic…someone asked if raw is more beneficial than cooked. YES! And that goes for all vegetables: Enzymes are heat sensitive and destroyed at temperatures above 118 degrees. When you cook food, nutrients and enzymes are destroyed. The higher the temp and the longer the cooking time, the less nutrients and enzymes you’re consuming. “Empty” foods fill you up less temporarily than raw, and your body must do more work to digest the cooked food you just ate. This speeds up the aging process and causes you to feel more lethargic. The bottom line: the more raw the better.
— Posted by Michelle
2007
3:28 pm
Susan asked about garlic preventing mosquito bites. All I have is anecdotal evidence, but when I was a cook at a Yukon research camp for several summer seasons, I and my assistants found that when we had chopped a lot of garlic, so the oil was on our hands, all we had to do to repel mosquitoes was wave our hands around. I think you’d have to eat a lot of garlic for it to come out your pores enough to repel them for any length of time, but it would probably be effective.
— Posted by Claudette
2007
3:43 pm
RE #15, #42, & chemistry lesson: If I recall correctly from my Organic Chem class in ‘65, H2S was used as a catalytic agent in our experiments…which meshes nicely in its role with red blood cells.
Re tomato & garlic: My mom’s “French sauce” recipe:
crush plum tomatoes, basil, Italian parsley, & tons of garlic (min 1/2 bulb) together (either in food processor or with mortar & pestle). Place in bowl. Add salt, pepper, & a little olive oil to cover. (If made ahead of time, put sauce in fridge.) Cook spaghetti, drain it, then toss in some of the cold sauce. Add additional sauce to individual plates.
Make sure everyone present eats — or keeps their mouths shut for the next few hours
— Posted by Vinny
2007
3:47 pm
Garlic, garlic, garlic! I am incensed. As an avid, very longtime (emphasis on longtime) reader of the NYT, I can’t help being incensed at this article praising garlic. I hate garlic. It’s effect on my immune system is devastating. Never mind the bad breath it causes. Healthy blood is an important part of the diet. I don’t see you doing any articles on that!!!
Victor, Transylvania, Rumania
— Posted by V. Dracuvic
2007
3:56 pm
Oh yes, parsley is absolutely the “antidote” to garlic. It works immediately. Note that a lot of dishes from the Mid-East, Turkey, India, Greece etc add parsley to dishes that contain large amounts of garlic. And to keep the garlic smell from oozing from the pores, make sure to swallow the parsley and not just chew it and spit it out. It neutralizes it in the stomach, too.
— Posted by Jill R
2007
5:27 pm
Garlic can kill most virus and bacteria bugs!!! I am living proof!!! You can make a garlic slushy by blending together 1 peeled bulb of garlic, with 1 chopped carrot and 1 chopped apple add water and blend - sip slowly throughout the day!!! Also they sell garlic oil for earaches at Wild Oats!!! This works great too!!!
— Posted by Carol
2007
5:59 pm
i can respect that V. Dracuvic.
— Posted by Jagger Maxwell
2007
7:12 pm
Garlic dose nothing good at all; just a myth. There is no real study that proves all these claims made about garlic. If, there had been a real credible evidence, it would have been a real medicine and also the FDA would have approved it.
It is just any other herb that makes food tastier.
— Posted by m. saleem
2007
11:35 pm
Mr. Dracuvic, I can appreciate why garlic is not something you would want to sink your teeth into. Me, I like the stuff, though in my mind, onion and garlic run neck and neck.
— Posted by Dennis Fairbrother
2007
4:48 am
This is another booster to the cosumption of garlic, thanks so much for the info.
Joe.
— Posted by Joe
2007
5:58 am
Parsley. While in Kawai on a pleasure trip,I doused my home prepared risotto with heaps of Hawain parsley…and had frightful hallucinations. Hve been wary of eating more than a pinch ever since…Can you comment on the recommended daily allowance of parsley ?
From Stuart in Rome ITALY
— Posted by stuart
2007
11:42 am
Raw garlic helps repel fleas for pets, too. Chop raw garlic and add it to your pet’s food, along with brewer’s yeast, and it will help keep the fleas away. There are yeast and garlic tablets available for this purpose from a number of places, including Petguard.
— Posted by lee
2007
12:46 pm
GREAT ARTICLE AND COMMENTS!!!My family has always used lots of garlic, mostly cooked in various dishes, but I’ve learned so much in reading this. #70, Carol, did you mean a whole “bulb” or a clove of garlic in the slushy? Also, thank you to Vesta, #47, for the “Vermont Medicine” recipe which I hope will relieve my aching joints. I have been given so many prescribed medicines that I’m afraid of walking past an open flame too closely thinking that I may blow up! How much garlic is healthy for human consumption, anyone know? No one believed me when I became really intoxicated (unable to focus, giddy, unsteady on my feet) after eating at a garlic restaurant in California. First came a whole baked bulb of Elephant garlic spread on toast (delicious), followed by a creamy garlic soup, then the entre of lamb baked with garlic. After relaxing for about 15 minutes, the feeling of intoxication came over me and grew stronger with every breath! As I said, no one believed me when I said I couldn’t get up, much less drive,(I was the designated driver). The waited brought a pot of coffee and, after drinking most of it strong and black, the symptoms began to dissipate and life contunued. Can anyone explain what happened to me for my benefit and that of other readers?
— Posted by Audrey
2007
1:27 pm
gee, i feel better!
garlic, while not a cure-all, as said before, is indeed my favorite of the herbal remidies. my mom’s been feeding me the stuff since i was five, and ever since, i’ve been an adict. try roasting it in the oven ’til it’s soft and smearing it on an english mufin with butter and salt. (particularly during alergy season)
morgan
— Posted by morgan
2007
2:00 pm
Thanks for the article! Now that I can’t get cold medications for my baby, thanks to the ignorant mis-dosing and abusing public at large, I’m going to try some liquifying some garlic. If he won’t eat it, I can always take a nice small clove and stick it up there as a suppository. If it helps, I might try it, too.
— Posted by Jeff
2007
2:41 pm
Re: 72
Just because the FDA has not yet approved something to be used as a drug doesn’t mean it’s not beneficial. I think that’s the point of this article, that more research is necessary to discover foods that are beneficial to our health. I know there are some (inconclusive) studies about garlic’s anti-microbial properties, probably that’s why people are using it as a cold remedy. I would love to see more studies like this in the Times, to learn about simple preventative health measures such as changing our diets slightly that can have long term health benefits.
The “modern” approach to medicine has been very focused on instant gratification type drugs, like antibiotics, that address illness once it has already manifested. A preventative approach is probably cheaper and safer whenever possible.
— Posted by Emilie
2007
5:23 pm
Somebody should check the literature!
Might work in a test tube, but apparently not in the body:
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/february28/m ed-garlic-022807.html
Eds note: Thanks for the link. In the study you cited, garlic showed no benefit in lowering cholesterol when used for six months compared to those taking a placebo The researchers noted that while garlic wasn’t effective in lowering cholesterol in this study, that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have other health benefits or that it doesn’t offer cardioprotective benefits. It may be that six months wasn’t long enough to see an effect. Or it may simply be that the heart effects of garlic seen in observational studies aren’t the result of cholesterol lowering but some other benefit. In addition, observational studies have also suggested a cancer benefit from a high-garlic diet. The verdict on how or if garlic benefits health is clearly still out. — tpp
— Posted by Ed Beardsworth
2007
9:45 pm
garlic used for centuries to eliminate and prevent intestinal parasites . works for dogs as well as humans. it was first used for thid reason in europe when peasants were forced to eat cheap available foods,which carried parasites. over the years a taste for garlic developed, and is now widely used for its taste in food preparation and the parasites have been forgotteen jerry
— Posted by jerry
2007
7:04 am
Garlic (or onions)is NOT good for Dogs or Cats The Same Component that is Good for People (Alium/Aliicin) Will Do Damage to the Red blood Cells And Cause Lethargy, anemia, Even Liver Damage and DEATH the Animals Body Chemistry is not the Same as Humans Google or Yahoo Garlic And DOGs for Vetrinary info.!
The Garlic Flavor used By Dog Treats is Processed to remove the Alium/aliicin component. Specialty pet stores or internet providers may Carry it make Sure They Know what you are asking for as some people that Care about thier animals Still are uninformed.!.
The Symptoms may not Show up immediately But the long term Damage Would Be Similar to Carbon monoxide Poisening They Keep Getting Weaker Cause The Aren’t Getting The oxygen and other Nutrients Carried in the Red Blood Cells.!
I lovegarlic and Eat masive Amounts But After reading about this on a Dogs Forum; I Did My own Research Please if you Doubt me Do Your own LOOK IT UP SAVE Your Pets From Slow Poisening.!.
— Posted by Rod G
2007
10:01 am
re comment # 77 and “After relaxing for about 15 minutes, the feeling of intoxication came over me and grew stronger with every breath! As I said, no one believed me when I said I couldn’t get up, much less drive”
Every so often a friend of mine holds a garlic party, which puts SanFran’s Stinking Rose to shame. Everything from meatballs that seem to be around 1/3 garlic to garlic buttercreams. Haven’t noticed any intoxicating effects with anyone.
That said, there does seem to be an interesting effect with the dark chocolate covered raw garlic. Dip raw garlic cloves in melted dark chocolate, then let cool on a cookie sheet. Bite into one, and you taste the dark chocolate, and then it feels like ‘the garlic hits you across the face’ and there’s a few minutes of lightheadedness. I quite enjoyed the candies, and also was quite amused by everyone else’s visible reactions to them.
I’ve not had the same feeling biting into, say, olives stuffed with garlic - possibly ’cause that’s pickled.
Re someone else’s comment musing about garlic as suppository, some folk do put peeled cloves as pessary for yeast infections.
— Posted by marcia
2007
10:47 pm
I started taking garlic & horseradish pills a couple of years ago to ease hay fever. I continued taking them because I discovered the many colds I was getting all but disappeared. My colds inevitably went to the chest & bronchitis set in.
— Posted by Jill
2007
11:19 pm
Garlic can prevent all types of transmittable diseases. This is a fact. When I eat large amounts of garlic, people stay far enough away from me to keep me healthy!
— Posted by Tony
2007
12:44 pm
I love garlic and in my country (Colombia) garlic is used as a medicine to prevent high cholesterol and to fend off colds. i agree with all the medicinal properties of natural foods that is why i created a web page to put all this information where people can read it and benefit from it.
angela botero
www.athousandtips.com tips on everything to make your life easier and more fun.
— Posted by Angela Botero
2007
5:51 pm
Dear Victor, (#68)
Don’t hate it. People who eat lots of garlic will have healthier and more healthful blood, n’est pas?
À votre santé!
Diana
— Posted by Diana
2007
10:50 pm
pickling it or roasting it does take away many of the beneficial properties of garlic. The clove has to be crushed in order to expose the inactive component alliin to oxygen and convert it to the active component allicin - which is the chemical responsible for most of the heart protective benefits of garlic. I would recommend using a garlic press for maximum crushing. Also, if cooked, it can only be cooked lightly (5 min. or less) in order to not denature allicin, and microwaving garlic completely destroys it. If prepared or cooked improperly, there are still beneficial nutrients in garlic, such a manganese, vitamin B6, vitamin C, and some other nutrients, but for maximum health benefits, specific guidelines must be followed (crush, wait > 10 min., and cook lightly if at all).
— Posted by Randie
2007
11:50 pm
I enjoyed the article. Garlic is wonderful and I had heard it was good for your health but now I know more specifically what it can do.
— Posted by karin
2007
4:18 am
Your picture garlic is too old. Young garlic tastes much better and does not stink.
— Posted by Fritz Goergen
2007
1:15 pm
http://www.mercola.com/2001/mar/17/garlic_infections.ht m
It is important to note that the garlic MUST be fresh. The active ingredient is destroyed within one hour of smashing the garlic. Garlic pills are virtually worthless and should not be used. When you use the garlic it will be important to compress the garlic with a spoon prior to swallowing it if you are not going to juice it. If you swallow the clove intact you will not convert the allicin to its active ingredient.
This comes down to the fact that if you take a garlic clove and you peel it very carefully and you smell it. There is very little smell. But as soon as you crush it…boom! You get an instantaneous smell. This is a clean smell, that is allicin that is produced.
And the reason is that in garlic itself you don’t find allicin but what you do find is a precursor molecule called alliin. And alliin is found within the garlic clove within the mesophyl cells and also in the garlic clove you then find around the phloem in the cells around the vascular bundle you find an enzyme called alliinase.
And these two are physically separated within the cell. When you crush it these two come into contact and immediately the combination of the two produce allicin, and the other thiosulphonates.
— Posted by Michael Shamblin
2007
4:32 pm
And then there are those of us who have allergic reactions to even the smell of garlic, who are more and more limited in our social interaction by the plethora of this noxious weed.
— Posted by Loea Jean Campbell
2007
4:52 pm
The garlic I buy on Long Island is almost tasteles. Recently,peeled garlic I bought from a large Asian market in Maryland was so strong it smelled up my car even though the plastic container was triple wrapped and was stored in the trunk during the trip home.
Peeled garlic loses its flavor pretty soon Where can I buy strong flavored fresh garlic?
— Posted by Erna Newman
2007
6:22 am
Garlic is a fantastic antibiotic. It has been an excellent cure for bacterial infections of the mouth, sinus and throat. I also use it as a cold prevention remedy and take some after eating sushi, to kill parasites.
— Posted by Jacqui Anderson
2007
5:09 pm
Garlic undoubtedly holds many preventive secrets and health benefits.Here’s how I treat myself to garlic-based hot sauce. I peel about 10 cloves,cut through them without splitting them and dip them into a mid-size jam bottle about full with olive oil. Add salt, fresh small red hot peppers that need to be pierced gently so that the oil would merge in.Close bottle and make sure oil covers the peppers.Leave out in kitche stand/cupboard;treat yourself after 15 to 20 days.To remove unpleasant garlic lingering smell f garlic,use fresh mint-leaves.Chew them,rince and of course use your regular tooth-paste.Enjoy garlicholic!
— Posted by Karsane
2007
11:19 pm
My father like garlic and always forces me to take it.He always say it is good for our health,but i really mind the garlic smell because it is odoriferous and suspect his assestment of garlic.Because of this artical,i think i may accept it though it takes like a poision.But if one day it can turn to good smell i may accept it actively.
— Posted by liu
2007
12:37 am
I knew a woman named Peggy Garlick. She did, in fact, have a somewhat sour, spicy dispostition.
— Posted by Tom
2007
6:40 pm
A peeled clove of garlic rubbed over freshly toasted bread - it melts - is a great way to take your ‘medicine’
— Posted by LesleyB
2007
7:13 pm
FYI, garlic isn’t an herb. In cooking, the word “herb” is used to describe the leafy part of a plant that is used for flavoring. Basil, parsley, cilantro, oregano, and so on, are all herbs.
Dried barks, seeds, roots, berries — basically anything BUT the leaf, are considered spices. So cinnamon (a bark), pepper (a berry), and any type of seed (whole or ground) such as mustard seed, anise seed, coriander seed, etc) are examples of spices.
Garlic is a somewhat unusual case, because it is a root, which would seem to put it in the “spice” category. So it’s not inaccurate to think of its dried forms (like the garlic powder, garlic flakes, and minced garlic available in supermarket spice sections) as spices. This goes for medicinal forms of garlic, like tablets, too.
But in its fresh form, garlic very much resembles its relative the onion, and is used in much the same way. So fresh garlic is probably best described as a vegetable.
— Posted by Frank
2007
5:47 am
Chop 5 or 6 cloves of garlic into fine pieces that can be easily swallowed & drop them into almost full glass of water.Then cut a lemon into two halves & squeeze the juice into that glass, taking
care that pips if any do not get in.Let this mixture stand for a couple of hours and drink it with your meal taking a gulp at a time between morsels until the entire glass is fihished.You will have the all the goodness of garlic as well as improved digestion & no smell.
— Posted by amar
2007
11:34 am
Great article and good responses.I hope you will continue to show the benefits of saying NO to drugs and Yes to basic good sense to good health ideas.I hope to read more of your thoughts. I am writing a cookbook along these lines for a Healthier America.Thanks
— Posted by dee
2007
11:58 am
I really miss living near Stonington, CT, where I used to go to the annual Garlic Festival held at a farm there. Great fun and garlic varieties. If they still hold that annual event then I really recommend it.
I will say, though, that one time the day after that I went to the movies with friends and when I mentioned the festival afterwards, they said “so that is what we smelled!”
— Posted by mary-leggett browning
2007
12:07 pm
To add to my post -#70- You will need to use a whole bulb of peeled garlic - not just a clove-
in the slushy to make it potent enough to fight off a viral or bacterial infection. This drink will make you smell like garlic but it may save your life someday!!! Carol in Kansas
— Posted by Carol
2007
3:14 pm
I’ve grown garlic for many years and I eat a lot of garlic. I haven’t had a cold that amounts to much for many years also. If I feel a cold coming on I heat a can of soup and before eating the soup I chop many cloves of raw garlic into the soup. Then I eat it with crackers to sooth the strong sensation that garlic can give. The cold doesn’t stand a chance to bloom. I also haven’t had the flu for many years. I really believe that garlic can fill many viruses that attack us humans.
— Posted by Nick
2007
10:20 pm
I am 65 and restarted on garlic so to say. I was on garlic in the 3 and 4th decades regularly and enjoyed being so. Ate 5 cloves every day after some meal, by chopping it with my teeth and then downed along with a gul pf plain water. Truly my friends used to comment that i was a moving bundle of garlic.
Anyway it helped me a lot in digetion of my meals, no flatulence, and excellent bowel movements.
By and large those days too garlic was treated as an aphrodisiac. So i enjoyed that too.
Now I am again on garlic regularly 5 cloves every day after a meal.
— Posted by thrivikramji
2007
11:34 pm
I lived in Manhattan (West End Ave. for most of adult life), until moving back West (PNW) to an island north of Seattle and have learned to grow many things, including garlic. If this former Zabar tote-ing urbanite can learn to grow varieties of organic garlic, anyone can! It’s incredibly simple, reliable and rewarding as a first garden (organic veggie) experiment.
Buy your first cloves from reliable US organic growers (plenty online like Territorial Seed Co. in Oregon), and plant in well-drained fertile soil 4-6 inches apart, 1-2 inches deep. Plant in Oct. or Nov.
Today, Nov. 5, my husband and I (between working) took two hours to plant garlic — enough bulbs (5 varieties) for a small Sicilian village. Who needs Fairway?
Dear Editor, excellent post. FYI: Garlic is one of those rare edible species: Antimicrobial. Garlic is both an anti-viral (hence its use in flus, colds, earaches) and an anti-bacterial (germs, infections including yeast — but ladies, please wrap the nicked clove in porous cheese-cloth before inserting!) Did you know that one of our foremost American herbalists, Rosemary Gladstar, says if she had only ONE herb/plant to grow — it would be garlic?
Note: Stay away from Grown in China garlic (90 percent of our U.S. garlic supply now comes from China and is grown in soils that are, at best, suspicious. We have plenty of good American garlic growers but the price factor undercuts them. Demand your store carry domestic organic garlic!
Plant a seed. Or a clove. Nuture it. And harvest it for dinner. With friends. Not exactly a Broadway show, but close.
— Posted by Denise Balle
2007
2:04 am
I seldom get sick and I recover quickly when I do get sick, but regardless, I’d rather be sick or even die than spend the rest of my life stinking of garlic. I’ve tried the fennel seeds, I’ve tried the parsley, I’ve tried the tomatoes, and I yet I still know when someone’s slipped garlic into the food because a few hours later the inside of my mouth is coated with some disgusting tasting mucus. Onions have a similar effect. Nowadays, I refuse to eat anything with sauces (especially italian and chinese food) because I can’t be sure there isn’t garlic or onions mixed in.
The yogic literature suggests that only tamasic and rajasic people benefit from garlic and onions. Saatvic people naturally detest and are harmed by these foods.
— Posted by Jake
2007
9:10 am
“The yogic literature suggests that only tamasic and rajasic people benefit from garlic and onions. Saatvic people naturally detest and are harmed by these foods.”
Why are there so many fools on this planet?
— Posted by Nicholas Robinson
2007
9:26 am
There was a study published back in the early 1980s that showed garlic killed germs at a distance of 21cm. The researchers did air sampling at varying distances from the subjects’ mouths after ingestion.
— Posted by palo
2007
9:33 am
In regard to giving garlic to pets, please see the warning below from entirelypets.com. Some other common foods can be harmful to pets. Raisins/grapes can cause kidney damage and kill them. For info, go to the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (APCC)web site
Toxic Foods and Plants for Dogs
Onions and garlic contain the toxic ingredient thiosulphate. Onions are more of a danger. While garlic also contains the toxic ingredient thiosulphate, it seems that garlic is less toxic and large amounts would need to be eaten to cause illness.
Cathy
— Posted by Cathy
2007
10:02 am
“If our ancestors were using garlic for centuries and they benefit from it there is no way for me to see why there would be doubts about the usage.”
We should totally go back to replacing water with beer and eating off of lead-based flat ware. Mmm… those ancestors knew how it was done!
Also, mixing the juice of a raw onion grown in Miami with a half gallon of non-pasteurized goat milk will cure gall-bladder cancer and grant the imbiber increased awareness of the Doppler affect.
— Posted by BB
2007
10:45 am
It should be kept in mind that “controlled trials” for any drug or other substance cost a lot of money. Just ask the pharmaceutical companies or universities.
Further, the FDA is not involved in “approving” anything that is a natural food.. just things that are used as “drugs”.
Finally, being a natural substance, no drug company would market garlic even if it were shown to be beneficial in some condition. It can’t be patented and therefore the profits would be relatively low.
As well all know, drug companies are in business mainly to make money.
LP (MD)
— Posted by Larry
2007
12:39 pm
As an American who has been a resident in Spain for many years, I have read much about the Mediterranean diet, here and there. The diet, which is rich in garlic among other healthy fruits and vegetables, contributes to longer lives.
Americans, however and me included, often want “quick fix” ideas. Life is a long evolving process. I see no reason to start eating massive amounts of garlic and every reason to add it to meals in an natural way.
Good luck to all and remember the gum or mouthwash!!
— Posted by Garrison L. McDavid
2007
1:27 pm
Wow..Thats all i can really say about this article.I didnt know in the slightest bit that garlic could be good for you.Maybe i should have my mom invest in buying alot more.Even though it’s not proven yet it still sounds safe and all so why not.I dont know about garlic water or anything like that yet..we’ll have to see
— Posted by SAMMiE..
2007
4:19 pm
Pity those of us who have severe allergies to garlic in moderate or large servings. I was always sickened by garlic as a child — it was not until I became an adult did I learn to avoid it.
— Posted by Dwight Elliston
2007
5:04 pm
I am an indian woman. We add garlic to almost all curries we cook especially non-vegetarian dish. I have to say I am more appreciating the taste and effect of garlic after my marriage since my husband adds a lot of garlic to almost every dishes he cooks. I have also read that it boosts the sexual drive.
JP
— Posted by Jyothi
2007
5:55 pm
Warning! Do NOT make garlic in oil with the method described by #96, left at room temperature for 2 weeks. This method creates good conditions for the growth of botulism toxin, which can be harmful or fatal if eaten. See this Canadian government health site for a proper method.
www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/concen/specif/herbsoi le.shtml
— Posted by Barbara Johnsen
2007
6:00 pm
The bulb has been a health wonder for centuries..we are somewhat self concious of its odiferous characteristic however.
I love garlic and indulge quite often. I have found that chopping it together with parsley and a smigeon of salt adding either olive oil, butter or avocado can significantly reduce the odor effects and actually can make a scrumptous sandwich spread…try it …you will like it
— Posted by Marge Kopp
2007
10:14 pm
Let’s not forget the immunological effects of raw garlic. I take a chopped up clove of garlic anytime I feel the onset of a cold. I swallow with water to avoid dragon breath. It works wonders.
— Posted by Wai
2007
11:42 pm
when i was growing up, my father used to force us to eat garlic,which i hate ‘cos of the smell.My father also used to soak garlic in water to drink for backpain. But i now know with lots of reading that garlic is good.
— Posted by kofo
2007
12:42 am
When the temperatures are below freezing the flu bug finds it hard to survive. However when I get visitors from the cities they often bring cold germs with them. One or two cloves of garlic a day block the germs in their tracks. Also for minor inflamations or infections it works well too as it seems to act as an antibiotic.
Regarding garlic pills - my brother owned a garlic factory and he only supplied garlic tablets because his customers demanded them together with his other garlic products. He felt the good effects were lost in the making of the pills. Nothing scientific whatsoever about his opinion, I’m afraid.
— Posted by Ian
2007
1:03 am
thank you for the information i learned something new for helping me to stay fit and prone to some diseases
— Posted by ajay
2007
1:21 am
I did a Lyme treatment that was mainly allicin, an incredibly strong garlic concentrate. It helped my symptoms a lot and unlike antibiotics, which suppress the immune system, allicin stimulates it. The doctor, Dr. Zhang (dr-zhang.com) comes recommended by Andrew Weil. Allicin has also been found in trials to kill hospital superbugs (google and you’ll see). It’s quite a plant!
— Posted by barbara
2007
1:34 am
I’ll always cherish my October trip to San Francisco in 2001 ,which included driving south through the small town of Gilroy, CA. and suddenly being engulfed with the pungent perfume of garlic even though my car windows were closed .
Every winter I preach the gospel of raw garlic to my sickly co-workers.
— Posted by Walter Evangelista
2007
1:37 am
I visited Korea a little while back, and they take their garlic seriously. It comes with EVERY meal that you order there, and it is sliced and served with a red pepper dipping sauce. Literally every place you visit will give you some. It is totally raw, so you definitely get bad breath from it. Everyone eats it though, so you can’t really notice the odor.
— Posted by ryan
2007
1:38 am
you dont have to read this all, it will just remind you that garlic helps you feel better!
— Posted by ter
2007
1:55 am
I don’t like the smell and taste but I like to eat it. Everytime during meal or dinner I swallow about some cloves.
If I’m not mistaken, garlic helps prevent cancer which is in the articles above. When I was little I get alot of colds until I eat garlic. Now I got no more colds for more than 2 years!
The best way is to swallow some garlic without biting or just chew on it a bit. Now I got used to garlic, it’s like my friend. Garlic, onions, ginger…they’re great.
— Posted by Way Huck
2007
1:55 am
Re #77: (”No one believed me when I became really intoxicated (unable to focus, giddy, unsteady on my feet) after eating at a garlic restaurant in California.”)
Since garlic causes the body to relax blood vessels, perhaps you experienced a sudden lowering of blood pressure? With an increased effect if you took a blood pressure pill as well?
“The waiter brought a pot of coffee and, after drinking most of it strong and black, the symptoms began to dissipate and life continued.”
I’m wondering if the coffee restored your blood pressure.
— Posted by David in New York
2007
1:56 am
I took 2 or 3 small garlic from the whole crushed and chopped then I mixed with rice and I ate with some cooked veges or coked fish everyday during lunch and dinner, I believe and I felt its true that my cholesterol level are low. I’ve been taking garlic for more than five years.
Sapwan Bj.
Singapore.
— Posted by Sapwan Bj.
2007
2:08 am
it’s a great feeling eating garlic everyday..it makes me feel good especially being hypertensive..i not afraid forgetting to take my maintenance for my high blood koz i ate lots of these stuff..it’s great..really great for my health.. rarely get colds..it works wonders to me..so..y not try it!
— Posted by pampee
2007
2:35 am
At least two readers have commented that their fathers used to “force” them to eat garlic! Why so many heavy-handed, domineering dads out there?
(It’s not that I don’t like garlic, though.)
My problem: can’t digest it raw easily. I need to cook the stuff a little and have made many an “Indian” curry over the years!
— Posted by Vickie
2007
2:56 am
The bad odor of garlic comes out through the mouth and through your skin, especially when you are sweating. Fennel seeds is good but it only takes care the odor coming out of your mouth but not your body odor caused by garlic. The best solution is apple cider vinegar. Why? Because when you eat garlic it goes to your system, so you have take two tablespoon of apple cider vinegar to fight the garlic odor in your system. You will be surprise no more garlic odor even when you sweat. It happened to me, it can happen to you too. Plus apple cider vinegar fights bad breath and other health benefits to but that will be another story…
— Posted by Arnold
2007
3:05 am
My blood pressure was drastically reduced when I swallowed 3 small cloves of raw garlic. Because my blood pressure is normally 90/60, my Dr has recommended that I stay away from raw garlic. However, I cook most of my meals with dried and milled garlic and ginger and I am amazingly doing well in my health.
To combact the smell, taking fresh tomatoes or carbbage or an apple along side the raw garlic, helps to eliminate the “offensive” smell.
— Posted by maria
2007
3:22 am
I heard garlic cures erectile dysfunction.
— Posted by Eric
2007
4:22 am
In response to #75: In regards to your hallucinations…Are you sure it was Parsley you brought back from Hawaii for your rissoto???
— Posted by EME
2007
4:56 am
Regarding comment #77: Whenever I eat large amounts of garlic, I feel lethargic and sleepy. I was told that this happens to me because garlic lowers blood pressure. That’s probably why the waiter gave you coffee to drink after your garlic-laden meal. Coffee raises blood pressure.
— Posted by Reema
2007
5:19 am
I believe on healthy property of garlic. Can add that for preventing intestinal problem and using it as disinfectant, you should swallow the cloves enterely. HOWEVER, if you suffer of gastrites, hyperacidity, esophagite or colon irritation, in such condition, the garlic is irritant and worst your situation. ALSO take care if you are allergic to some of the substance contents of garlic or whatsoever that can be developed by chemical reaction. For instance, I am allergic to sodium bisolphate and raw garlic is part of the types of aliments that I should not consume.
— Posted by sab
2007
5:25 am
Doses/quantities of garlics, vitamines, oligoelements etc, are subjective!
Particularly with natural remedies you are the best to ascertain what is good and how much your body needs!
— Posted by sab
2007
6:36 am
When I feel a cold coming I do the same as comment 2. I tried chewing the galic, which I would assume is better for you, but that’s tough. I also tried swallowing the chopped up garlic in the morning. My co-workers complained about my breath, so I stopped. I think the combo of garlic with near empty stomach was just bad. Now I just do it at home since my wife doesn’t mind it. She eat’s it like that too.
— Posted by mewolf
2007
8:05 am
Responding Stuart #75: Are you you sure it was Parsley what you used for your Risotto?
In the other hand it is known that Parsley boosts sexual desire…Also in high quantities it could induce abortion in pregnant women…
It is correct that Parsley is good to remove the garlic smell…
Garlic is good as Antifungal, blood pressure,mosquito bites, avoiding Alopecia for its vasodilatation effect on the blood cappillaries nurturing the hair bulbs, Cholesterol lowering, insomnia, immune system.
1-You can poor garlic bulbs in apple vinagre for 14 days and then eat one bulb on each meal…for general benefit
2-For mosquito or insect bites just cut one bulb of garlic so its oil is exposed to the air for five minutes then apply it rubbing it to the bite for 2 more minutes
3-For Alopecia, mix finely smashed garlic and olive oil and apply with smooth 15 minutes massage to the scalp at night twice weekly for 3 month…shower very well in the next mornings, apply colonia on face and neck to mask the residual garlic odor…don’t take a public transportation…
4-Recepy from Barcelona Spain: Cut “open” one bar of french bread rub on it a half bulb of garlic, then rub over it a half fresh tomato then poor olive oil and eat it as apperitive…or as a snack…it is called “Pan con tomate”
For others who felt like sleepy or can’t drive after eating a meal rich on garlic, could be for it is effect lowering the blood pressure causing temporary hypotension…
— Posted by Coco
2007
8:16 am
Bulk garlic preperation
Cut the head in half place cut side down in a pan of warm oil on the stove, …..wait a few minutes…. then squeze the half cloves out of the skin all at once
— Posted by kb
2007
10:24 am
Let’s hear it for garlic!
It tastes soooo good.
My favorite: several cloves mashed, minced and slowly sauteed in olive oil. Throw in some chopped onions, celery, and green peppers and you have an incredibly delicious base for pasta sauce, soups, rice toppings, etc.
We are blessed by a loving creator who gives us many things to enjoy.
— Posted by Taylor. R
2007
10:26 am
since garlic makes me incredibly ill (as do raw onions) there’s no health benefit for me… just a lifetime of aggravation when I try to eat out.
— Posted by MoCo
2007
12:02 pm
The artical says nothing about raw garlic. I guess it’s the same cooked and so much better and easier to eat!
— Posted by VinceV
2007
1:32 pm
each of us has different reactions to food as well as life experiences. My brother gets the runs from chocolate and cocoa. Yet cocoa raises blood flow to your brain by fifteen percent. A Dr Rubin finds that a vibrating floor induces mice to a increase of bone density and reduce the grows of fat. He includes pictures of the change in fat tissues of the mice. I am in the process of testing his findings on human male bodies. Also am testing ultrasound use on teeth as shown by a University of Edmonton dental professor since August 17 2006. Results so far are regrown teeth with negative and positive findings. Broken tooth enamel was ejected by the pressure of growing inside while teeth and bone density showed high level improvements on X-ray. Presently testing bone , heart and lung treatment with the same equipment with impressive results. MY FINDINGS ARE NOT IN A SCIENTIFICALLY ACCEPTED METHODOLOGY WITH PLACEBO AND STATISTICAL AVERAGING.
— Posted by attila Gf. Matuschka
2007
3:35 pm
We’ve all heard about how eating olive oil that has been heated to high temperatures can increase free radicals and cause cancer, but here’s exciting news: cooking some garlic, onions, or bell peppers in the oil prevents this! Enjoy your vegetables sauteed in olive oil without worrying about free radicals!
— Posted by Mary
2007
8:30 pm
I have been taking raw, chopped garlic with breakfast and it helps to keep my BP under control, especially the diastolic, which goes up at least 10 points if I stop taking it!
— Posted by Nel Paduma
2007
12:07 am
the reason why the garlic clove must be crushed and allowed to sit for 15 minutes is that the inner and out sections of the bulb when crushed together create allycin, a potent antibiotic-like compound. we know this for years, see articles by Janet Raloff at ScienceNews.org and note that bad bacteria in gut can be thwarted by yogurt and garlic because these beneficial foods create bactericins which kill bad bacteria which may roam in the blood and create problems. i wonder if garlic can help create nitric oxide to relax blood vessels and keep blow flow regulated as well.
— Posted by troy christensen
2007
3:43 am
Maybe one of the reasons that garlic protects against colds is that, once you’ve eaten it, no one will come close enough to you to give you their germs.
— Posted by Teed Rockwell
2007
4:11 am
Comment 1: Why do we have to put all that garlic in food? Why not just swallow chopped garlic down like other cures (after letting it sit for 15 minutes)? Keep it off my plate!
Comment 2: It would still produce bad breath, which evidently stems from the digestive system anyway. Another very good cure for the resulting halitosis is anything containing chlorophyl, probably the easiest being alfalfa tablets. Inexpensive and easy to obtain, but taking too much of it is not recommended.
— Posted by Wendy Smith
2007
6:35 am
Fresh Garlic causes me to enter REM or in other words, dream, for extended periods during the night. I wonder if this happens to others?
— Posted by Jonathan
2007
8:31 am
it’s a great feeling eating garlic everyday..it makes me feel good.it’s great..really great for my health.. rarely get colds..it works wonders to me..so..y not try it
— Posted by Dr S.P.Bindra
2007
10:17 am
I learned recently of a great way to have garlic.
Chop the top from a head of garlic and place it unpeeled in foil, and bake at 425 for 40 minutes.
The result will be a paste that can be squeezed out of the chopped opening. You’ll be eating this with a spoon, it’s so delish.
— Posted by JohnP
2007
1:56 pm
Response to Jonathan #152:
It’s interesting that you should mention a possible correlative link between increased garlic consumption and heightened REM sleep, as I too have noticed greater dream response/awareness since establishing a daily garlic ‘regimen’ in my diet.
It would be very interesting if to know if there are any formal studies concerning this.
— Posted by kate
2007
2:30 pm
I used a garlic clove sliced in half and I put it between my check and teeth when I had swollen tonsils during a pregnancy that could not be treated with antibiotics. I read that this is a Russian-remedy from long ago. The garlic slowly drips onto the tonsils (and down your throat) during the day and cures the infection. People long ago relied on these old remedies because they work and more importantly, they are free! Not something the Pharmacy Companies want people to know or practice.
— Posted by Kate
2007
4:41 pm
Yes. Perfect. Exellent comments. Garlic is magical and helps prevent illness. This is perfect advice. Don’t waste your money on cold medications. In answer to a couple of skeptical postings, the reason the government or big Pharma does not recommend garlic is simple, there is more money to be made in selling drugs. Almost all drugs are derived from natural compounds. But the price goes up when you can bottle it and patent it.
A good way to eat Garlic is through Kimchi, a spicy korean dish of pickled cabage.
— Posted by jake
2007
10:36 pm
To those who suggested planting garlic cloves to grow garlic, should the cloves be peeled or left intact?
— Posted by Susan
2007
9:24 am
It’s important to note that garlic itself doesn’t contain free hydrogen sulfide (H2S), but the disulfides present in garlic are metabolized to form H2S.
Quoting from the paper (discussion):
“Here we demonstrate that garlic and garlic-derived organic polysulfides induce H2S production in a thiol-dependent manner and that this signal molecule mediates the vasoactivity of garlic”
Amazingly, considering it’s a deadly poisonous gas H2S is a putative neurotransmitter and may function as effectively as nitric oxide (another poisonous gas) in regulation of the vascular system, see
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/0709010104v1
for a commentary just posted in the same journal on this matter. In passing, this also means that garlic which is deprived of the (smelly) disulfides and trisulfides simply will not possess this activity. Unfortunately, just about any sulfide, disulfide, or polysulfide will have a sulfurous stink, and there is no way you can make it not smell except to remove it or to chemically react it with something else.
I would hypothesize that fresh garlic would have the highest content of these compounds since allyl disulfide and trisulfide releaased on crushing are fairly volatile.
— Posted by RB Murphy
2007
1:56 pm
I have read that when you have a cold or flu coming on you should coat part of your foot with olive oil to protect the skin, put a crushed garlic clove in a sock and sleep wearing the sock. The garlic will be absorbed into your bloodstream through your skin. May help if you want to test the medicinal effects but are not an admirer of the taste.
— Posted by ckinnj
2007
4:48 pm
I found a cool little grlic grater in France. It is a small(5″)saucer with a rough area in the center. It is pottery, decorated, and often sits on a small base or foot. Pour a little olive oil in it and then take a garlic clove and rub ove the rough area and voila the garlic is essentially liquified.
— Posted by Carl Bach
2007
5:57 pm
“… transmits cellular signals that relax blood vessels and increase blood flow…”
How long untill this happens and how long does it last? I donate blood (T cells) and this could be a help for me. So WHEN should I eat my garlic sandwich?
Thanks
— Posted by murphy
2007
12:08 am
it`s true. i have eaten garlic for years, so i have a healthy body and perfect skin. and sss…t (a top secret) it boost your L2 (lust and lybido ). okey . . .
have a nice day with garlic. /chairul
— Posted by chairul azhar
2007
1:24 pm
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Firstly I thank the team for publishing such good articles on this web site. Garlic has been used in my country for centuries which cannot be dated. This has got amazing effects on heart diseases and protection against cancer. Moreover it purifies blood and increases vitality.
All the newely wed couples are given a treat by their relatives with lots of garlic dishes so that they have strong arousal and the girl would immediately concieve. Thats the reason in India the productivity rate is very high compared with western world.
Moreover most of the traditional ayurvedic medicines have got garlic as a main substances in their medicines which would cure the abdominal problems and heart problems. The ancient text says that a baby born during winter season would never catch cold when few drops of garlic oil is appled over the crown of the head and even at the fore head of the baby.
Any way thanks to the entire people who keep reading the articles about GARLIC
Best wishes
RAM - India
— Posted by RAM
2007
1:56 pm
The majority of studies on garlic do show positive benefits for the human cardiovascular system including lowering of blood lipids, anticoagulation (as does aspirin), and improved endothelial function (endothelial cells line the blood vessels). For a current review Mol. Nutr. Food Rev 2007 51:1365
Our bodies require sulphur in our diet and onions and garlic can be a good source. It has been suggested that a proportion of the population maybe not consume enough sulphur.
Note: There are many differences between human and other animal physiology, so results in, for example, horses cannot necessarily be extrapolated to humans. As stated above onion and garlic (as are raisins) are poisonous to dogs. Also unlike humans, dogs do not get high cholesterol in the absence of some other problem such as hypothyroidism.
— Posted by judith airey
2007
7:43 pm
There’s an easy way to reduce the garlic smell, especially that which lingers long after you’ve eaten it. If you have a whole clove, you’ll notice that there’s something like a stem down the middle, that breaks away from the rest of the clove and has a different texture. This is what sprouts if you leave the clove on the counter for a while. Take this part out - devein it, in a sense - and the lingering smell is significantly reduced.
— Posted by jennaisavegan
2007
3:49 am
great info and garlic tips, everyone.
any recommendations for websites with good garlic recipes???
and more homemade remedies would be appreciated, thanks!!!
— Posted by luvphood
2007
7:43 am
No one has mentioned South American chimichurri. A basic or complicated sauce based on olive oil (3 parts), chopped garlic (1 part) and parsley (2 parts), approximate. I had it served with a “healthy” flank steak, beans, rice and eggs breakfast. Before the main course, bread and the simple chimichurri in a small saucer were brought out. I ate two little saucers and dipped a half a loaf of bread. Great way to start the day.
— Posted by Bud
2007
9:17 am
I am pleased to see the Times run an article that isn’t just bashing herbal remedies, as has been its’ usual practice. There are a number of solid studies on herbal remedies that don’t get reported in the mainstream media - why? Simple - stories on the plane landing safely don’t sell papers. The problem with the media’s reporting of studies is that each one is presented as definitive, rather than as an addition to the body of science on that substance. There is a lot of great information out there. I like www.supplementinfo.org, and Healthnotes.com.
— Posted by SuzyQ847
2007
9:33 am
Yes, garlic is easy to grow and it is not too late to plant it, I just put mine in on Sunday. Google ‘organic garlic seeds’ and you will come up with several generally very friendly sources. You put them in, mulch them down, and forget about them till next May or so. Save some of your bulbs to plant again in the fall. Every day it becomes more important to know where your food comes from. If you like garlic pickles you can also easily make your own and have your own organic garlic pickles which also taste much better than anything out of a supermarket and will also amaze your friends. There are many recipes that have NO salt in them so look for them out there, try looking at the onion pickle recipes and substitute the garlic. I don’t know about the nutritional value of roasted garlic vs fresh, but I know that it is sweeter and more palatable for me. Another fun thing is to smoke your garlic - it will last forever, and will reconstitute itself in dishes like black eyed peas or chile or soup, yum.
— Posted by Susan
2007
11:09 am
Garlic is planted point side up with the “skin” on but if it has fallen off already no need to worry. We have planted approximately 600 individual cloves which will yield well over 100 lbs! Yeah, we like garlic! - and shallots and peppers and squash and broccoli etc. etc. which we also plant. The point is that many whole foods benefit everyone in different ways. Sure, some people can’t eat garlic; others can’t tolerate dairy or wheat or eggs or tomatoes or peanuts, the list is endless. However, don’t despair or condemn the food that affects you adversely. I can’t eat certain mushrooms - morels make me horribly ill, though I relished them at one time. When everyone swoons with their first appearance in spring, I feel smug in turning a blind eye.
Last words: EAT WHOLE ORGANIC FOOD - sustainably grown - live a good life.
— Posted by Joan Rawce Metzger
2007
12:52 pm
Thank you for explaining the benefits of food on health. In natural medicine, garlic is suggested to boost the immune system, among other things. Whenever I feel like I’m getting a cold, I crush some raw organic garlic (2 cloves if I can take it) and spread it on a bagel or toast with peanut butter and local honey. It flush out the system a bit, but it has prevented my illness from worsening. Sometimes, I feel better within a few hours.
— Posted by Christine
2007
12:55 pm
Regarding cooking garlic, for the best health benefits, I learned in herbal medicine school that it is best to eat raw or to add at the end of the cooking process, rather than at the beginning.
— Posted by Christine
2007
2:09 pm
Garlic makes me fell ill unfortunately, I like it’s taste and would like to think it has health benefits but I get headaches, sometimes of migraine proportions after garlic consumption. Also my physical energy is sapped out of me for several hours making me feel quite weak. It took me sometime to figure out it was the garlic (and not wheat or dairy for example) affecting me through a careful process of dietary elimination/trial and error. When I don’t eat garlic at all I’m fine. I consider it an allergy of some sort. Perhaps it’s the hydrogen sulfide produced by the garlic. Does anyone know if there is a difference in hydrogen sulfide production/levels between raw garlic and roasted garlic..?
— Posted by Rodders
2007
2:41 pm
We grow garlic in our garden in NC. We planted it in September and will harvest in late May or June.It is the ultimate in no-brainer gardening. Take a store bought clove of garlic and stick it in the ground and,ta-da, you have a head of garlic in eight months. Homegrown is sweeter and wetter than store bought. And of course it’s organic. If Southern insects don’t eat it, and they don’t,nothing will eat it-except humans.
— Posted by Gayle
2007
3:06 pm
Muhammed -59- no reason to feel injured because you think the Muslim side of food lore is ignored - it is not - I have seen reports on garlic’s benefit by Turkish scientists. See whfoods.com (world’s healthiest foods) for reports on current research and also explains reasons why both garlic and onions need to be cut or crushed and let stand few minutes to release enzymatic activity -
And Victor from Transvylania no. 68 - land of my ancestors - one hates to hurt your feelings but we should all recall the benefit of garlic for warding off vampires (but not the NYT-reading ones). I had a friend who hung garlic bulbs behind the living room drapes when expecting a visit from his mother, but she still could expertly suck the blood out of a good time and frighten children too.
— Posted by Sheena
2007
4:45 pm
I have been eating garlic for years in high consumption. Even more so now since my fiance is Korean. I can tell you that I have not had a cold or flu in ten years. Yes, not even one single cold. Believe it or not. I try to at least eat a couple of cloves of garlic every day. When I feel that I am not 100% I load up on the garlic, eating as much as 20 gloves in a day, I take a extremely high amount of vitamin c and multi vitamins as well.
— Posted by Derick
2007
11:11 pm
Dear RAM from India,
You stated that the reason for a high birth rate in India is because of the huge consumption of garlic in the Indian diet.
I stipulate that the reason for a high birth rate, (which India cannot sustain without creating more poverty)is because contraception is not available for most Indians (except for the rich and middle classes who comprise fewer than 12% of the Indian population of over 1 billion people: that’s about 130 million people), nor are adequate supplies of clean water, housing, health care, and access to education available to 88% of the population.
India’s phenomenal economic growth as a mass producer of exports has been at the expense of the poorest population in India. Pollution and sub-standard living conditions are taking a huge environmental toll on the Indian sub-continent, just as it is in China, where CHEAP labor and weak environmental laws have worsened the lives of the poorest segments of the population. They have the highest birth rates and the lowest life expectancies.
Garlic is tasty in food, but it isn’t responsible for enhanced reproduction.
What is the average life expectancy and quality of life for this increased population? No one really knows, because not many people pay attention to the conditions they endure.
Please do not take offense. The conversation here was about the ’supposed’ benefits of garlic. I found most of the claims to be humorous, but your response topped all others, ergo my response.
Sincerely,
Charlie,
Staten Island,
New York
— Posted by charlie
2007
8:15 am
The newspapers write about some things as if nobody has ever heard about it. Garlic has been eaten by people since time immemorial. In Europe, east of the German border, garlic is a daily staple added to most cooked meals and meat. Only the western people cannot stand the smell of garlic although it isn’t very strong. The benefits of garlic outweigh anything, especially smell. And, if the Chinese have been using it for thousands of years, it must be good. The Chinese know most about plants, herbs, nutrition - believe or not.
— Posted by Erik Wassenich
2007
10:59 am
No one has mentioned my favorite cold/cough remedy:
Mince 1-2 cloves of garlic and mix with a couple of tablespoons of honey (sounds gross, but it helps it slide right down). Swallow this, then (if you are an adult) follow with a nice little drink of bourbon, fresh lemon juice and hot water. Now, go to sleep. The next morning, no cold!
I used this remedy on my kids also. The garlic seems to cut mucus production, and the honey (always good anyway) keeps their little throats from burning.
One more comment. I wonder if those with garlic onion allergies may be sensitive to pesticides used on those particular crops? I thought I was allergic to red onions for years, because I got a vicious headache when I ate them, but when I switched to organic, no problems….
— Posted by Mary
2007
1:57 pm
I’m sorry to hear that some folks have adverse reactions to garlic, I suppose it is to be expected with all the other allergies out there that some will be sensitive to garlic. Mary may be on to something with the pesticide possibilities though. I was violently allergic to tuna-fish as a child, gave me severe stomach cramps. Now I have no problem with it. Not sure if I outgrew the allergy or they quit harvesting tuna from a toxic area.
— Posted by Andy in Michigan
2007
2:55 pm
I am half italian and all of my italian relative ate fresh parsley at meals. Also, in regard to earaches, and simple outer-ear infections, I learned of using 50:50 ratio of rubbing alcohol and any vinegar( from an ear doctor) really eliminates the infections for me.
— Posted by townsend blauvelt
2007
3:10 pm
People are busy talking about the odor of garlic as bad breath. I have smelled fresh garlic on people’s breath right after they’ve eaten a garlicly meal. It smells like garlic - not bad at all. I even like it if it is not utterly overwhelming. Rather, there is an affect maybe eight hours later. That breath is horrible. I have smelled it on the breaths of Chinese who I believe have good cleanliness habits. It could literally knock you over, you cannot get close. I even suspect this stink has been on my own breath! Does anyone know what’s going on here? Fresh garlic breath is not the objection, I am fairly convinced.
— Posted by addie
2007
3:51 pm
ın turkey it is an unseperable item of the kitchen and the people generally use in their meals. the only reason people dont eat much is the smell
— Posted by muhammet servi
2007
5:00 pm
> breath
http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi/jafcau/1996/44 /i12/abs/jf960640e.html
J. Agric. Food Chem., 44 (12), 3778 -3782, 1996. jf960640e S0021-8561(96)00640-1
Copyright © 1996 American Chemical Society
Analysis of Compounds in Human Breath after Ingestion of Garlic Using Proton-Transfer-Reaction Mass Spectrometry
Abstract:
After ingestion of raw garlic, the components allyl methyl sulfide (1), allyl methyl disulfide (2), diallyl sulfide (3), diallyl disulfide (4), diallyl trisulfide (7), dimethyl sulfide (8), and acetone (9) in the breath of a test person were analyzed over a time period of about 30 h by means of proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry. While the concentrations of 2-7 reached maxima shortly after ingestion of garlic and declined to baseline values within the next 2-3 h, concentrations of 1, 8, and 9 increased much more slowly and showed enhanced values even 30 h after garlic consumption. The strong increase of the concentration of acetone might be indicative of enhanced metabolism of serum cholesterol, triglycerides, and total lipids in the blood stream.
— Posted by Hank Roberts
2007
5:22 pm
Dear author:
Parsing the details of a story to determine which assertions have been proven by scientific investigation and which are conjecture can be tedious. To better convey the information, it would be better to clearly define the scientific study and the results shown. For example, all that has been shown here is that garlic juice placed in petri dishes with human cells causes the cells to produce hydrogen sulfide. There is no evidence that injested garlic would cause the same effect. The enzymes or molecules responsible for the response may be altered by digestion or incapable of passing the blood barrier intact. Thus, no health benefits have been proven by this study. There is only an interesting finding that warrants further research.
— Posted by David
2007
6:07 am
Rotten eggs DO NOT smell like sulphur.
— Posted by pam welch
2007
7:41 am
I know garlic can be used to treat warts when a piece is placed directly on the wart and covered (overnight). Take it off in the morning. Do this for about a week and it will ‘peel’ it off. Tried and true.
— Posted by Elizabeth
2007
5:29 pm
Parsley is a good source of vitamin C so sounds like the combination with garlic is a good thing all around for colds. I’m sensitive to garlic too (it upsets my stomach) but because I love to cook with it, I put up with the symptoms. I am also allergic to sulfa drugs - anyone know of a correlation? Red wine does not seem to bother me; nor does any other food that I’m aware of, so I am ruling out a mild sulfite allergy.
— Posted by Linda
2007
5:43 am
How lovely to read a blog whose responses do not consist of insulting and “flaming” the other respondents. Speaking of which, roasted garlic is one of the great discoveries/pleasures of recent years, for me. And I’ll try the garlic-and-cottage-cheese combo, since I love anything with cottage cheese.
— Posted by Jim
2007
7:39 am
Garlic has been in use in India from times immememorial although some people may resent its use.It is known to be highly beneficial for good health by beeing highly thermogenic.It is recommended for generous use during winter.
— Posted by K L Mahadevappa
2007
2:38 pm
garlic makes my nails grow much faster.
My sister and I both noticed that after peeling garlic and getting the juice on your nails, they grow much faster. You don’t even have to leave it on, you can wash it off in a few minutes and your nails will grow faster.
for those people who don’t feel good after eating garlic, perhaps it lowers the blood pressure too much and you already have low blood pressure.
Try taking it at night and don’t forget the fresh parsley!
— Posted by Maria
2007
5:01 am
Everybody is expounding on the benefits of garlic and it is great to see this article/blog on the NYT.
Garkic also thins the blood and is not recommended for people who are on blood thinning drugs like Coumadin aka Warfrin. It is not safe to ingest garlic for these patients
— Posted by Jayadev Bisineeru
2007
4:07 pm
A cooked egg left on a light for a couple days will smell like sulfur. Found out on Easter when one wasn’t found!
— Posted by Julie
2007
12:33 am
My parents and grandparents have always used garlic in their food and so do i now. I have been told that it’s good for health, more so for foods that make you gassy and i have also heard that it thins the blood.
— Posted by Veeran
2007
3:57 pm
I wonder if this toxicity mentioned at high doses is related to the fact the garlic falls into the nightshade family. I personally get very ill even smelling garlic or onions and nauseous and vomitous if they are ingested. I searched online and found that it is not that uncommon of a food allergy, and the articles I’d found related that to it’s belonging to the same genus as deadly nightshade.
— Posted by Sean
2007
5:29 pm
“Nightshade”?! oh my word - I was going to post a comment about garlic as a food allergy, seems other alreayd did. My husband can not take this however I can, and glad for it. GARLIC freshly prepared daily per this article makes a tremendous difference for me re. sinus / bronchitis issues. I definitely tell a difference with it. Including feeling more energetic. I digest about 4 cloves every other day and 3 the others. I also as poster Joi Hays drink garlic water. Sometimes with honey and lemon mixed in. For a sinus / bronchitis sufferer, it really helps!
— Posted by Cyndy
2007
8:46 pm
As a Chef I can tell you that I eat Garlic every day at home and at work and have done so my entire life. I would guess that one or two cloves are my personal consumption, Well I have never had problems and as far as colds or flu. Kids I will tell you this is a rare event for myself and family. When we get it the worst is over in 2 or 3 days. With luck this will continue.
P.S. My wife does have digestive problems with garlic. I just cut down the garlic I use at home. Add a few cloves on the side for my self and enjoy. to comprimise.
— Posted by Stephen
2007
10:36 am
Ever smear a little garlic on a bald head?
Do it everyday for at least 2 weeks.
Know what you get?
A bald head that smells like a garlic bulb.
TPP responds: you win the prize for most-amusing garlic post ever.
— Posted by thom
2007
12:44 pm
Raw garlic in vanilla ice cream is delicious! No, really, I swear. Try it before you make a face.
— Posted by Lavinia
2007
1:08 pm
In her autobiography, Nadia Comaneci said that while she was training for the Olympics in Romania, her coach Bela Karolyi made her and her teammates eat raw garlic every day. As a result, they were the only team that never ever got sick, even when a bad flu was making the rounds(though when they sweated they smelled like hell!).
— Posted by Olivia
2007
2:33 am
Garlic soup from Julia Child’s book… Aigo Bouido (Garlic Soup)is a mellow, aromatic and delicious way to enjoy garlic. As Julia says, “Because the garlic is boiled, its after-effects are at a minimum, and its flavor becomes exquisite, aromatic and almost undefinable.”
I swear I feel better every time I make it. Enjoy!
http://tinyurl.com/2eumna
— Posted by Deann
2007
4:47 pm
What a fantastic article and comments!! Really outstanding and a pleasure to see people sharing their experiences and recipes in a friendly way!
I read all of the 202 comments so far and wrote down many tips and recipes, extremely enlightening. I did not know the chinese garlic issues and I am glad I learned about it.
Also, for you GARLIC GROWERS, is it possible to grow it indoors? I live in an apartment (spacious) and I am wondering if I could put some dirt in a big vase and try to grow it there. Also, does it grow well during cold winters (read -20).
Thanks to everyone for their postings. Garlic rocks!
— Posted by Nando
2007
1:33 pm
Very interesting comments, but can anyone give me an e-mail address of some nursery that sells garlic online? I know markets sell garlic, but they treat it with chemicals to retard growth (as they also do with horseradish root. If you have an answer, please e-mail me at: jamesr38@msn.com. I’m also not against a phone call with same information at (208) 861-5476. Thanks for your time and have a Very Happy holiday season.
— Posted by Jim Ramsden
2007
1:10 am
i like garlic! very much! i think it will do good to me.so just eat it. just do it
— Posted by hudson
2007
1:57 am
I find that Michigan has the best conditions for growing garlic, and have been self-sufficient in that wonderful item for ten years now. Great thinly sliced on french bread with butter. But also, used in small quantities crushed,chopped and added in cooking, it is like nature’s MSG, enhancing other flavours without drawing attention to itself; the key is small amounts. Check out any good recipe for arroz brasileiro (Brazilian rice) to get the idea. Also, China has been dumping underpriced garlic on the US market lately and has been destroying our domestic production. California garlic, while not as good as mine of course, is excellent and should be supported. INSIST on US garlic, folks.
— Posted by krnewman
2007
2:09 am
Much as I love to eat garlic, I’m worried about the poster who proposed to use it as a suppository for his child if the child wouldn’t eat it. Garlic could be extremely irritating if used in that way and could cause serious problems.
The poster who said she used it as a suppository for yeast infections misused the word. She meant inserting the garlic into the vagina, where yeast infections may reside.
— Posted by Lili
2007
3:14 am
Garlic is ethereal. Good for almost everything. Like aloes. Or karili (bitter melon). It’s funny how bitter things, like aloes & bitter melon, or something pungent like garlic, are good for the body and are excellent inner disease repellents & detoxifiers. Try crushed garlic on salads; galic with chili; crushed garlic, olive oil, and pasta, with a wee bit salt; some people walk around with cloves of garlic in their pocket (to ward off evil spirits & vibrations. I had an uncle once who did that.
Crushed garlic in honey: good on toast.
Remember to always crush cloves in skin. Easier (this way) to peel.
Remember, too, moderation is an essential ingredient in cooking (as in life).
— Posted by Lennox Raphael
2007
3:37 am
We in india are aware of these benefits since ages.
— Posted by yogendraprasad
2007
3:39 am
Why is it nobody needed to tell me that garlic was good for me? I like the smell, the taste and never smell it on the person of another garlic lover…too bad: N’est-ce pas? The same folks, it seems to me, who make such to-do about the ‘fragrance’ of garlic on someone’s person seem not to have any problem with the stink of tobacco and tobacco smoke that permeates the clothing and perspiration of a smoker who is in a no smoking train, class or office. In those situations, if it weren’t so inappropriate, I would rub garlic under my nose to cover the stink. By the way, speaking of cigarettes, tobacco is the only plant in nature in which Polonium 210 occurs naturally. Isn’t it odd that that fact has never been debated publicly? Too bad it doesn’t have the same health benefits as that other poison, hydrogen sulfide. In that case America (the World, really) wouldn’t be experiencing such a health care crisis.
Greetings from Budapest.
— Posted by Luis Perez
2007
3:49 am
I have munching on that yummy herb for years and one of my fav way to eat it is to roast in in the oven sprinkled with some olive oil
— Posted by Big Jim
2007
4:00 am
i like garlic.it makes me feel really comfortable in the time i eat it.Its not only good for my health but also makes some food really tasty.about it’s smell,i think its not a big deal.you can use many thing to fix it .by the way,i think garlic is not suitable to everyone.its smell,obviously,and the allergy it makes which i am sure many people vary and maybe too sensitive.so choose it ,for your health or for your appetite,it completely depends on you guys
— Posted by dungams
2007
4:07 am
For long being the benefits of Garlic on health was a deabtable issue. Although, recently scientist claims it’s potential benefits in cancer or in protecting heart from coronary heart disease. We as a sub-continental people and middle eastern as well consuming highest amounts of Garlick. But, if you go through the data on medicine you will find that the incidences of CAD is more in this region! As a Cardiologist, I myself has confusion on it, although it has potential antioxidant property.
— Posted by Dr. A H M Waliul Islam,PhD
2007
4:18 am
to the mother that is thinking of trying garlic as suppository for her baby: Please don’t do it. Raw garlic juice on the skin especially that of a baby and can cause severe reaction including blistering. If inserted into the rectum the effect could be even worse
regards,
babs
— Posted by barbara
2007
5:48 am
I have found garlic very effective in joint pains. I have been regularly eating it for nearly five decades
— Posted by N D Sharma
2007
5:52 am
I just worked over winter on a film set and whenever somebody was coming down with a cold we would immediately chop up some garlic and give it to them on a biscuit. The whole office would smell afterwards and the boss would look at us strangely but days off were relatively small and people came back regularly so we’re all for it. Parsley does help if eaten afterwards but it tends to come out in your skin. If the whole world ate Parsley this wouldn’t be a problem…Aliison in Australia (happy with new government)
— Posted by Aliison
2007
5:58 am
We in Bangladesh are aware of these benefits since ages. Girlic is very importantan of life.
— Posted by kmkamruzzaman
2007
6:09 am
Why would you want to cook anything(garlic in this case) in a microwave if you’re consuming it for its health benefits? It ruins the nutritive value of any food.Do your own research.
— Posted by sri narayan
2007
6:13 am
May I suggest a very simple way to eat the stuff?
We in Catalonia use “all-i-oli” (garlic & oil) sauce for barbecued meat -mostly lamb-, sausages, toasted bread, baked potatoes, baked artichokes and the like.
Pestle some real fresh garlic clovers (remove the inner core if you want to avoid most of the odor) in a strong mortar. Then pour virgin olive oil very slowly so that you get a thick, deep yellow creamy emulsion (it takes vigorous stirring) that may hold a spoon in vertical position.
Add a pinch of salt and enjoy!
Jordi
— Posted by Jordi
2007
6:19 am
Hi… I’m also a garlic eater.. co’z i beleive that it helps my health so much…
Anyway thanks for this news here…
— Posted by glendale M. Baylon
2007
6:25 am
unaware of garlic’s cancer-fighting powers, i used to refuse consuming a lot of garlic; i often thought, who wants to be that guy with offensive garlic breath? i’ve been living in south korea for nearly a year and a half now, and i don’t feel that way so much anymore. the korean diet contains many healthy foods with potent smells, like kimchi, for example, that garlic breath is much overlooked. garlic breath, here it seems, is a small price to pay for such a salubrious and cheap herb.
— Posted by Bilal Muhammad
2007
6:26 am
Whether you consume it raw, boiled, fried, baked etc, that does not matter. We must have strong belief and faith on the wonders GARLIC would do on one part of our body system. Lets continue eating garlic so that we can continue telling others about the good and the “not so good” about garlic. I just love garlic. It makes me feel good.
— Posted by Sidek Moh
2007
7:41 am
Special notice to Curious: I make a from onions when I feel a cold coming on & it kills it before it gets started. Since garlic is of the same family,it should work even better.Use honey to modify the taste.Garlic is also the best natural mosquito repellent.
— Posted by Frank Elkins
2007
7:44 am
I take garlic in raw form, slicing thinly 4-5 cloves mixing it with one sliced raw onion bulb and one raw tomato, and mixed it with half-cooked leafy vegetables and poured with 1-1/2 table spoon of soya sauce. The dish tastes good to me. I take this daily keeping in mind and hoping that I benefit of its medicinal value. And I do not emit garlic-smell from my body. I hope that the researchers will come up, later, of conclusive report on their studies of garlic. I already heard the benefits of garlic mentioned in the comments posted above. ARQ
— Posted by Alejandro R. Quitoriano
2007
7:51 am
Yes! Garlic is great!
Coco: your tomato bread with garlic is great.
I rub garlic on toast, then open a tomato and rub it on the toast, and finally a little olive oil and salt and pepper. Delicious Catalan staple.
I am going to tell you all of a fantastic way to make allioli, the famous garlic mayonnaise of Catalan cuisine. Although the traditional way takes forever because it calls for endless hours of beating olive oil and garlic, and seldom works, this is a very easy way:
Crush four or five garlic cloves (not the gigantic ones). Mix them with half a teaspoon of salt to make a paste. Put this paste in the food processor (it has to be a food processor or it won’t work).
Start the food processor on high, add one full egg and one yolk (you can SLIGHTLY cook the eggs to prevent salmonella) and VERY SLOWLY pour the olive oil. About six ounces will do, but it has to be poured very slowly. (Some food processors have a small opening on top that pours the olive oil a few drops per second–well, maybe a little more).
And that’s it! Your will notice when the food processor starts slowing down. Then it is done.
Believe me, you will thank me for this. You can eat it with meat, fish, eggs, or just about anything.
By the way, Catalans also invented mayonnaise, in the Balearic island of Mahon, hence its name. You can also do mayonnaise like this, just without the garlic. But allioli is so much better!
Try also rubbing garlic on toast with avocado and olive oil, salt and pepper.
— Posted by MB
2007
7:59 am
It has been known for centruies that garlic is beneficial for nearly all aspects of human body. If you wanna be a healty person, get a habit to eat garlic if possible every day. But do not forget to brush you teeths:)
— Posted by Cagatay
2007
8:06 am
In my life, there are about 5-8 pills garlics in my plate and I am cooking lunch with it everyday, but I don’t think there is something strange smell at all.I like it very much.
— Posted by michael chang
2007
8:32 am
Whoever would have thought that lil ole garlic cloves could produce as much comment as some of our most un-newsworthy celebrities who produce nothing other than setting an obscene example of life for young adults to emulate!!
— Posted by Robert Cooper
2007
8:32 am
Like many of you I have extreme negative reactions to garlic and onions. Migraine headaches, indigestion issues and my body will ’sleep’ to get over the effects. The most extreme incident caused shakes and a seizure. My friends always cook an allium-free meal for me, we use chilis alot and ginger.
For many years people have tried to tell me how healthy it is for me to have garlic- when the exact opposite is true. If there is even a small amount in any sauce I get a headache.
For those of you who seem to experience the same I have noticed that vidalia onions aren’t as bad an option but little else…Who has some recommendations??
(having had this since childhood I have substitutes and have gone to nutritionists-none of them have had actionable advice other than ‘avoid it’!)
— Posted by patty
2007
8:48 am
While garlic is essential for my cooking, the ongoing and well-funded marketing farce that is garlic “research” is a continuing source of amusement. Find me any researcher who wants his funding discontinued — the garlic producers do pay well, after all. The American Tobacco Institute should have done so well…
— Posted by Scott
2007
8:48 am
As a grower of garlic (over 60 varieties from 20 countries) and three books about garlic I am living proof of benefits of garlic. Most of the sciene tests disproving the benefits have used PROCESSED garlic or garlic capsules. We had penicillin in WWII, the Russians did not. Saw wounded Russians pull garlic cloves from pocket and rub on wounds. David Mirelman, Israel has been publishing scientific journal articles re. his research on tumors using allicing, a property found ONLY in RAW garlic. Look at me as your final example: I am 108 years old and my third wife, 30 years old, is pregnant with our third child.
— Posted by Chester Aaron
2007
9:05 am
I like garlic, but I don’t like the smell
— Posted by chengxiaojun
2007
9:11 am
I eat the garlic too. It good for me. I not like you, smell come from skin is nice and I like that too. Carry garlic with you in shirt or trouser pocket. When always handy you can eat all day long.
— Posted by Dartang
2007
9:13 am
a french receipe against cold.
1L 1/2 of water.
6 cloves of garlic chopped in 4 slices each.
thyme.
rosemary.
boil 10mn
pour through a sieve
add 3soup spoons of olive oil
drink a cup and go to bed and drink the remaining tomorrow
(if you use it as a soup add eggs and 125g grated”Gruyere”
Better health
— Posted by Christine
2007
9:16 am
Although We in the family are coming across dozens of such articles every day through the daily regonal and national papers; but your article here on the same topic is more simple and due to your paper`s prominence it is adaptable to few more after reading the article here in the home.Although it is highly acclaimed by Aurveda and was being used in India many many years ago but the recent generation are more inclined to take 3 to 4 cloves when eating due to pungent smell. When this marvel of nature was reintroduced after reserch; all are watching that in everymeal at home or hotel, the garlic is a must and who cares for the smell ?.My thanks to Chris Ramirez for the report.
— Posted by SATYANARAYAN MOHAPATRA
2007
9:21 am
If you grow your own garlic you should try eating some of the young shoots. They can be used in the same way as scallions or green onions. They are popular in Asia and are quite tasty.
Garlic, in my opinion, does not cause bad breath, it causes “garlic Breath”. Bad breath is caused by rotted food particles trapped between teeth and in general by poor oral hygene.
— Posted by Charlie Sommers
2007
9:31 am
Yeah Garlic is all of that and the chips. I use garlic as often as I can. Yes the smell bothers some but your health is your first concern. Buy some mints if you must sometimes I use to be crued and say just don’t stand so close. It helped me wether on of my most taxing jobs as an airport catering agent in out of the cold taxi strips did not get one cold. I am sorry for some people that just can’t give credit where it is due. Thank Yah, Hashem for it!! and keep it moving smile
— Posted by tekiyah
2007
9:33 am
My dad who was 89 when he passed and until the last month of his life took only a baby asprin and drank garlic water three times a day. He had no blood pressure problems and was still maintaining his own home and yard alone. He was a strong man who could work circles around any of us kids.
There is a benefit.
— Posted by Sally
2007
9:38 am
I recommend garlic in yoghurt. crush a few cloves and mix with yoghurt in a bowl. enjoy eating…
— Posted by Mehmet Azizoglu
2007
9:53 am
To some, the smell of garlic is too offensive and pungent but I can say only “vampires” hate it so to speak. In the Philippines, garlic is a great flavor enhancer in most Filipino dishes. I can’t bear the taste of chicken arrozcaldo (porridge) without sautéed garlic.
— Posted by rolito cupino
2007
9:55 am
I named my company Garlic, so it’s no surprise that I’m a dedicated eater of 6-7 cloves a day. I don’t know about the health benefits–I’m in advertising– but for flavor and enjoyment, just saute a few sliced cloves with olive oil, red pepper and add a pile of fresh produce (broccoli rabe, spinach, escarole and beans, etc). Mix with a little pasta or rice and a glass of wine and you have a great meal. In addition, I will sometimes crush one clove in the morning and mix with a glass of tomato juice, but will try the water recipe suggested by others. I can attest that growing garlic (in a clay pot in NYC) is very easy. And to the health benefits, I haven’t been sick in years, but when i feel just a touch of a cold coming on, I make garlic soup with no less than one bulb of garlic and then take a freezing cold shower. (An acupuncturist gave me this tip years ago: a good 5 minute shower under cold, cold water and you actually feel the cold releasing its grip.) It’s a great feeling.
My Garlic Soup with beans:
http://www.garlicadvertising.com/eat/recipe.php4
— Posted by garlicbreath
2007
9:57 am
Garlic is one of the easiest things to grow. Stick four or five cloves into a flowerpot full of dirt in the spring. Keep it moist. In the middle of summer, after the leaves begin to yellow, dig out your fresh homegrown garlic.
— Posted by werner
2007
10:02 am
Actually I eat daily a cup of five liquefied green and red veggies plus two cloves of garlic and a medium onion, vinager and Olive Oil plus seven or so species included fenell. The ailments of the age have come and go, I enjoy 73 looking younger and in good health, 3 years ago I used to ran for hours although I have HBP and HCh. I also eat a lot of beans, nuts and seeds, some carbs, fish and wine. My weight is perfect with my height.
— Posted by Roger Garcia-Marenco
2007
10:04 am
i have a question:how to cook garlic can make it more valid for health?
— Posted by YUANCAO
2007
10:11 am
More on growing garlic….lots of varieties of seed garlic are available online, both softneck and hardneck varieties, organic and conventionally grown. Hardnecks have larger cloves and stronger taste, but softnecks store longer, so I plant some of each. They go in in the fall, and if the weather is mild start to show a little green above ground before winter. In spring, they grow a couple of feet tall, and the hardncecks send up a flower stalk called a scape that is delicious if you cut it when it’s tender. The early greens are also delicious, as is is young tender green garlic dug before the heads form. When I plant softnecks, I seperate the largest cloves and plant them individually to harvest as bulbs, and plant the remaining smaller cloves close together or in pots to eat as greens or baby green garlic in spring. Once most of the top growth dies back, usually in july, the bulbs can be dug and cured for storage. I plant about 200 heads, and they are gone by February, plus I eat all the scapes, greens and green garlic. All in all, planting garlic lets you harvest from May until July, then you have the cured garlic for several months.
— Posted by Vincent Corrado
2007
10:12 am
fresh garlic crushed wait 10 minutes use yougurt ,peanut butter toast ,mashed pogates or any way you can eat with burnign your mouk
ABOUT 15 YEARS AGO WE WROTE A BOOK GARLIC CANCER AND HEART DESEAS BY dR.ORVILLE GREEN FROM NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY IN EVANSTON,ILL AND NICK POLYDORIS. MY GRAND MOTHER IN GREEC AND MY MOTHER WHERE KNEW MANY WAYS TO CURE .60 YEARS AGO IN EVANSTON WHERE I WENT TO GTRADE SCHOOL AND HIGH SCHOOL AND BEIGN THE ONLY NICK THE SYSTEM EATING GARLIC WAS TANTAMOUNT TO BEING AN IGNORANT GREEK.
GARLIC IS SOLD IN THE DRUGSTORES I HALF OF THE WORLD ,BUT THE 16TH CENTURY ENGLISH WRITERS PUT THE CURSE ON FRESH GARLIC EASTERS BUT THINGS ARE CHANGINE FOR THE GOO
NICK POLYDORIS
— Posted by NICK POLYDORIS
2007
10:15 am
Here is the unique way of having garlic to your diet….
Boil the garlic in milk until the bulb are throughly cooked. ( 4 to 5 bulbs per glass of milk).
Drink garlicked milk with mild sugar .. you will love it… and you will get all the benefits of garlic with out any loss…
Its and indian tradition to give milk boilded with garlic for pregnent women during 7,8,9 and 10th month….
It prevents the pregnent woment from cold, flue, indigestion …etc…etc..
Indian soups ( called Rasam ) will have garlic as a key ingrediant …. which is good for digestion….. Rasams/ soup will be integral part of south indian food on a daily basis….
Be healthy and be happy….
— Posted by Danabal
2007
10:15 am
Can anyone comment on whether it might have the same benefits to swallow the whole clove instead of crushing it? Been doing it for years but now wonder after reading you have to crush it and let it rest for 15 min…
— Posted by Nestor Lopez
2007
10:17 am
I always eat raw garlic when stomach don’t feel very well.
— Posted by steven
2007
10:19 am
If you think supermarket garlic, mostly grown in China - old, abused, dried out, sprayed with sprouting inhibiters, is good for you, please try some locally grown organic garlic. Fresh hardneck garlic contains far more juice and oils than the supermarket variety. Hardneck garlic has one row of 4-8 fatter, meatier easy to peel cloves. Most importantly they have rich, complex flavor that changes with specific varieties. Some are better suited to eating raw because of a less potent spicyness combined with delicious flavor. Others, sauted slowly over low heat, carmelize into a nutty, sweet garlic flavor. Comparatively, supermarket garlic is harsh and grating on the pallette. It’s the Night Train of garlics.
Hardneck garlic is grown in cold climates, planted in fall and harvested in mid summer. Growing garlic is labor intensive, with many steps that must be done by hand. With armies of cheap labor Chinese farmers have been able to over take the mass market.
Cultivated garlic is a heavy nitrogen feeder that does poorly when competing with weeds. It naturally carries many pathogens and viruses due to the fact that it reproduces by clone and not by seed. Thus garlic NOT organically grown requires heavy use of petroleum based fertilizers, chemical herbicides, and toxic soil fumigants. Organic garlic on the other hand relies on healthy soil that is biologically alive to minimize the effects of inbread disease. It is fed with nitorgen from decomposing plant and animal materials and weeded by mechanical methods and the use of ground covers.
You’ll find organically grown, local hardneck garlic at farmers markets, CSA’s and local food co-ops. In warm climates you may find some spring planted softneck garlic.
http://www.localharvest.org/farms/M19244
— Posted by Mark Stein-LandMark Farm
2007
10:20 am
Garlic, when planted in the garden or flower bed, provide food for the bees and other animals. Leeks will produce massive round flowers which attract butterflies and all other sorts of insects. Fun to watch.
The heirloom garlic you can purchase from growers here in the states tastes far superior to the nasty imported white stuff you find in the stores from China. Google search “heirloom garlic” for links to suppliers.
— Posted by osisbs
2007
10:21 am
The raw garlic is helpful to your stomach.
— Posted by steven
2007
10:23 am
We in Russia love garlic. Garlic smells nice and if you put garlic in your child’s pockets when you send her/him to school, your child will avoid all infectious disease. Of course, if you eat garlic like I do every morning, you cannot take public transportation, for fear of being arrested, you know it is very hard with the new regime and Putin and all. So I have to hire a driver, but he is the only person who gets offended on my way to work. In the office, I keep to my corner, but I also keep healthy. And, of course, buying anything Chinese, might destroy your health, so avoid Chinese garlic, and buy Sorrento lemons instead.
— Posted by goggi
2007
10:26 am
i have a way to eliminate the smell of garlic.
after enjoy the garlic,you can chaw some green tea,it can work quickly!
— Posted by caoyuan
2007
10:29 am
Regarding Garlic in Supplement forms. I am a Nature’s Sunshine District Manager. Like most supplements, it needs to be a quality Garlic which has been formulated properly for it to be beneficial. The Whole Garlic cloves will always be more beneficial for particular circumstances, however the garlic capsules have been used successfully for many health benefits. Here is some information taken from The Comprehensive Guide to NSP by Steven Horne, available at Tree of Light publishing, regarding many of the garlic uses.
Garlic has been called nature’s penicillin. Garlic is also one of the most powerful circulatory remedies. This herb is as effective as many drugs in lowering high blood pressure, but needs to be used regularly for long periods of time (3-6 months and longer). Garlic many also help to chelate (remove) plaque from arterial walls, thus lowering cholesterol levels. Garlic destroys many types of parasties and infections. This aromatic herb is a powerful decongestant and expectorant.
Raw garlic works well for serious lung problems and infections, but for less serious problems take 2 capsules regular garlic or 1 of high potency garlic tablets every three to four hours until relief is experienced. For more serious respiratory conditions use 2 capsules or 1 tablet every one to two hours along with 4 capsules of ALJ. For an even more powerful decongestant and expectorant action, add 1/2 dropperful of lobelia extract every one to two hours. Garlic has anti-viral properties and is helpful for colds and congestion. Use 1-4 capsules up to every 2 hours during a cold. Tea used as an enema helps break fevers, especially in children. For prevention take 2-3 capsules or 1 high potency tablet daily with meals. For infection (bacterial, viral or yeast) or respiratory congestion, take up to 2 capsules every two hours or 1 high potency tablet every two hours. For bacterial infection, use in combination with golden seal, Echinacea, Lymph Gland Cleanse HY or Lymph Gland Cleanse, or IN-X. For viral infection, use in combination with Una D’Gato Combination, yarrow or Elderberry Defense. For yeast infection, combine with pau d’ arco or Yeast/Fungal Detox. For respiratory congestion, combine with AL-J, mullein or lobelia. For swollen lymph nodes combine with lobelia and mullein. For parasites take eight to twelve capsules per day. Combine with Herbal Pumpkin and black walnut.
For hypertension (high blood pressure) and/or high cholesterol, take 6-10 capsules or 2-3 high potency tablets per day for three to six months. The fresh bulb has the best anti-hypertensive properties. Always use for at least three to six months for circulation conditions before expecting to see real results. Can be taken continually for prevention after improvement. Eat 1-3 cloves the size of almonds daily. (Cut up small and eat on bread.) Larger doses need to be taken for arterial effects.
Using Garlic Oil: For lung congestion, rub liberally on chest and back. For earache, use 3 drops (warm) in ear, rub on ear and rub on neck beneath ear. Constituents of garlic penetrate right through skin. Even the fumes kill harmful micro-organisms. Rub on throat for sore throat.
Raw Garlic: Eat 1-2 cloves every morning and regularly at meals for general health. For warts and cysts, rub with small slices of raw garlic throughout day. Follow with clay packs. Use 3-5 cloves in a decoction or eaten raw, three to six times daily for worms. Enema: For a garlic enema, simmer one chopped clove for 10 minutes in 1 pint of water or use 6-8 capsules and steep as tea. Use garlic enema for fevers, earache, infection and worms.
For more natural health information please visit my blog http://herbsplus4health.blogspot.com
— Posted by Karen Doolan
2007
10:32 am
good garlic!!!
garlic is efficient too against intestinal worms (oxyure)rap a clove on toasted bred and take care of your kids against oxyure with a natural produice
— Posted by Christine
2007
10:33 am
To cure your cutting board of the garlic oils, rub coffee grounds into it and let it sit a while before washing as usual.
While waiting tables during college, I learned that drinking sambucco (anise flavored liquer) with coffee beans in it after dinner nullified the garlic injested at dinner.
I have brohchitis as I sit here and type. I now have garlic roasting and am making some soup of it as well. I’m bound to get better, but anything I can do to lessen my misery I’ll gladly try!
— Posted by Susan
2007
10:33 am
I use garlic in almost everything I cook. Also garlic soup is one of my family’s favorite dishes. Garlic heals everything from stomach ailments to the common cold. It works.
— Posted by Carolyn
2007
10:52 am
An apple in a day keeps the Doctor away.
A garlic in a day keeps everybody away
— Posted by D.K. Bhattacharya
2007
11:01 am
I had a friend in Israel many years ago who ate a large clove of raw garlic every morning. He followed this up with a teaspoon of instant coffee granules that he chewed and swallowed (I kid you not). He had absolutely no garlic smell about him and swore that he hadn’t been sick for many years. Worth a try…
— Posted by S Johnson
2007
11:10 am
If you have an earache you should use a garlic capsule. Use the liquid from the capsule and before you go to bed pour it into your ear. Keep that ear face up all night and by morning the earache will be gone. I have done this many times and it has worked every time. It is great because most earaches need prescription medication. This saves you a trip to the doctor and the pain.
— Posted by Bridget
2007
11:32 am
In México Garlic is been used to cure certain skeen deseases for centuries,believe it, really works!
— Posted by Sergio Lerma
2007
11:34 am
Bar-B-Q, Bar-B-Q. How can you cook out doors with-out on the grill without some sort of Garlic flavoring or amendment on your meat. Myself, the use of garlic sweetens the taste of meat. The taste of albacore tuna will really taste like chicken when you use garlic to bar-b-q it. You are saying it good for your health, will ok, but I would rather eat first.
— Posted by fvenzor
2007
11:56 am
Garlic has traditionaly been applied for years through oxymels, a honey - vinegar blend. Known as a strong defense against bacteria without the damaging effects on gut flora associated with pharmaceutical antibiotics. It can also be just as beneficial for those especially sensitive to apply the crushed garlic to feet which are warm due to showering with warm water, sauna, and so on.
Your friendly neighborhood herbalist of The Massage Center, DE and the Tai Sophia Institue, MD.
— Posted by Anna Davis
2007
12:00 pm
In response to the comment about garlic and horses… a number of animals can get anemia from eating garlic, including dogs. Small amounts may be beneficial for dogs, but large amounts of garlic or onions can kill them. This is not true for humans, by the way. Dogs or horses have a different digestive system and body chemistry than humans, and it’s not a good assumption that they would react the same way to any substance in their food.
— Posted by seer
2007
12:10 pm
I take raw garlic at the first signs of a cold - I mean the very first signs - and it always knocks it right out. I chop it up, let it sit out for a while, then down it with a glass of water.
However, garlic and onions are extremely toxic to cats, even though some natural cat remedies contain garlic. It destroys their red blood cells, causing a serious condition called “Heinz Body Anemia.” Different strokes for different species.
— Posted by KZ
2007
12:21 pm
I developed an ulcer taking Ibuprophen when I was sick. It left me having to take Prilosec for many years or my stomach would bloat up. I started taking garlic pills for my cholesterol, even though I knew it might not do much, I knew it was beneficial. My stomach started feeling better and I eventually stopped taking the Prilosec and took only the garlic. I have been doing that for several years, and will only bloat up if I forget to take my garlic pills. It is great to take a natural food for a condition caused by a medication.
— Posted by Meah Bottoms
2007
12:42 pm
Eat lots of garlic. Then drink fennel tea, made by simmering fennel seeds in water with some ginger. The fennel kills bad breath that emanates from the mouth and from the stomach.
Garlic can also cause gas. Add a pinch of asafoetida resin to water and drink, kills gas in about 15 minutes.
Side benefit of garlic: Hard erections because it thins the blood which then is better able to traverse into the penile blood vessels. Save money otherwise spent on viagra.
If you can get your woman to eat garlic, then skip the fennel.
— Posted by j
2007
12:59 pm
As a devotee of garlic, I started a religion that worships the all-powerful bulb–”The Holy Stinking Order of Garlicians.”
We are lead by his stinking holyness, the Ascended Master Gardener, Baba Ganouj.
— Posted by Christi
2007
1:04 pm
Responding to Kevin Simms (post no. 53), you might want to try the U. of A. DCA information site at http://www.depmed.ualberta.ca/dca/
Haven’t had time to read it yet, but it may provide some useful information.
- Dennis Moore
— Posted by Dennis Moore
2007
1:14 pm
I’m a Korean American and I was grown up in garlic rich foods. As comment 126 indicates, Korean can’t imagine any food without garlic whereas Japanese foods never contain even a smell of it. Who lives longer and healthier? Average longevity of Japanese beat that of Koreans.
— Posted by andrew jung
2007
1:16 pm
When I am stung by a bee, wasp or hornet I crush a garlic clove and rub the juice over the affected area. This eliminates the pain and swelling associated with the sting.
TPP responds — the wonders of garlic never cease do they? I haven’t heard of this remedy before.
— Posted by Steve Root
2007
1:19 pm
In rural areas of Mexico, garlic is used as an antidote to scorpion bites.
- Posted by Alan (2)
— Posted by alan riding
2007
1:25 pm
I use garlic to keep vampires away. Ever since I started hanging several cloves of garlic on my front and back doors, not one single vampire has tried to get in. It really works!
— Posted by Tyler Kent
2007
1:29 pm
Garlic is excellent for the common cold and many other ailments. I believe it is the most natural anti-biotic around. For those worried about the smells on the breath, try this simple trick :- Take a clove of garlic and peel it. Then simply slice this glove in to smaller pieces and swallow these small slices one by one with a glass of water. No breath problem.
Ravie Valaitham
— Posted by Ravie Valaitham
2007
1:32 pm
Eatith garlic! It maketh the heart happy!
— Posted by plutarch
2007
1:46 pm
The comment about using garlic for ear ache reminds me of the time back in the 70’s when I tried to cure an ear ache by crushing a clove of garlic just a bit and inserting it into my infected ear.
The garlic blocked my outer ear completely, and the pressure became unbearable. So I headed to the Free Clinic. The doctor and the rest of the staff loved it - a break from the usual drug OD’s and VD. The doc removed the garlic clove and I was fine. He claimed it was his first garlicectomy.
— Posted by John
2007
1:48 pm
At the first sign of cold symptoms, I immediately consume 10-12 whole heads of garlic.
By the next day, the symptoms are gone! Because the garlic has actually gone back in time and prevented the onset of the symptoms a day before you noticed them. Amazing!
Also, to get rid of the garlic smell, chew a mixture of parsley (organic flat-leaf ONLY!), heirloom tomatoes, and activated charcoal, of the sort you might buy for an aquarium filter.
My grandfather also lived to be 243 years old on a diet of nothing but garlic and olive oil and grain alcohol. Not the Chinese garlic that’s grown in tubs of DDT and mercury, but ORGANIC sustainable rain-forest-friendly free-trade garlic, that was shipped to market in a Prius.
Long live garlic!!!
— Posted by Chris G.
2007
2:00 pm
I heard something about garlic causing the bad breath? Does anyone heard of that? Maybe Scope or fennel seeds mixed with parsley could help, but I’ve never tried those things.
— Posted by Chad Knowlton
2007
2:03 pm
When hiking above 15,000 feet in Nepal and Tibet, eating a clove of raw garlic every day seemed to help prevent symptoms of high altitude sickness.
— Posted by Bill Ficklin
2007
2:17 pm
One way to neutralize garlic breath is by taking chlorophyll pills or liquid…it may be an annoying extra step, but it works pretty well.
Also, garlic has potent antimicrobial properties. And while it hasn’t been fully proven that garlic can take out the cold or the flu, when I’ve taken when sick, it’s helped tremendously.
Here’s an article that talks more about it:
http://livevitaminfoods.com/vitaminblog/nutrional-suppl ements/cold-symptoms-effective-cold-remedy/
— Posted by Jeff
2007
2:18 pm
After eating an evening meal prepared with garlic, I wake up with a hangover (nausea, headache) after having a fitful night’s sleep (due to indigestion and vivid dreams). (I grew up in an Italian family, too!) Poster #185 gave me an “Eureka! moment” when it was pointed out that garlic will cause acetone production in the body. If I remember my chemistry, alcohol comsumption causes production of the same or similar compounds.
I also truly smell rancid for about 3 days after eating garlic. The smell emanates from my pores. No amount of raw parsley or fennel seeds will stem the smell. My husband can’t stand to be in the same room with me for even 5 minutes. I’d rather put up with a cold for a few days than to make myself (and those around me) miserable by eating garlic.
Seems like there are enough differences in body chemistry to suggest that garlic may not be the answer for everyone.
— Posted by Debbie K.
2007
2:21 pm
I would disagree with this posting. I’ve found no benefits from the use of garlic. I find it completely repellent. It leaves me gassy and bloated. I have long since stopped using it in my cooking.
However, being un-dead I begin to see the science behind it. You know, with the red blood cells, sulfides, anti-aging properties and what not.
— Posted by Dracula
2007
2:41 pm
Last, but not least, Garlic necklaces ward off vampires! Go garlic!
— Posted by abby
2007
2:41 pm
Anyone else notice the recent decline in quality of supermarket garlic? At least here in NYC, I have a difficult time finding heads of garlic that aren’t moldy, rotten, blemishes, sprouting, etc. (Shallots are even worse.)
I can still usually find decent garlic at the farmer’s market, but I remember when I started cooking about dozen years ago, you could count on getting unblemished garlic at the supermarket. What’s going on?
(oddly, the pre-peeled garlic in the plastic tubs usually looks fine, but I don’t like the idea of using all that plastic just to save a few seconds of work.)
— Posted by Tom M.
2007
2:52 pm
What’s wrong with the smell or garlic anyway? It seems to me that it smells like the taste, and the taste is great.
When I get enough time, I hope to finish a business plan for a new perfume, to be called Garlique. Anyone wearing it will become deliciously edible…
— Posted by Bernard Higonnet
2007
3:12 pm
I take the garlic pills every day .I started taking them because the doctor said i had very high cholestorol and wanted to put me on a statin drug ? I frankly dont trust the pharmaceutical companies as far as i could throw them so i declined to go on the statin and began taking garlic . I really dont know if it has lowered my cholesterol any but i dont get colds anymore i virtually never get sick and before i started with the garlic i would get the flu or similar at least once or twice a year ? go garlic
— Posted by Sean
2007
3:20 pm
I’ve found that Mint Assure or Breath Assure tablets, active ingredient: Parsley Oil, is great to cut the indigestion and smell of garlic.
— Posted by Kelly
2007
3:23 pm
Garlic caused anemia and a reduction of red blood cells in horses. In the U-Alabama study, how much garlic was too much for human red blood cells?
Sorry, I am highly skeptical of this blog publishing an incomplete tid bit of science. To truly adjust our nutrition, and before we all rush and eat 12 cloves a day, I want to read serious science writing, a report encompassing many studies (at leas a few) and with more details about benefits, downsides, limits, error margins, and so on.
Kudos to the poster who recomended bying US grown garlic.
— Posted by Rena
2007
3:28 pm
I have seen in many articles from different medias that garlic is the most powerful natural antibiotics and by my own experience I can assure that garlic can eliminate warts and disinfect and cure cuts and wounds.
I am a fanatic defender of garlic not only for its health beneficial but also as a strong flavor’s enriching.
Try to mix it smashed with butter and oregano on rolls or bread slices, or smashed on partially warmed slices of provolone cheese…it’s just delicious!!
— Posted by Osnor
2007
3:30 pm
I take garlic once a day to eliminate my otherwise nice-smelling breath. I also like to put one clove of garlic in my sock drawer to neutralize that “ungarlicky” smell you get from clean socks.
J
— Posted by jim
2007
3:36 pm
Well, I’m no doctor, and I don’t know about the medical benefits of garlic but…
Since I’ve been eating Garlic I have NOT been attacked by any damn VAMPIRES (from either party!).
— Posted by James
2007
3:52 pm
PLEASE BEWARE OF FEEDING YOUR DOGS GARLIC AS THIS IS POISONOUS TO THEM AND DESTROYS THEIR RED BLOOD CELLS!!! Please check out the lists of food items that animals should not have before feeding “people” food to them. These lists can be found on several sites on the internet.
— Posted by Dee M.
2007
4:00 pm
garlic is really great, both as a condiment s well as medecine. To reduce the smell, drink some lemon juice after eating garlic.
— Posted by Domjohnny
2007
4:10 pm
274 Tyler Kent,
Tyler, this has worked for me. However, I still have a problem with bats.
Any suggestions?
— Posted by Don
2007
4:21 pm
After checking Mayo Clinic website (http://mayoclinic.com/health/garlic/NS_patient-garlic )one finds that Garlic may be beneficial in lowering serum lipids but says in all other cases that the studies have not been large enough.
— Posted by Dale
2007
4:37 pm
There is no magic pill or magic clove. Good health comes from a dose of luck, environment, and lifestyle which means what you do and what you eat and how you abuse or not yourself mentally and physically. There no one ingredient or thing that is the solution to the problem of life other than the end of the problem.
— Posted by David
2007
4:41 pm
Back in grad school I once woke up with a bad cold and a head so stuffy I couldn’t breathe through my nose. After breakfast and prior to my 8:00 class, I tried chewing up a clove of garlic to see if it would affect my stuffy head. Partway through my 25 minute walk to class my nose began draining and by 10:00, after two engineering classes, my sinuses had drained and were completely clear. From that moment I have been a firm believer in dietary garlic.
— Posted by bbenson
2007
4:42 pm
For me (an Italian), the stench of garlic is so disgusting that I renounce to all its benefits.
— Posted by Carmelo Mangano
2007
4:50 pm
My co-worker loves garlic. BUT????
— Posted by paul flan
2007
4:57 pm
Karan Doolan’s soliloquy must be gospel indeed. After all, she’s a Nature’s Sunshine district manager. I’m sure that she’s taken part in Level-1 research, randomized, double-blinded, double-crossover, prospective studies. Actually, I bet that she hasn’t done any of that folks. Sounds like her garlic will taste (and perform) better with a grain of salt.
–Stephen
— Posted by Stephen
2007
5:06 pm
I frequently eat the pickled whole cloves available at our deli or in bottle from various makers. It is delicious and certainly does prevent cold and flu IMHO…When the snowbirds get within range of my breath, they scurry thus preventing the illness! Seriously though, I am a firm believer in the wholesome benefits of garlic consumption. Happy holidays from Florida…JB
— Posted by JB
2007
5:07 pm
Just to add little info on Garlic. I am from India and here its considered as an alternate medicine for cold,fever etc. Thats known to all as many of you have commented on it. Unknown part is - there are couple of religions in India, Jainism and Swaminarayan religions, they dont take Garlic and Onion. They are denied in these religions. They belive that eating Garlic and Onions make people more angry in their nature.
— Posted by Alpesh
2007
5:09 pm
It was the habit of several French friends of mine (from the Dordogne) to deplore the use of a garlic press. They would split the clove, remove the sprout and chop the garlic with a very sharp knife. Crushing the garlic against the core or sprout, they said, would release an enzyme that was responsible for a frequently acrid, hot, almost repellent garlic flavor and smell. Could this phenomenon be what the doctor in fact says is beneficial?
— Posted by woodmack
2007
5:20 pm
“I wonder if this toxicity mentioned at high doses is related to the fact the garlic falls into the nightshade family. I personally get very ill even smelling garlic or onions and nauseous and vomitous if they are ingested. I searched online and found that it is not that uncommon of a food allergy, and the articles I’d found related that to it’s belonging to the same genus as deadly nightshade.”
Garlic is an allium, not a nightshade (solanum).
I’d probably disregard anything found in that article, and it’s proof you can’t trust anything you read on the internet.
— Posted by Steven
2007
5:41 pm
I once had a very severe cold and cough. I took antibiotics for 10 days and still my cough won’t go.
I finally had garlic tea in the afternoon (chopped garlic boil with water for 20 minutes) and by evening by cough was gone.
This is a true thing and i am a firm beliver of garlic.
— Posted by TP
2007
5:58 pm
I grew up eating a mostly Mediterranean diet, otherwise known as eating at grandma’s house. Garlic was incorporated into several dishes at each meal but we always ended the meal with fruit, nuts and raw fennel bulb slices. I thought it was just tasty and refreshing but eventually found out that the fennel aided digestion and helped with garlic breath. That serving of nuts and fruit turned out to be healthy, too. I don’t claim that we Italians “knew” any health secrets - it was just following a traditional diet.
— Posted by ren
2007
6:08 pm
All that talk about garlic is a myth. I have seen people consuming garlic regularly in all their meals but still got cancer and other diseases. Garlic has no proven medicenal effect, it is just another spice that makes food taste better. Because of the strong pungunt smell people had always imagined that there must be something magical about it. If Greeks were giving it to their athlites befor compitition, it probably was doing a plecebo effect on them. And one more thing, let FDA approve it as a medicine, then it would be somewhat convincing, other that that it is just an empty talk.
— Posted by saleem
2007
6:25 pm
Garlic (onion) must have been used in the many of the medications we are consuming under a different secret names for the so called patented (royalty)justifications. I remember a long time ago the world richest person in ages from then the Soviet Union claiming that his healthy survival for that many years was due to his daily diet of consuming a bowel of onion for all those years.
— Posted by Tesfaye
2007
6:44 pm
Darn the New York Times! Now how am I supposed to meet the ladies if they’re all going to use Garlic?
— Posted by Dracula
2007
7:02 pm
actually,garlic is very delicious when cooked with vegetables,like haricot bean,eggplant or some kind of nuddles!!
— Posted by lulu
2007
7:06 pm
Well, Garlic, i think called Allilum sativum in botonical langauge is known to be the core herbs in grecc and chiness herbel medecine. Still these days the people used to eat it by wrapping in some bread and chew it. looking on the benefical side i think we could go for it jusst ignore its bed odor. it’s because of Allicin a compund present . So go for it to be the intergral part of our diet.
Raza
— Posted by Raza
2007
7:24 pm
I want to add little info on Garlic too.Barbecue garlic can cure dysentery.When I was a child, when I was troubled with diarrhea,my mother always cooked for me!
— Posted by Jessie.zhao
2007
7:26 pm
i hate the taste of garlic but if it will help me the way you say it does… i say screw the taste i want to live longer…. but my problem is that if it highers your cholesterol then whats the point? im just gonna gain weight anyway… right?
— Posted by april
2007
7:44 pm
Reply to Post #51. I did research in mosquito-ridden swamps in Tenessee and North Carolina for several years. I tried every remedy that was rumored to to repel mosquitos, including skin-so-soft lotion (useless), sulfur powder (useless), DEET (burned my skin and almost useless) and garlic. I ingested as much garlic as I could stand for several weeks and crushed it and rubbed it on my skin and clothes when I did field work. I can tell you equivocally that garlic did not work at all. The mosquitos drew as much blood as ever.
Incidentally, the only two things that did work were a little electronic ultrasonic buzzer (helped a little) and keeping a lit cigar or cigarette in my mouth (this worked great, but I couldn’t stand breathing the smoke for more than one or two hours).
— Posted by MRod
2007
7:46 pm
A friend of mine who was aware that I wrote a book on garlic “Garlic, The Stinking Magic Herb,” forwarded this article to me. Garlic is not a drug but a food that is consumed over a long period of time by those who use it. Food items do not produce good or bad effects overnight but their effects are evident over a period of time. Whether someone likes garlic or not is a personal preference and if someone is allergic to it that is also an individual’s constitution. However, we do not accept anything based on its effects or worth in 100 percent people. Drugs that are considered MOST efficacious work at the most in 60 percent patients. Do we reject them? No! What FDA approves is only a drug that claims to diagnose, prevent, or treat a disease and not dietary supplements. The role of diet was recognized by all systems of medicine of the past. Unfortunately, the modern medicine was very late in recognizing the role of diet and when it started doing it, it conflicts with our way of life and the existing advertising culture.
Anyway, I knew that it is not possible for a common man or woman to judge what one should really believe in what one should reject based upon the conflicting reports in the media. It was this feeling that made me write the above mentioned book for public knowledge. It is not a recipe book because it deals with only the historical reports but most importantly the scientific studies on garlic. I am not promoting my book here but those who want to read the scientific background of garlic may do so by reading this book. I will welcome any comments, suggestion or advice from the audience. Thanks
Shahid Akbar, M.D., Ph.D.
— Posted by Dr. Shahid Akbar
2007
7:47 pm
… eating garlic appears to boost our natural supply of hydrogen sulfide …
So this explains why my bedroom smells like rotten eggs the morning after eating garlic.
— Posted by Michael
2007
7:49 pm
I’m a huge, huge garlic fan and use it liberally in all my cooking. I usually crush a whole bulb or two in the food processor and then package tablespoons of the paste in foil and freeze for whenever I need them. This really saves time but my concern is whether the frozen garlic retains all the benefits. Does anyone know if crushed garlic, frozen for about 1-2 weeks,is as potent as fresh?
- Posted by Lavina
— Posted by lavina melwani
2007
8:40 pm
i don´t like the garlic, but after that read this paper i think the garlic is good to health.
— Posted by Phill
2007
8:42 pm
Garlic actually works as a bug, specifically mosquito, repellent. You must eat a few cloves in food each day. I’ve had great success with this method while hiking in the High Sierras. It makes your sweat smell, but out there with the bears, who cares. And, best of all, the bugs don’t bite.
— Posted by Alexis Monday
2007
8:42 pm
WoW! This has been like the Garlic Diaries. The best benefit I’ve found was when traveling throughout Mexico eating an ample of raw & roasted garlic at every restaurant & cafe along my travels. It seemed to ward off Moctezuma & any revenge he may have wanted!
Ja!me
— Posted by Jaime Cubello
2007
8:48 pm
How do you make garlic water?
— Posted by Santhi
2007
9:32 pm
The best way to prepare garlic for cooking or as a measure against colds is as follows: Remove the
clove(s) from the bulb. Using a wide blade knife lay it across the clove. Press down on the clove leaving the skin on the clove. Wait 15 minutes. Remove the skin from the cloves. Using a SHARP chopping knife mince the clove into small pieces. The garlic press…leave it in the drawer. I’ve tried them all, the best to the worst. They destroy the character of the clove. Worried about the residue smell of garlic on your hands? Wash your hands with metal soap. About $15 for the “bar”. Works everytime. Also good for fish, onions and other funky odors that can stay on your hands for hours.
— Posted by Leslie
2007
9:44 pm
Garlic also helps your nails grow more quickly and healthier. I used peel them using my thumb and it really worked. My thumb nail grew much faster compared to the rest. =)
— Posted by Anonymus
2007
9:44 pm
Oh, and sorry Dracula =P
— Posted by Anonymus
2007
9:53 pm
i love the smell of garlic! let’s start a garlic revolution; if it’s hip to smell like garlic, everyone will flock to you when they notice that biting odor on your skin. maybe we could pressure estee lauder to come out with a new perfume, Garlic Pleasures. i’d be the first in line to buy! start an online rumor that it’s an aphordisiac.
— Posted by HK08407
2007
10:00 pm
in response to post 208 where it mentions other healthfull plants, especially aloe vera. I’d like to point out that aloe is one of the more potent natural laxatives, so you might not want to eat that.
Just FYI.
— Posted by EMH
2007
10:01 pm
Take two cloves of garlic, add some water and honey, marinate with balsamic vinegar. Will cure poverty, hunger, and disease. You may even win the Megamillions lottery this weekend.
— Posted by garlickycureall
2007
10:02 pm
I have found that since I started eating garlic daily, I have had no occurrences of vampire attacks on my person, or even those close to me.
— Posted by John
2007
10:12 pm
Pour hot milk in a cup and add finely chopped raw garlic(2-3 cloves) + raw unfiltered honey(at least two coffee spoons). Drink up!
This will kill a cold in one night. Guaranteed.
— Posted by gil
2007
10:18 pm
nice to speak to real people. I practice functional medicene and aged garlic acts as a chelating agent removing aluminum from the brain and calcium from arterial plaque abundant exp. evidence. Buy as a suppliment but it must be aged!
— Posted by michael propper
2007
10:22 pm
In India Garlic is daily used in vegetable cooking people well know its great benfits. People says that its has medicinal values for many problems like diabetic. but Aurvedic (harbs) doctor suggest not to talk. pls talk with advice of doctor.
— Posted by H L Kushwaha
2007
10:53 pm
Indians are using lot of garlic from centuries, alomst every indina dish has garlic. So eat indian food and be healty….. thanks to research.
— Posted by cyberwaves
2007
10:56 pm
There have been dozens of clinical studies on Garlic and I would suggest a look at naturalstandard.com for anyone serious about a regimen of 5+ cloves per day. Important safety and health information is available for garlic and need be weighed.
Personally, I consume plenty of garlic and love cooking with it. I haven’t experienced the social consequences because those around me are also fans of the pungent stalk.
— Posted by Jason
2007
11:05 pm
Here in Alaska where it got dark today at about 4 pm, I brought home some take-out garlic and ginger tofu–extra garlic. I ate while reading your posts and feel positively filled up with good spirits knowing how many of us love garlic. It got me thinking about how I’d walk with my grandfather about fifty years ago, holding hands in the Bronx, NY, and how he’d buy long strings of garlic bulbs that were hanging from the ceiling in the market on Arthur Avenue. Since then, I’ve been eating garlic with almost every meal except maybe my morning cereal. After reading about all the variations on a theme, I’m looking forward to planting some garlic, tasting dark-chocolate covered garlic cloves, and hosting a holiday garlic party where we’ll all catch a buzz from garlic flavored vanilla ice cream. Thank you all for some great ideas
— Posted by jude
2007
11:15 pm
The best way to have garlic is to put it Balinoff vodka for a few days and drink 1 oz a day
from September until May before dinner.
— Posted by yuri
2007
11:32 pm
I used to catch colds frequently from my friends until i started eating raw garlic. Now I never have colds - no friends either!
— Posted by archieRawlings
2007
11:33 pm
Ten years ago I began eating five to ten cloves of raw garlic daily with food (like one would eat a pickle or onion with a hamburger) and have not had a cold or the flu since. Before this I would have at least a couple of colds per winter.
I must say that I have had some complaints about the smell, but have been able to hook my girlfriends onto the garlic habit.
— Posted by Allan
2007
11:35 pm
One day I ate some garlic, and the next day I won the lottery.
— Posted by mt
2007
11:43 pm
Would garlic still be efficient if frozen? I like garlic and use it regularly. But I live in Niger, south of the Sahara Desert. I have a hard time getting fresh vegetable and fresh garlic is available periodicaly. Therefore, I get enough garlic, clean it and freeze it. Does this conservation mode alter its characteristics and health benefits?
— Posted by Odette Eiger
2007
11:44 pm
The interesting book “A Garlic Testament: Seasons on a Small New Mexico Farm” has been reprinted — see http://www.amazon.com/Garlic-Testament-Seasons-Small-Me xico/dp/0826319602/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=11961 38356&sr=8-1
Also, I plant different varieties of garlic from Seed Savers: http://www.seedsavers.org/
— Posted by AKS
2007
11:44 pm
Comment #250 had it right, garlic and onions at grocery stores have been treated with sprouting inhibitors. I used to grow a lot of garlic, make it into braids and sell at the local farmers market. I did a segment on “Oklahoma Gardening”, it’s a program from Oklahoma State Univ.( the agrcultural college) on Oklahomas PBS channel , anyway the shows host and horticulturist, Steve Dobbs, told me that. I got my start of softneck garlic at the grocery store. But got my hardneck garlic from a neighbor and later bought some different hardnecks(rocambole) from a seed catalog. Look for Mother Earth News magazine online at the Jan/Feb 1990 issue , has an article about garlic. And the rocambole bulbs can get as big as the softneck and the cloves covering has a reddish hue and they taste great. I planted in the fall and harvested in June to early July.
— Posted by Kathy
2007
11:45 pm
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also showed that when garlic causes red blood cells to release hydrogen sulfide into the body the result was that blood vessels relax.
When blood vessels relax, they become larger and are able to carry more blood and more oxygen to the brain, heart, and other important parts of the body. Blood pressure also comes down when blood vessels relax.
For more info visit http://hookupwithhealth.wordpress.com/category/garlic/
Hook Up With Health Today!
— Posted by Hook Up With Health
2007
11:46 pm
I will eat three pieces a day for two to three days if I have a diheara, that will cure the disease
— Posted by Fan
2007
11:53 pm
I make my own hummus. I include alot (in my opinion) of raw garlic in the recipe. I make it in advance and freeze it in small containers so I make it about 4 times a year. I put a generous layer on my toast every morning with Louisiana hot sauce. I’m hooked on it and lost without it when I’m on vacation away from home. It’s great to hear all the positives about garlic.
— Posted by Danny Boy
2007
12:34 am
One thing that I find helpful is taking a few cloves and boiling it in a teapot. The garlic tea if you will soothes the body and helps focus as the blood circulates better to the brain. Downside is the breath.
Garlic was always known to be very helpful in my family. I don’t know how we’d survive vampire attacks without it as it is our best weapon against them.
— Posted by Xander Von Hutton
2007
1:03 am
Isn’t the life expectancy in India 47. Oh, and thanks Alexis #320. I had been trying to get the mosquitoes to eat the garlic
— Posted by Jim P.
2007
1:20 am
Several years ago I discovered the most delightful recipe: Take a head of garlic cloves and leaving the head intact, cut off the tips of the cloves. Place the head of garlic in a small oven dish (slightly larger than the head of garlic). Spoon melted butter over the garlic tops, then add enough chicken broth to cover 2/3rds of the head of garlic. Cover the small pot. Baste the bulbs frequently with the butter/chicken broth mixture and bake at 375 until soft, about 20 minutes at sea level. This was so tasty that I ate about 3 to 4 full heads of garlic every day on toast. After about 2 weeks, my hair started to fall out. Since I have very long hair, this was not thrilling to me and I cut back my consumption. I still love garlic and use it in much of my cooking… but, if some is good, a lot may not be better.
-Posted by Dene
— Posted by Dene Ballantine
2007
2:21 am
Want to get your garlic in daily - Martini! i’ve discovered that a dry martini with a clove of garlic in it is an absolutely great way to end the day. A nice martini, followed by a kick in the pants from eating the clove, raw.
— Posted by Joe
2007
2:25 am
Could someone please tell me if taking Garlic in the form of “Garlic Oil Capsules” is as beneficial as taking it in other ways?
My email address is: pburgess@uol.com.br
Thank you!
— Posted by Paul Burgess
2007
2:49 am
When my daughter was getting lice repeatably and when all chemicals at the local pharmacy would not do anything - I pulled some infected hairs from my daughter’s head and with a cotton swab I tested a number of household items (such as dish washing liquid, vinegar, and many others). The thing that worked was a blend of olive oil and crashed garlic from the blender. The louse egg on the hair moved, which did not happen with the many other “remedies” I tried. I then applied the garlic blend on her head and the lice disappeared in the next week or so. The only side effect was that for about 4 months, her hair smelled like garlic whenever her hair got wet (from a shower or from swimming in the sea)! But she was lice-free and chemical-free.
— Posted by SteveK
2007
2:57 am
Although applauding the beneficial effects of garlic, I contest the claim that Italians eat up to 8 to 10 cloves per day. This is a fallacy. I live in Italy and I estimate that the average Italian would consume on average one per day maximum, and that mostly as flavouring and certainly not normally eaten whole or raw.
— Posted by Leitha Martin
2007
3:55 am
The most effective and pleasant way to take in garlic is to crush two cloves of it and allow to rest for 20 minutes. Boil milk with crushed garlic cloves until milk is hot. Remove cloves and add sugar to taste. Garlic flavoured milk is great and very healty.
— Posted by Tracker
2007
4:43 am
Eating a hard-boiled egg can be a very effective way to get rid of garlic breath.
— Posted by Claudia
2007
5:25 am
Just like to add that I have also had great success at killing warts by rubbing garlic into them.
Much better than having them burnt off which just leaves a scar.
— Posted by Steven
2007
5:57 am
I take 4-6 tablets of garlic a day. I began 10 yrs ago when my cholesterol was 310. I did not eat red meat, only non-fat dairy was used, no butter or mayo. Still it was constantly going up with every Dr visit. I was told I had no choice but medication. Instead, I went to a health food store and asked what they knew of garlic for lowering it. That’s where I was told if you want to use it for lowering cholesterol, then a minimum of 4 tabs a day was required. It’s not a 1 a day pill. So I started with 4, then increased to 6. I changed nothing else. My reading is in the low 200s now and has remained there. Coincidence? I don’t know, but I’m not going to stop. I will not take the cholesterol reducing drugs. The tabs I take have minimal odor, so thanks for the ideas to combat that.
I now occasionally eat red meat; but dairy is always non-fat. Still no increase in cholesterol.
I also cook with garlic a lot. I use the tabs to add to what I already consume. It works for me. I will try the other teas, etc. Baked garlic, is the best on crusty bread!
Thanks for all great recipes!
— Posted by LoisW
2007
7:21 am
Anecdotal stories such as: “I eat garlic 5 times a day and I rarely have colds and when I do they rarely last for more than 3 days.” are of course completely worthless. It always stuns me how many people take them seriously as evidence for (and rarely against) alternative therapies.
The problem is that by just looking at one person, you aren’t controlling for a number of variables. Because you don’t know how many colds you would have had if you hadn’t eaten garlic, or how long they would have lasted, you cannot EVER be sure that your improved health is due to this factor and not others. Maybe your immune system is better at combating cold viruses than other peoples. Maybe you were lucky to have caught particularly mild strains of the cold virus. Maybe your perception of how many colds other people get or how severe they are is inflated (how can you really have a good measure of this without putting in a lot of work). Maybe your nutrition differs from other peoples in some other way and it is this other difference that causes your resistance to infection (do you drink more water?).
The only way to fiind answer to these questions is through years and years of rigorous scientific study. Don’t fool yourself!
— Posted by Dan
2007
7:36 am
My sister sent her daughter to visit my Mom, who uses natural remedies like a wiz. My neice developed a raging case of ringworm in her scalp, which is next to impossible to get rid of becuase the child keeps scratching it. She had little patches of hair missing all over her scalp. But my mother put a remedy of crushed garlic on her scalp and presto, no more ringworm. I would like to add that after many prescriptions failed to get rid of it, it was the garlic that did the job.
I also have a friend who swears by it, though he goes overboard, taking it in oil, raw form, which burns the hell out of your throat, by the way — should anyone want to try it. It should be diluted with water, although the oil is not soluable in the water so go figure.
— Posted by JacMac
2007
7:58 am
“If you have read all of the 300+ comments up to this point, be sure to ingest three cloves of uncooked garlic each day; there is evidence that garlic ingestion helps to relieve ‘neurotic tendencies.’”
— Posted by Larry
2007
8:00 am
I believe garlic is an aphrodisiac.
— Posted by funkspiel
2007
8:18 am
a good recipe for garlic, if you eat chicken, is to take 2 heads of garlic, boil them for 10 minutes in their skins, then clean them (they will pop out of the skins easily) mash them, and then put them in a covered dish in the oven, mixed with olive oil and rosemary and whatever other herbs you like, with two or three chicken breasts, then bake at a medium temperature for 40 minutes. The garlic imparts a wonderful flavor to the chicken, and the harshness of the garlic taste is gone, it is very mild, enhancing the flavor of the chicken. You can spoon the juice left over on roasted or sauteed tomatoes or potatoes or green beans.
Generally, boiling garlic and mashing it into a paste will make it easy to use and seems to lessen the smell considerably, too.
— Posted by Lucy
2007
8:39 am
Love garlic, used it once for indigestion. I know. How can that work? Well it worked like a charm! was told it thins blood so that might not be such a bad thing for some but for others …well be carfull. I’ve used it on blemishes like boils too, little slices under bandaids with some irritation but the infection stopped in is tracks! Perhaps as the big pharms and anti socials say “more studies are needed”
AD
— Posted by andrew delano
2007
8:44 am
From the NIH …
“Garlic has been found to interfere with the effectiveness of saquinavir, a drug used to treat HIV infection. Its effect on other drugs has not been well studied.”
http://nccam.nih.gov/health/garlic/
— Posted by Tom
2007
8:46 am
I’ve been taking a combination of garlic and lecithin daily for more than 15 years. I use a chaser of acidopholis after a couple of hours, or in the morning and before bed.
Started taking this due to a severe intestinal problem that treated with western medicine c/w side effects was a bit of a losing battle.
The natural combo along with pure foods (no additives) has kept me without pain for many years now. I feel fantastic and alive. I also thrive on fresh garlic almost any way I can get it!
— Posted by Brenda Kane
2007
8:50 am
I have sung the praises of garlic for years, partly because it has worked for me, but mostly because I love it…taste, aroma and ‘warmth’—it warms my whole being in cold weather. but one thing I have done and, call me crazy, but, it works: any sign of stuffy ears or ear-ache, I peel and place a clove, fat-end, into the outer-ear canal. You can feel it warm the ear. I cannot tell you how many times this has worked, on me, children, grandchildren. I’ve seen screaming toddlers calm and find relief that ntohing else could seem to provide. [I am aware that this might sound dangerous, but a clove is actually larger and duller than a Q-tip, so I have never felt at risk of injury.] It feels good and has never failed us.
— Posted by Tess
2007
8:58 am
Here is korea. korean are people who eats most many garlic. korea`s Kimch is made of chinese cabbage and garlic,red pepper powder. Because of eatig many garlic, so koreans are best smart people in the world. And korea garlic is well known to stamina foods, so krean call garlic to alive Viagra. have a good night. now korea is midnight
— Posted by 정한국
2007
9:11 am
A note to M. Saleem: The FDA is not your friend. There is no paternal figure - in the government, or the heavans, watching over you. Read a book on critically thinking and learn to learn so you can take care of yourself.
— Posted by Peggy LaCerra
2007
9:12 am
This is really tasty. Got from an Italian friend.
Slightly toast a slice of wheat bread. Rub it with a garlic clove until you finish it all. Add some olive oil (the good one). Add some herbs (basil, majorana, oreganos).
Just eat it.
— Posted by Marcos
2007
9:23 am
The antimicrobial properties of allicin (from garlic) are scientifically well established. Allicin was first isolated and characterized by Cavallito et. al. [1] and it was patented in 1950 [2]. Allicin and other garlic-related compounds are approved as dietary supplements by the FDA.
Scientific research confirms that allicin inhibits the replication of almost every form of life, including bacteria, fungi, viruses, and tumor cells. This research includes human studies, animal studies, antimicrobial assays, and enzyme inhibition studies. Representative examples of each of these are provided below.
In a double-blind clinical trial, allicin was shown to be effective in the prevention and treatment of the common cold, significantly reducing both the incidence of infection (only 24 infections vs. 65 for the placebo group) and the duration of symptoms (to an average of 1.5 days vs. 5 days for the placebo group) [3].
In a comparative study of raw garlic with tetracycline in albino rats, the garlic was as effective as tetracycline in eliminating intestinal streptococci bacteria (~100 fold reduction) while sufficiently preserving the beneficial lactobacilli (only ~10 fold reduction), thereby achieving a pro-biotic effect [4]. (Keeping the good bacteria while killing the bad ones.)
In a comparison of the effectiveness of 13 types of antibiotics against 13 types of bacteria, garlic and chloramphenicol tied as the most effective antibiotics (inhibiting 12 out of 13 types of bacteria) [5].
By targeting the delivery of allin and allinase to tumor cells, allicin formation was localized to the tumor tissue and tumor growth was completely halted in nude mice [6].
Allicin is a potent inhibitor of most “SH enzymes” [7], but this inhibition is also readily reversible by antioxidants such as glutathione [8]. It is the glutathoine in normal animal cells that protects these cells from the allicin (bacteria have less antioxidant capacity, so they can’t recover their enzyme activity).
One of the enzymes that is inhibited by allicin is bacterial RNA synthase [9]. Without the ability to synthesize RNA, the bacteria can’t replicate. A similar mechanism may also be involved in the inhibition of viral replication.
References:
[1] JACS 1944, 66:1950
[2] US patent 2508745
[3] Advances in Therapy 2001, 18:189
[4] Folia Microbiol. 1984. 29:348
[5] Indian Journal of Experimental Biology 1977, 15:466
[6] Molecular Cancer Therapeutics 2003, 2:1295
[7] Biochemical Journal 1956, 63:514
[8] Biochemica et Biophysica Acta 1998, 1379:233
[9] Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 1988, 32:1763.
— Posted by dmott
2007
9:47 am
As a gardener, I’ve been ordering garlic for years from Filaree Farm in Washington. Great service. Great information. Great organic product. 509-422-6940 or info@filareefarm.com. Although it’s a little late, I just planted some 100 toes in my Savannah garden. Can’t wait to start harvesting! Thanks for the China warning. Its garlic is everywhere!
Jane Fishman
— Posted by jane fishman
2007
9:49 am
Garlic has been existing since ancient times.It is not only used as dressing material for cooking food but also used extensive therapy in some kind sickness.Its magic cure even better than nodern drug so called chemical compound,and does not occur any side-effects.But there is one point I must emphasize is that if you eat it too much can cause iron deficiency.
— Posted by David lung
2007
9:53 am
should be studied by NIH
— Posted by alan thal
2007
10:10 am
Garlic is good in curing some kind sickness,I eat garlic every day,I feel very healthy than before since I ate it four year ago.
— Posted by David lung
2007
10:11 am
The institution where this research took place, as correctly noted at the beginning of the article, is the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Truncating the name to the University of Alabama (UA), as is done later in the article, is incorrect. While both are part of the same state university system, these institutions are in different cities, have different university administrations, and serve very different educational and research missions.
http://www.uab.edu/
http://www.ua.edu/
— Posted by Thomas
2007
10:16 am
Growing up, my grandmother’s recipe, if you got a cold or flu was to cut up one small yellow onion and one good size clove of garlic chopped up and cook in pat of butter or olive oil till translucent and then you eat it. It actually tastes pretty good and that will kill the cold virus or at least shorten the duration of the cold. I’m Italian so I love garlic. Stay Happy and Healthy the natural way.
— Posted by Phil
2007
10:24 am
Are you all aware there is a Garlic Festival in Gilroy California every year! http://www.gilroygarlicfestival.com/ July 25-27 2008. You can get the best garlic and try different garlic foods.. including Garlic Ice cream! It might sound funny but it tastes great! I used to go to it every year till I moved to Australia. Remember… a clove a day keeps the doctor away!
— Posted by Marksails
2007
10:28 am
Being a grower of garlic in Spain (although of Dutch origin) I can’t exactly be called objective on the subject of the health benefits of this product, but I would like to share a bit of interesting information with you all. The article says that garlic may be indigestive, but the indigestion is caused by the stem that starts growing inside the clove a couple of months after it’s harvested. Before using the garlic, cut it in half and remove the stem. You will not experience any indigestion…..at least not due to the garlic. Feel free to visit our website www.ibergarlic.com.
— Posted by Alexis (Córdoba, Spain)
2007
10:31 am
Wonderful progress - when our science tries to catch up with millenial wisdom. Let´s not forget that garlic has also been shown to be an excellent anticoagulant (instead of aspirin) and antibiotic (a blog did mention the prevention/reduction of caries).
— Posted by Tomas Engler, MD, MPH
2007
10:49 am
My family believes that “too much garlic is never enough.” Health food stores use to sell “garlic and parsley” pills that my Dad would give to all his children as winter approached. We were also reqired to chew on pine needles at the first sign of a cold.
— Posted by dlee
2007
10:55 am
On Friday nights, I usually take a stroll to the local supermarket and buy a few pounds of these magical bulbs and the clerk smiles and gives me a wink as I hand over some of my hard earned money. I get home, my heart racing like a madman’s, and chop up the stuff into fine pieces and then proceed to throw all of it into the bathtub filled with hot water. Of course I wait about 15 minutes before doing so. I have been doing this for about 20 years and have never gotten sick. One slightly negative consequence of this tradition is not having any friends.
— Posted by Magneto
2007
11:27 am
In regards to Leitha Martin’s claim that Italians do not eat much garlic per day:
“Although applauding the beneficial effects of garlic, I contest the claim that Italians eat up to 8 to 10 cloves per day. This is a fallacy. I live in Italy and I estimate that the average Italian would consume on average one per day maximum, and that mostly as flavouring and certainly not normally eaten whole or raw. — Posted by Leitha Martin”
Leitha: I think your statement is heavily skewed. First of all, the use/consumption of garlic depends where you live in Italy. My family is two different areas of Sicily, and we eat garlic very often. For example, we eat tomato salads with RAW garlic and also cook almost on a daily basis using garlic. We use whole cloves of garlic in our tomato sauce (something we eat very often as well.) Where I live now, 15 miles from Milan, almost no one uses garlic. I hope that clears things up.
— Posted by Nuccia
2007
11:28 am
I’m a person who can’t stand garlic and loathe the smell of it reeking from someone. I grew up in an Italian home, and no one ever ate 12 cloves of garlic a day (!?). That’s nonsense. Good italian chefs do not over-use garlic. Even Sophia Loren in her excellent cookbook from a few years ago addressed this issue.
When the Italian chef Marcella Hazan came to Seattle, she went into a restaurnat and was so appalled at the over-use and stench of garlic that she immediately left–calling it “a scurge.” When chefs cook with too much garlic, it’s all you taste–all other tastes and herbs are overhwelmed. That’s not good cooking. It’s time to get past the garlic-mashed-potatoes mentality, whatever the purported health benefits.
— Posted by Mark (Tucson)
2007
11:35 am
Ya garlic is good and for long now i have heard stories and secretes behind garlic, just doing some kind of my usual reserch with my Girl friend and found out that after reading 378 of coments i just thought and suggested that we will both eat garlic every day.
Harry & Nnenna
Nigeria.
— Posted by haruna
2007
11:36 am
Who has knowledge about Garlic oil?
My mom drinks that everyday and its suppose to help her with the high blood pressure.
Is that possible?
— Posted by julisan
2007
11:37 am
Garlic is Great.
By Harry & Nnenna.
— Posted by haruna
2007
11:45 am
To Times Readers:
The health benefits of garlic have been documented at least since ancient Greece. But few comment on a social aspect: the “garlic breath” and “strong odor” allows garlic lovers to convene without intrusion of those averse to garlic. And this may be the greatest benefit of all!
submitted by Roger Latzgo www.rogerlatzgo.com
— Posted by Roger Latzgo
2007
11:48 am
Garlic has antibiotic traits and if you spread the extracted juice on a wound it heals in half the time.
— Posted by tristan
2007
11:48 am
Around 20 years back when I was back in Pakistan, we used to have a very old maid at home who would come everyday to clean our dishes, cook pita bread and food - including the bread and the curries.
She was around 80 years old. She moved deftly and worked in around 3-6 households.
And on many occasions I will see her sitting on the side eating a bunch of garlic cloves with onions on a pita bread. I always wondered what was the secret of her longevity. Was it the simple diet and an active lifestyle. I think it was.
— Posted by Rizwan Dar
2007
11:54 am
Someone suggested using the microwave to cook garlic…well…nothing should be cooked in the microwave. They are saying that it alters the content of the foods you cook in them. I really beleive that since the way a microwave works is it “excites” the water molecules to the point of extreme heat from molecular friction. That certainly kills wheat germ in steel drum flour mills. Best not nuke anything folks. MPO
— Posted by POL
2007
12:05 pm
With respect to comment #81, the study cited to show that garlic has no effect on cholesterol levels is only part of the literature. Previous studies (see Chemical and Engineering News report on herbal medicines from a few years ago) reported that garlic was the number one herbal medicine used. It further reported studies showed a small but measurable drop in cholesterol (~5%). Perhaps those studies were before the statin drugs were so prevalent or the more recent study may have been too small to detect a small drop.
— Posted by James Lewis
2007
12:47 pm
Garlic is a very strong ingredient and, like many other people neither mentioned nor considered in this promo piece for the garlic industry, I have a strong negative reaction to ingesting garlic. To me it’s as if bits of tinfoil and kerosene have been ground into the food. It’s not just about the smell and the taste. The effect on me is like luiquid tinfoil spreading around my mouth and afterwayrds, like a softboiled egg stuck in my throat. Needless to say a plunging of my mood accompanies the experience… but it can continue for 24 hours, depending on the amount.
It’s ubiquitousnes in both commercial and private kitchens is a major reason that many people like me do not go out to eat. If a list of ingredients was mandatory for wherever foods are prepared, a lot of people would go out more.
Penicillin is a wonder drug but you wouldn’t add it to everyone’s food without warning them about it because, obviously, it’s not good for everyone.
Similarly, peanuts are not just healthy protein, and garlic is not just a health food. To all too many people they are toxic; please remember that.
— Posted by Peter H.
2007
12:56 pm
I traveled Eastern Europe for months during the Fall and Winter. If I had even the slightest sneeze or runny nose that anyone could notice, garlic was being shoved in my face.
It’s a panacea for the Poles, really. It was almost in everything. I learned to love and now cook with it when possible.
Does anyone know if the beneficial properties of it are lost if one uses the minced dried garlic available in grocery stores? I hate to keep buying it in whole cloves and then throw it away if I don’t get to it.
— Posted by Peter Hedberg
2007
12:56 pm
I wish I liked it, but even the smell gives me a stomach ache!
— Posted by Nikki Hardin
2007
12:59 pm
While garlic has many health benefits, it is rarely noted in articles such as this that garlic decreases the effectiveness of oral contraceptives.
— Posted by JJM
2007
1:07 pm
After reading down the posts, garlic is my new best friend.
— Posted by Yasmeen Husain
2007
2:58 pm
My daughter, who is now 21, is prone to ear infections. Very early on when Taryn was a toddler I had read that putting a peeled, sliced to fit, garlic clove in her ear (not all the way in) before she went to bed would eliminate any earache. We never had to use antibiotics, garlic is the best remedy. She continues to do this even as a senior in college. My Mom, who’s 79, also has started using this method and it works for her too. We think garlic is a fabulous smell - so earthy.
— Posted by Betsy
2007
3:41 pm
Yet another benefit of eatind garlic:
A friend of mine who eats garlic regularly says, “While ‘an apple a day keeps the doctor away’, a garlic a day keeps _everyone_ away!”
— Posted by Timothy F. Wheeler
2007
3:45 pm
Many Brazilians I know drink a sliced garlic infusion with a dash of lime juice when they have a cold. I thought it was their specialty but these postings show that many people do something similar all over! In Japan we also say that garlic is good for purifying the blood.
— Posted by Yuko
2007
4:30 pm
Love garlic: raw, pickled, in cooking, sauteed. But it turns up on my heart medication list of foods to limit (like boiled onions). No explanation and not on most lists I’ve scene. So I wonder what drugs have bad side effects
— Posted by Cabbage Head
2007
4:35 pm
I am amazed that the educated readers of the New York times would get excited about the response of red blood cells in a test tube to garlic. Also disturbing is how many comments here are completely anecdotal in nature. Isn’t the point of modern medicine that we don’t base decisions on anecdotal evidence or rely on treatments that have only been shown to work in a test tube.
— Posted by Abie
2007
4:46 pm
I’mfinally ready for the perfect health diet: one fifth of each - raw garlic, turmeric, cayenne, olive oil, yogurt. See you in 100 years.
— Posted by zippy
2007
4:56 pm
To all of you who get sick from eating garlic, you might see if you are allergic to it. My husband is violently allergic to it and if he combines red wine with it, then he literally has to go to the doctor. This allergy manifests itself in him through hives, but he also feels physically ill. It’s an enormous shame because I LOVE garlic but can no longer cook with it.
— Posted by sandra
2007
5:06 pm
Garlic is easy to grow but in northern climates, DON’T plant bulbs you get from the grocery store - the “softneck” varieties aren’t reliably hardy. I grow “hardneck” reliably in Wisconsin. (Some varieties come from Siberia). I plant some of my own, some from the farmer’s market, & some from Jung nurseries. Plant before the ground freezes in fall, just like a daffodil bulb, then harvest in late spring, just before the flower head opens. Few veggies are easier to grow. Some of the bulbs are small, but they still taste much better than store bought garlic. For someone who wanted to plant in pots, I would imagine it needs some chilling time, you could try forcing it (put in a pot & stick it in the back of your fridge for 6 weeks), but you wouldn’t get much - once you taste REAL garlic you can’t get enough. Try your local farmer’s market.
— Posted by SueG
2007
5:16 pm
My grandfather, who was born in Abruzzi province in 1888, ate raw garlic sandwiches daily. He survived mustard gas attacks on the front lines in the First World War, lost six children, both legs, smoked his whole life and drank like a sailor. He made it to 85 until a stroke got him, and he always swore by his garlic.
— Posted by David
2007
5:55 pm
As always, I have enjoyed reading all the comments as much as the original article!! No matter what garlic does or does not do, if you believe it will help you, I think that belief system is very powerful. Your body says, Ok fellows, this here garlic is being sent down the tube and then your energy blockages unblock and your own good self helps to heal you! The system is GO! What is it the military says? WHOO AHHHH! Cheers!
— Posted by Mom
2007
6:19 pm
Garlic (diced or small crushed amount) if applied to skin can “cauterize” acne - take care that you apply a reasonable amount though. It worked for me as a teenager after i read about it in an indian herbalist’s interview (I think her name was Shahnaz Hussain)after i had a very strong breakout.
— Posted by sm
2007
6:21 pm
Indian food is rich in garlic, ginger and onion - this often creates strong smells (quite flavorful if you ask me) but I’d be curious to know similar effects of the ginger root as well. Long live the humble roots.
— Posted by sat
2007
7:54 pm
Garlic keeps you healthy because it creates a strong body odor and keeps others away and therefore you do not catch infections from them. My wife substitutes headaches with garlic, I think.
— Posted by Eric
2007
8:22 pm
While the production of hyddrogen sulfide when garlick is mixed with blood cells may be new, the auther’s statemen “… it’s never been clear why the herb might be good for you” shows he is otherwise ignorant of the subject matter.
There have been hundreds of scientific studies on the chemistry and medical benefits of garlic going back at least to the 1920s. Why? Because its medicinal and antibiotic properties have long been known. After the rediscovery of penicillin in the 1940s, most doctors forgot about garlic.
But research continued. One of the foremost experts on the chemistry of garlic is Professor Erik Block at SUNY Albany.
I believe it was he who found that you needed to crush raw garlic to break down the cell walls so that the chemicals would combine to produce the medicinal compounds, such as allicin. At least, that’s where I first heard about it.
Garlic can cure colds, if taken early, and, yes, there are scientific studies to back this up.
It’s too bad newspapers keep perpetuating inaccurate information, ad nauseum.
— Posted by JP
2007
8:28 pm
When I was a nursing mom I would sometimes get a breast infection (mastitis). Antibiotics will get in the milk supply and the baby will ingest them, so not a good idea. I’d take a garlic clove, slice it in half, and place it inside my bra right over the infection with the sliced side at a right angle to the skin, not against it, as the juices can burn. That, combined with lots of rest and hot showers directed toward the infected area always cured me. I’ve also put a cut garlic clove in my ear for ear infections or sore throats and it’s worked for that too. But beware: the clove has to be large enough not to get stuck in there.
— Posted by Bettina
2007
9:02 pm
I don’t know about the medical but I am addicted to the flavor! The topic reaps a bounty of comment and recipes! Thank you all.
I have a variety of garlic given to me a score of years ago by a historian/ archaeologist who found it associated with Spanish explorer encampments & trails. The pod produces “bulblets” that remain in the ground to produce another crop if left. The plant has the tall purple flower that the commercial crop lacks. I would appreciate commentary.
turandotte@mail.com This is a “cutout” address that can be abandoned if the spam grows faster than the garlic. Bless NY for your hospitality to this ole Coastguardsman, a half century ago, and for the continuing gift of WQXR- now streaming. Try KMFA for a pleasant alternate streaming from Austin, Texas.
— Posted by Kronos
2007
9:44 pm
Garlic is also good to keep away vampires.
— Posted by Brynn Fiori
2007
10:20 pm
I recently read an article saying that raw garlic is healthiest, cooked is only a little less healthy, and microwaved is not healthy at all. However, my hunch is that raw is healthiest by far. I guess we have to start to love the smell of it! Parsley might work to somewhat kill the smell. And milk or yogurt or oranges can kill the burn right after chewing.
— Posted by FantasyFreddy
2007
10:33 pm
It is so nice to read all the positive comments about garlic!
I have been using garlic for years and I have seldom -if at all- got any cold!
The way I use it is by chopping 6 cloves of fresh garlic, chopping 1/2 inch of fresh ginger root, heating about 4 tablespoons of olive oil and sauteeing these for about two minutes on medium heat. Sometimes I add chopped jalapeño peppers to jazz it up, along with cumin seeds, and after they are sauteed, I can use it along with most recipes for spicy food, such as vegetarian chili.
I open up a couple of cans of navy beans or red kidney beans, add them to the above sauteed mixture and let it cook covered on low heat, until the beans are tender. Then I add a can of crushed/chopped tomatoes and cook covered for 15 minutes on low heat. Then I add 1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon powder and let it cook for about 2 minutes on low heat, covered. When done, I add salt to taste and Voilla, I have just made the most delicious vegetarian chili you can imagine. If you have acquired taste for it, you may add 1/4 cup of cleaned, chopped cilantro leaves.
Divine! Just Divine! Try it and be happy, AND COLD-FREE!
— Posted by NetRocket
2007
11:05 pm
I have three golden retreiver dogs. Each night I sprinkle a small amount of garlic powder in their food. Not only does it have wonderful health benefits, it has been shown to act as a natural flea repelent.
While other owners use toxic sprays, collars and powders, none of my dogs have ever had a problem with fleas. The oldest is 11 years.
marc
— Posted by marc romano
2007
11:59 pm
There was a symponsium in America a few years ago on Garlic . Experts put their opinion on Garlic .There should be wide publicity on this wonderful and best herb found througout the world which is a handy remedial food supplemetnt of all time to stay away from various diseases in a preventitive measure .
I welcome the publication in New york Times .
Thanks to all readers who has taken pain to go through the articles.
— Posted by Ashish Kumar Das
2007
1:05 am
After skimming through 400+ posts, I’m amazed that no one has mentioned the most effective antidote to garlic breath. Chew a zinc tablet and it goes away instantly.
— Posted by Naomi
2007
1:30 am
Question: does the fermentation resulting from pickling or marinating in vinegar diminish garlic’s potential benefits?
I suspect that the most benefit from garlic is obtained when the raw cloves are chewed. Absorption through the palate seems like something garlic was made to do - for those who can stand the resulting days of aftertaste and strong breath, which I for one, cannot.
When I want to eat raw garlic, I’ll smash a clove and “hide” portions of it inside something soft to swallow whole, such as mashed potatoes or soft bread, etc.
I am another one of those who cannot tolerate eating raw onion (ensuing stomach upset, and days of strong lingering aftertaste and thirst), and chewing raw garlic gives me somewhat similar symptoms. But swallowing garlic without it touching the tongue, & during the course of a meal to avoid digestive issues, works for me without the downsides.
But as mentioned in a previous posts above, perhaps an apple cider vinegar chaser is strong enough to neutralize the effects of chewed garlic? In my case, I doubt it, but am eager to test pickling or vinegar-marinated cloves.
— Posted by Peter W
2007
2:22 am
over a year ago i was eating a lot of garlic, greens, and red wine and then around that time i develepoed what is called restless leg syndrome. i finally figured out that sulfur or sulfites make the rls worse. garlic makes it terrrible at night to sleep. and i finally figured out wearing wool socks at night helps. but mainly garlic bothers me. i used to eat 10 cloves a day i loved garlic so much. I think too much of a good thing is bad. autobill2000@yahoo.com
Billy Jacobs in Oakland, Ca
— Posted by bill jacobs
2007
3:19 am
Does anybody have any suggestions for those of us who cannot tolerate garlic (and onions) because of the awful digestive problems it triggers? I like the taste but refuse to eat it because of the after effects. I would prefer not to have to rely on supplements
— Posted by Jon
2007
3:38 am
Ok Folks this is how it works.
1. I Started eating garlic THIS WAY in 2000 and now 8 years later have never had a cold,flu.nothing.
Before that I was as sick as anybody else.
2 Heat small amount of olive oil in frying pan
add chopped onions [one onion]..fry to semi brown
add 2-3 chopped tomatoes.fry to soft
add crushed raw garlic..the crap sold in the stores in bottles is useless.
mix in..keep on flame for 2 minutes..let stand for 5 minutes. Spead on bread,eat,..health WILL follow.
DO NOT EAT GARLIC RAW..NO BENIFIT..AND YOU WILL STINK
— Posted by Leslie Udwin
2007
4:40 am
May be we cna increase our garlic consumption!
— Posted by Anjana Bhushan
2007
5:21 am
Italians eat the equivalent of 8-10 cloves a day? You’ve got to be kidding me. (I’m not incredulous, it’s just patently not happening.)
I do agree with the vampire comment though.
tpp responds: That number is per capita consumption. It’s the total amount of garlic consumed divided by the population.
— Posted by Elizabeth
2007
5:23 am
Response to #47. Honey and vinegar is indeed a Vermont cure promoted by a Dr. Jarvis who practiced in the 1940s and 50s. When you feel that little tickle in the back of your throat in the morning and know a cold is coming on, put two Tablespoons honey and two Tablespoons apple cider vinegar in a mug of water. Microwave a couple of minutes, stir and drink. It won’t taste very good but you won’t have the cold if you do it for 3 or days in a row. If you already have the cold do it twice a day for 4 days. Usually kills the cold.
— Posted by Ted Teffner
2007
6:25 am
The best way to enjoy Garlic is to take about 20 cloves, completely peel the skin off, place half a tea spoon of butter in a small pan, and saute the garlic clives till golden - dark brown, and crispy.
One can eat this as is or mix it with hot rice and salt or add it to bowl of hot soup!!
You shall attain Nirvana…immediately!
Dr. Shankara
— Posted by Dr. Shankara