The peel is thicker and attached firmly to the root, so cutting off the root end first will save a lot of time and effort peeling garlic.

you can avoid stripping the peel into tiny sticky pieces or digging grooves into the clove while you gouge or scrape off the peel from the top or side.

this is another lifehack I would have appreciated learning years earlier.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
2 points

I would imagine it’s more the collisions with a hard surface, and metal bowls are simply the lightest way to do that. It’s actually not a lot of work; it maybe takes 20 seconds of shaking. I like the other suggestion of using a cocktail shaker, though. That would be quieter AND easier, assuming it’s equally effective

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points
*

I couldn’t stop thinking about the shake-peel so I just gave it a whirl.

two full bulbs pf garlic later, my first impressions of the shake-peel go like this:

I’m shocked this works at all.

lots of cloves are unpeeled after multiple shaking sessions.

deeper bowls could make a difference.

I have to clean the bowls afterward because garlic juice is coating the entire inside of the bowl.

The garlic cloves are very bruised and damaged after the shaking.

prep work of cutting off the root end and the top of the cloves makes them much more likely to be peeled by the end of the shaking.

maybe if I get better at this or I have better tools, this will save time and effort; right now it’s more difficult and disrupts my chill kitchen flow with some pretty frantic shaking, but I could see it getting easier and less disruptive as I get used to it.

definitely an interesting suggestion and something I’ll try to improve on, thanks for bringing it up.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

One thing I forgot to mention: don’t cut off the ends first. Then you won’t get garlic juice everywhere :)

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*

my success rate was really low without cutting off the ends, like 1-3 in 10 cloves peeled after multiple shakes, and i still had juice all over the bowls.

i think the impacts bruised the garlic and allicin leaked out.

without cutting the ends, do you pull apart the cloves in the beginning? or do you just toss the bulb in there and shake like crazy?

do you use deep bowls?

That’s the thing I’d have to try next, find some deeper bowls

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*

I have a couple bowls, I’ll have to give that a whirl tomorrow.

I was going to make a garlic dip, and that’s an intriguing method of peeling garlic.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Lifehacks

!lifehacks@sh.itjust.works

Create post

Efficiency in all walks of life.

Community stats

  • 3

    Monthly active users

  • 11

    Posts

  • 124

    Comments

Community moderators