I do the same because I love garlic too .... unfortunately, this past winter, I discovered there is an upper limit to this 'one neat trick' ..... an entire head of raw garlic on a piece of toast is enough to wish you could physically remove your colon from own body for a few hours.
There's actually a better way to get more garlic flavor into your dishes without adding more. The secret is to add the garlic at the last possible moment in the cooking process to reduce the garlic oxidation. The more it oxidizes the less flavor it has. It oxidizes the second you break the cell walls so waiting until the end of possible helps retain the flavor and make it more potent!
Climate Town just released a video about exactly this, how the dairy industry is colluding with the US government to offload cheese onto the American public.
I might be an outlier here, but I absolutely think there is such a thing as too much cheese. My partner and I have regular disagreements about how much should be put on a pizza when we're making one at home.
Adding too much cheese can keep the the middle of the pizza from cooking properly, just like too much sauce or too many large chunks of vegetables with high water content. It takes a LOT of cheese to reach that point, but it is very possible when combined with the large chunks of vegetables.
It could be the cheese basically sealing in moisture from the sauce. Usually the cheese itself isn't too wet, just oily, but if it completely covers a wet sauce and prevents that moisture from escaping, I think that would do it.
What really gets me is when someone crosses the line from "enough to hold it together" all the way through "cohesive item you can take bites from" then dives headlong into "everything sloughs off as the cheese stays connected and drags every other topping with it", then acts like nothing is wrong and it's a good thing.
Seriously. I sorta watched Netflix's You are what you eat documentary. If you haven't watched it, it's basically veganism propaganda, in my opinion. The point is some expert says something like "OMG, cheese is actually addictive!". It just baffled me. Like, what's the damn problem with cheese being addictive? If it is at all, it is addictive for me and it will be like that my whole life, because I feel empty if I don't include cheese in my diet... So, fuck yeah!
I haven't seen it, but the problem is that dairy is consumed to ungodly levels in the US, and even mandatory for school food programs, I believe. The problem with dairy is the myth that it's vital to a healthy diet, despite like 50% or more of the world not being able to properly digest it.
If it's addictive, then seems like a bit of an issue if it's being pushed on kids.
It's not gonna kill you in moderation, though.
The US really has a weird obsession with cheese, in my opinion. I live in Australia, a western country with the majority having European ancestry. As such cheese is consumed, in large qualities also. But my lordy, the US is on a whole other level with cheese.
The most revolting thing I've seen is "gooey" liquid cheese "sauce".
🤢🤢🤢🤢 Yikes.
Haha, sorry for the rant, kind internet stranger, I am glad you enjoy your cheese, and if it makes you happy, then bless your heart, even if I don't understand personally
I'm not talking about dairy in general, just cheese. To me, it's just wonderful to have so many different types of cheese and I want to taste them all, even those that smell awful.
But yeah, the FDA recommends three daily glasses of milk for Americans (which I'm not, BTW). That by itself is absolutely ridiculous.
I just watched the climate town video yesterday and that was a hell of a journey. I didn't realize how pervasive milk was in America, and it's not by choice
The best thing that ever happened to me was finishing off some caramelized pork slabs in the cast iron pan...
I put some aged white cheddar, turn the heat off, and put the top of the pan on just to do a quick cheese softening... Well of course I forgot about it and left the room
30 minutes later I came back when my stomach was rumbling, lifted the pan lid and realized that the cheese had melted off the pork and onto the pan. There was just the perfect amount of latent heat, by complete fluke, to perfectly caramelize the aged cheddar into a crispy, greasy disc at the bottom of the cast iron pan.
I have tried to recreate that by frying cheese, and I have never been able to capture that moment of pure tastebud joy and bliss.
Accidents are often the best ways to discover cooking techniques. I remember hearing about a story of a medieval cook who feel asleep cooking his lord's meat over an open fire. At first he thought his lord would have him whipped or beheaded... but actually enjoyed the roast so much he gave him his own farm!
Be careful. Maybe im not a good "chef" (is making frozen pizzas a chef?), but too much cheese can mean the base/ingredients underneeth doeant get heated, so its melted cheese on top of a cold pizza.
I've done it once, added so much cheese that the only flavor left was cheese and it solidified back into a cuttable block when it cooled down. It was disgusting