


Place the beef shanks in a large pot or Dutch oven with the chopped onion, 2 cloves of garlic, one bay leaf, and a pinch of salt. Cover with about 6 cups of water. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer. Cover and cook for about 2 to 2.5 hours, or until the meat is very tender and starting to fall from the bone. Skim any foam from the surface during the first few minutes of cooking. Once cooked, remove the meat from the broth and set aside. Strain the broth and reserve it.
While the beef is cooking, toast the guajillo and ancho/pasilla chiles on a dry skillet (comal) over medium heat for 30-60 seconds per side until fragrant. Be careful not to burn them, as this will make the sauce bitter. Place the toasted chiles in a bowl and cover them with 2 cups of hot water from the reserved beef broth. Let them soak for about 20 minutes until they are soft and pliable.
Transfer the soaked chiles to a blender. Add the remaining 4 cloves of garlic, the Mexican oregano, marjoram, and about 1 cup of the chile-soaking liquid or reserved beef broth. Blend until completely smooth.
Heat the oil or lard in a clean pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Strain the blended chile sauce through a fine-mesh sieve directly into the hot pot. This step is crucial for a smooth, refined sauce. Be prepared for some splattering.
Cook the sauce, stirring constantly, for about 5-7 minutes until it darkens in color and thickens slightly. Add the cooked beef shanks to the sauce, along with 2-3 cups of the reserved beef broth, the remaining bay leaf, and the optional avocado leaves. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Bring the stew to a gentle simmer. Cover the pot and let it cook for at least 20-30 minutes, allowing the meat to absorb the rich flavors of the adobo sauce. The sauce should be thick enough to coat the meat beautifully.
Serve the Chamberete en Adobo hot in bowls, making sure to ladle plenty of the delicious sauce over the meat. Accompany with warm corn tortillas, white rice, and a garnish of fresh, finely chopped onion and cilantro with lime wedges on the side.



Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). Slice the tops off garlic heads to expose the cloves, drizzle with olive oil, wrap each head in foil and roast 35–40 minutes until soft and caramelized.
Rinse the rice under cold water until the water runs clear, drain, then cook with 2 1/4 cups water in a rice cooker or covered pot until tender; let rest 10 minutes and fluff with a rice paddle, then stir in salt.
When the garlic is cool enough to handle, squeeze the roasted cloves into a bowl and mash with a fork until smooth; stir in 1/2 tablespoon softened butter and a pinch of salt to make a silky paste.
Wet your hands to prevent sticking, divide rice into 4 portions, flatten each portion, place a spoonful of garlic mash in the center, enclose and shape into triangles or rounds; melt butter in a small pan, add soy, mirin and sugar to make the glaze, brush the outside of each onigiri with glaze and grill or pan-sear over medium heat until the surface is caramelized and lightly crisp.
Sprinkle with toasted sesame seeds and nori strips, garnish with scallions if using, and enjoy warm as a portable snack or part of a meal.
Rinse the sprouted mung thoroughly under cold water and drain well; if sprouts are long, chop them slightly for even cooking.
Grate the coconut or pulse coarsely in a blender and set aside; slice the garlic, onion and green chilies.
Heat the oil in a wide skillet over medium heat; add mustard seeds and wait until they pop, then add urad dal if using and curry leaves and fry briefly.
Add the sliced garlic and sauté until golden and fragrant, then add the onion and green chilies and cook until the onion turns translucent.
Add the drained sprouts, turmeric and salt; toss to coat, add a splash of water, cover and cook over low heat for 6–8 minutes until tender yet still slightly crisp.
Stir in the grated coconut and cook uncovered for 2 minutes to marry flavors, then remove from heat and squeeze in lemon juice.
Transfer to a serving bowl, scatter chopped coriander, and enjoy warm as a vegan coastal-side with rice, dosa, or flatbreads.
Preheat oven to 425°F (220°C). Trim and halve the brussels sprouts and pat dry.
In a large ovenproof skillet over medium heat, add chopped bacon and cook until crisp; remove with a slotted spoon leaving about 1 tablespoon fat in the pan, add olive oil if needed, then add minced garlic and sauté 30 seconds until fragrant.
Lower heat slightly and stir in maple syrup, bourbon, butter, salt, and pepper; simmer 1–2 minutes until glossy and slightly reduced.
Return the bacon to the skillet, toss sprouts to coat in glaze, arrange cut-side down, then transfer skillet to the oven and roast 18–22 minutes until deeply caramelized and tender, stirring once halfway through.
Remove from oven, toss with toasted pecans and lemon juice, adjust seasoning to taste, and serve hot straight from the skillet—perfect on Garlic Shop's table.
Wrap the tofu block in paper towels or a clean kitchen towel and set a weight on top for 15 minutes to expel excess water.
Heat oil in a small saucepan over medium heat; when shimmering, add the thinly sliced garlic in a single layer and fry until golden and crisp, about 1–2 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent burning; transfer to paper towels and season with a pinch of salt.
In a small saucepan combine the kombu dashi, soy sauce, mirin, and rice vinegar; warm gently to meld flavors and keep hot.
Cut the pressed tofu into 1-inch cubes, pat dry, dust lightly with potato starch; heat 1/4 inch of oil in a skillet over medium-high heat and fry the tofu until golden and crisp on all sides, about 3–4 minutes per side; drain on paper towels.
Place fried tofu on plates, spoon warmed dashi-ponzu over each portion, top with grated daikon, green onion, and a generous scattering of crispy garlic chips and sesame seeds.
Serve immediately while piping hot for contrast of silky interior and crisp garlic, offering extra ponzu on the side for dipping.
Trim the stems and halve the eggplants lengthwise, then score the flesh in a diamond pattern without cutting through the skin so flavors penetrate easily.
In a small bowl combine the softened butter, white miso, minced garlic, mirin, sugar, and a pinch of salt; stir until smooth and spreadable.
Heat a large heavy skillet or grill pan over medium-high heat until it smokes slightly; brush the eggplant flesh with vegetable oil and place cut-side down, pressing to maximize contact; cook 4–6 minutes until deeply charred, then flip and sear the skin side 1–2 minutes.
Reduce heat to medium, spread a generous tablespoon of miso-garlic butter over each eggplant half and let it melt and caramelize, spooning the butter over the flesh until glossy and warmed through; add a splash of soy sauce if you like more saltiness.
Transfer eggplants to a serving plate, sprinkle with toasted sesame seeds, sliced shiso and scallion, and serve with a lemon wedge for brightness.
Best eaten hot as a vegetarian main or izakaya-style side with steamed rice; refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days.
Toast saffron threads lightly in a dry pan for 20 seconds, cover with 2 tbsp warm water and let bloom for 5 minutes, then mash or blend with the grated garlic, melted samneh, and a pinch of salt until a smooth, fragrant paste forms.
Heat olive oil in a skillet over medium heat, add the halved dates cut-side down and sprinkle with cardamom and lemon zest; cook 2–3 minutes until glossy and slightly softened, turning once.
Spoon the garlic-saffron paste into the pan with the dates and gently toss to coat for 1 minute—the oil will carry the aroma without overwhelming the dates; remove from heat before the paste browns.
In a small dry skillet toast the pistachios over medium heat for 2–3 minutes until aromatic and slightly darkened, then chop roughly.
Arrange the warm, glazed dates on a serving platter, drizzle with a little fresh lemon juice and honey if using, scatter the toasted pistachios and parsley leaves over the top.
Offer warm or at room temperature as a starter or meze; provide small forks or toothpicks and crusty flatbread to scoop up the garlicky, saffron-scented bite.