Garlic Confit (Two Ways – Roasted & Traditional French)
Garlic confit is whole garlic cloves cooked slowly until they’re soft, sweet, and spreadable. The raw sharpness is gone, replaced by a mellow, almost buttery richness that makes you want to put it on everything.
I’m showing you two methods here. The first uses whole garlic bulbs wrapped in foil and roasted in the oven. It’s the quickest path to soft, caramelized garlic—no peeling required, no jar of oil to store, just pure roasted garlic ready to use in an hour. You slice the top off the bulbs, drizzle with olive oil, wrap them up, and let the oven do its work.
The second method is traditional French confit—peeled garlic cloves submerged completely in olive oil and cooked low and slow. This is the classic technique. It takes more time and more oil, but you end up with perfectly preserved garlic that keeps for weeks and infused oil that’s just as valuable as the garlic itself.
Both methods give you soft, sweet garlic with that signature velvet texture. The foil method is faster and simpler. The oil method is traditional French technique and gives you more versatility.
The Foil Method
This is roasted garlic at its simplest. Whole bulbs get cut across the top to expose the cloves, drizzled with olive oil, wrapped in aluminum foil, and roasted at 400°F for about an hour. The foil creates a steamy environment that keeps the garlic moist while it caramelizes.
When you unwrap the packet, the cloves squeeze out of their skins like soft butter. The texture and flavor are similar to traditional confit, but you save yourself the time of peeling individual cloves and you don’t need to deal with storing garlic in oil.
This method works perfectly when you need roasted garlic right now—mashed into compound butter, stirred into pasta, spread on bread, or blended into sauces. It’s immediate. No advance planning required.
The Traditional French Confit Method
Real confit means cooking something submerged in fat. That’s the French technique. You peel the garlic cloves, place them in a pan or oven-safe dish, cover them completely with olive oil, and cook them gently at low temperature until they’re soft and golden.
This method takes longer—about 90 minutes to 2 hours depending on your heat source. But the payoff is garlic that keeps in the refrigerator for 2-3 weeks because it’s preserved in oil, plus you get garlic-infused olive oil that you’ll use in everything.
The confit method is better when you want to make a batch that lasts. You can pull cloves out as needed throughout the week, and the infused oil becomes a staple in your kitchen for sautéing, making vinaigrettes, or finishing dishes.
When to Use Each Method
Use the foil method when you’re already using the oven for something else and want roasted garlic to use within a day or two. It’s perfect for dinner tonight—roast the garlic while your chicken cooks, then mash it into the pan sauce or spread it on bread alongside the meal.
Use the traditional confit method when you want to prep ahead and have roasted garlic on hand for the week. Make a big batch on Sunday, store it properly, and you’ve got soft, sweet garlic ready whenever you need it. The infused oil alone is worth the extra effort.
Garlic Confit (Two Methods)
Materials
- Foil Method
- 3 garlic bulbs
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- Optional: fresh rosemary or thyme sprigs, red pepper flakes
- Traditional Confit
- 35 cloves garlic
- 2 cups olive oil
- 4 sprigs fresh thyme
- 1 bay leaf
Instructions
- FOIL METHOD (QUICK ROASTED GARLIC):
- Preheat Oven: Preheat oven to 400°F. Position rack in center of oven.
- Prep the Garlic: Take each garlic bulb and slice about 1/4 to 1/2 inch off the top to expose the individual cloves. You want to see the garlic flesh, but you're not cutting the bulbs in half. Leave the root end intact—this holds everything together. Peel off any loose papery skin from the outside.
- Prepare Foil: Tear off a piece of aluminum foil large enough to fully wrap all your garlic bulbs. You want it big enough to create a sealed packet.
- Season: Place the garlic bulbs cut-side up on the foil. Drizzle each bulb generously with olive oil—about 1 tablespoon per bulb. The oil should pool in the exposed cloves. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. If using herbs, tuck a small sprig of rosemary or thyme next to each bulb.
- Wrap Tightly: Bring the edges of the foil up and over the garlic. Fold and crimp the edges to create a sealed packet. The packet must be completely closed so steam can't escape.
- Roast: Place the foil packet on a baking sheet and roast for 50-60 minutes. The garlic is done when the cloves are completely soft and golden brown. The bulbs should feel very soft when you gently squeeze them through the foil (use an oven mitt).
- Cool and Use: Remove from oven and carefully open the foil—watch for steam. Let cool 5-10 minutes. Squeeze the bulbs from the root end and the roasted cloves will slide right out. Use immediately or store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days.
- TRADITIONAL OIL CONFIT METHOD:
- Peel the Garlic: Break garlic heads into individual cloves. Place cloves in a heatproof bowl and pour boiling water over them. Let sit 5 minutes—this loosens the skins. Drain and peel each clove. Remove the woody core at the base of each clove if desired.
- Choose Your Method: You can make confit on the stovetop or in the oven. Stovetop gives you more control. Oven is more hands-off.
- Stovetop Method: Place peeled garlic cloves in a small saucepan. Add herbs and spices if using. Pour in enough oil to completely submerge the garlic—usually 1.5 to 2 cups. Place over the lowest heat. You want the oil to reach about 200-210°F—barely simmering with just a few tiny bubbles. If it starts bubbling actively, reduce heat immediately. Cook 45-90 minutes, stirring occasionally, until garlic cloves are completely soft and lightly golden. They should be light golden (not dark brown), completely soft when pierced with a fork, and almost falling apart.
- Oven Method: Preheat oven to 250°F. Place peeled garlic cloves in a small oven-safe dish. Add herbs and spices if using. Pour in enough oil to completely cover the garlic. Cover tightly with foil or a lid. Bake 90 minutes to 2 hours until garlic is completely soft and golden. Check at 90 minutes—cloves should be tender when pierced with a fork.
- Cool Completely: Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature in the oil.
- Store: Transfer garlic cloves and oil to a clean jar. Make sure garlic stays completely submerged in oil—this prevents spoilage. Seal and refrigerate immediately. Keeps for 2-3 weeks refrigerated.
Notes
- Spread on toasted bread or crostini like butter
- Mash into softened butter for compound butter
- Stir into mashed potatoes or root vegetable purees
- Blend into hummus or white bean dip
- Mix into pasta with olive oil and Parmesan
- Spread under chicken skin before roasting
- Stir into soups or stews for depth
- Add to Caesar dressing or creamy salad dressings
- Spread on pizza crust before adding toppings
- Mix into scrambled eggs or omelets
- Mash onto grilled steak or roasted chicken
- Blend into mayo for garlic aioli
- Stir into risotto or polenta
- Add to grilled cheese sandwiches
- Mix into cream cheese for a spread
- Toss with roasted vegetables
- Spread on burgers or sandwiches
- Sauté vegetables or proteins
- Make vinaigrettes and salad dressings
- Drizzle over finished pasta dishes
- Dip bread—better than plain olive oil
- Drizzle over soup just before serving
- Brush on pizza crust before baking
- Use for making garlic bread
- Roast vegetables
- Make garlic mashed potatoes
- Finish grilled meats or fish
- Use anywhere you’d use regular olive oil but want garlic flavor

