The terminology ‘dehydrated garlic’ covers three commercially distinct products. Confusing them — or supplying the wrong form — is one of the most common friction points in the buyer-supplier relationship, particularly for new procurement teams sourcing Indian dehydrated vegetables for the first time.
Garlic Powder (Fine Ground)
Particle size: typically 40 mesh to 100 mesh. This is the most widely traded form and the default specification for most food manufacturing applications — seasoning blends, marinades, snack coatings, and ready-meal sauces. The fine particle size ensures uniform dispersion in liquid and dry mix applications.
Garlic Granules
Particle size: typically 8–16 mesh or 16–40 mesh. Granules are the preferred form for applications where visible garlic particle presence is desirable — artisan bread coatings, pizza seasonings, grilled meat marinades, and premium pasta sauces. The granule form retains slightly more volatile compounds than powder due to lower surface area exposure during processing.
Garlic Flakes (Dehydrated Slices)
These are thin cross-sections of the garlic clove, dehydrated to below 6% moisture. Flakes are primarily used in applications where textural presence is required — premium soups, stews, rice dishes, and food service seasoning systems. They also serve as the raw material for further processing into powder or granules by downstream processors who wish to control the grind in-house.
Minced Garlic (Partially Dehydrated)
A fourth form growing in demand for food service buyers: coarsely chopped garlic dehydrated to approximately 12–14% moisture. It rehydrates rapidly and is used in restaurant and institutional kitchen applications. This form has more limited shelf life than fully dehydrated products and requires careful moisture-proof packaging.
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