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Toum (Lebanese Garlic Sauce)

by Maria
July 14, 2026
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Toum (Lebanese Garlic Sauce)

Toum (Lebanese Garlic Sauce)

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I first ran into toum at a Lebanese spot near my sister-in-law’s place, ordered as an afterthought alongside a chicken shawarma plate, and ended up asking for a second cup before the meal was even half over.

It looks like a simple white sauce, almost like a thick mayonnaise, but it is entirely eggless, just garlic, oil, lemon, and salt whipped into something impossibly light and fluffy while still tasting like a punch of pure, raw garlic.

The technique is the whole trick here: garlic gets pureed with lemon juice first, then oil gets added in a slow, patient stream while the food processor runs, the same emulsification logic behind a good aioli, except toum gets there without any egg at all.

Get the timing right and you end up with a cloud-like sauce that holds together for weeks in the fridge. Rush it and you get a broken, oily mess, so patience matters more than any other single ingredient.

I keep a jar of this in the fridge more often than I probably should admit, and it goes on nearly everything savory in my house, grilled chicken, roasted vegetables, even smeared inside a sandwich in place of mayonnaise. If you have made my Muhammara (recipe on the site), toum is the same Levantine pantry logic in a completely different direction, bold, simple, built from almost nothing.

Toum (Lebanese Garlic Sauce) Recipe

Prep time: 15 minutes · Cook time: 0 minutes · Total: 15 minutes · Servings: about 2 cups (16 servings) · Calories: ~90 per serving

Ingredients

  • 1 cup peeled garlic cloves (about 4 to 5 heads)
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice, divided
  • 2 cups neutral oil, such as canola or a light olive oil
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons ice water, as needed

Instructions

  1. Place the garlic cloves and salt in a food processor. Process until finely minced, scraping down the sides as needed.
  2. Add 1 tablespoon of the lemon juice and process another 30 seconds until the garlic forms a smooth paste.
  3. With the processor running continuously, begin adding the oil in a very slow, thin, steady stream, just a few drops at a time at first.
  4. Once the mixture starts to thicken and turn pale (after about a third of the oil is in), you can add the oil slightly faster in a thin stream, alternating occasionally with a teaspoon of the remaining lemon juice or ice water to keep the sauce loosening and emulsifying rather than tightening.
  5. Continue until all the oil is incorporated and the sauce is thick, white, and fluffy, similar in texture to whipped marshmallow. Taste and adjust salt or lemon juice as needed.
  6. Transfer to a clean jar and refrigerate. The sauce will firm up further as it chills.

Recipe Notes

  • Sourcing tip: look for the mildest, freshest garlic you can find, since it is the entire flavor of the sauce; garlic that has started to sprout will taste bitter and harsh.
  • If the emulsion breaks (it will look thin, oily, and separated), do not panic: start a new small paste with a spoonful of the broken mixture, an ice cube, and a splash of lemon juice, then slowly drizzle the rest of the broken sauce back in while processing.
  • A light, mild olive oil works, but strong extra virgin olive oil can turn bitter when emulsified this aggressively, so save your good finishing oil for something else.
  • Toum keeps in the refrigerator for 3 to 4 weeks in a sealed jar, and it mellows slightly in intensity after the first day or two.
Tags: condimentgarlic sauceLebaneseMediterraneanMiddle Eastern
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Maria

Maria

Hi, I’m Maria — born in a small village in northern Portugal and now cooking from my kitchen in the USA, where I live with my husband, our two kids and Max the dog. On Maria’s Cookbook I share the recipes I grew up with — from my Trás-os-Montes family table to my grandmother’s Azorean kitchen — along with Mediterranean favorites and dishes I’ve fallen in love with along the way.

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