Creamy Lebanese Garlic Dip (Toum)

Servings: 32 Total Time: 15 mins Difficulty: Beginner

This is one of those things you don’t make casually…

Not because it’s difficult, but because you know exactly what you’re getting into: a lot of garlic, a bit of patience, and a creamy dip that refuses to be anything but bold.

Creamy Lebanese Garlic Dip (Toum)
Creamy Lebanese Garlic Dip (Toum)

If I’m in the mood for something easier, something you can mix and adjust as you go, I’ll usually reach for my Yogurt Ranch Dressing. It’s lighter, more forgiving.

This isn’t that.

This asks you to commit to it from the start. You build it slowly, let it come together on its own terms, and by the end, it turns into something thick, smooth, and surprisingly light, but still very much garlic.

And that’s exactly the point.

Ingredients for Toum

There are only a few ingredients in this creamy Lebanese garlic dip, but each one plays a role, and how you bring them together is what makes or breaks it.

This is what goes into it:

Ingredients for Toum
Ingredients for Toum
  • 3.5 oz garlic cloves, peeled (100 g) – The base. Strong, sharp, and the whole point of the sauce.
  • 1 teaspoon salt (6 g) – Helps break down the garlic and balance the intensity.
  • 2¼ cups sunflower oil (520 ml) – This is what turns it into a cream. It needs to be neutral.
  • ⅓ cup fresh lemon juice (80 ml) – Cuts through the garlic and stabilizes the emulsion.

This makes about 2 cups, more than enough to keep in the fridge and use across a few meals. Keep it in a sealed container, and it’ll stay good for a week or two. A quick stir before serving usually brings it right back.

How To Make It

I start with the garlic. Each clove gets cut in half, and I take the time to remove that green sprout in the center. It’s a small step, but it makes a difference in the final taste.

The garlic goes into the food processor with the salt, and I let it run until it’s completely broken down. Not rough, not chunky, it needs to be fine.

From here, everything slows down…

Add the garlic and salt to a food processor.
Add the garlic and salt to a food processor.
Pulse until you get a fine paste.
Pulse until you get a fine paste.

The oil goes in first, just a little at a time. A couple of tablespoons, then I wait. Let it blend, let it come together, scrape the sides, and repeat.

At first, it looks like it’s not doing much. Then it starts to change. It thickens slightly, lightens in color, and you can feel it coming together.

That’s when I start alternating. A bit of oil, then a splash of lemon juice. Back to oil, then lemon again.

You don’t rush it. That’s what keeps it from breaking.

Add oil slowly and pulse. Then start alternating between oil and lemon juice until smooth.
Add oil slowly and pulse. Then start alternating between oil and lemon juice until smooth.

After a few minutes, it turns into something smooth and stable. Thick, almost like mayonnaise, but lighter. That’s when you stop. Your Toum is ready.

Creamy and Authentic Lebanese Garlic Dip (Toum)
Creamy and Authentic Lebanese Garlic Dip (Toum)

What Makes the Difference Here

It’s simple, but it’s easy to get wrong if you rush it.

  • Adding the oil too quickly breaks the emulsion.
  • Skipping the lemon balance makes it too sharp and heavy.
  • Not blending the garlic enough leaves it grainy instead of smooth.
  • Letting the processor run steadily, without stopping to scrape, gives you a more even texture.

Get those right, and it comes together exactly as it should.

When It Doesn’t Come Together

This is one of those things where you can feel it going wrong!

It stays too loose, or suddenly looks like it’s split, and for a second, it feels like you’ve lost it.

Most of the time, it just means things moved a bit too fast. The oil went in quicker than it should, or the garlic didn’t get the chance to fully break down at the start. It happens…

The easiest way back is to slow it down again. Start fresh with a small base, a spoonful of garlic, or even a bit of egg white, then slowly bring the rest back in, the same way you would from the beginning.

More often than not, it comes back together, and after that, you won’t even have to think about it.

Where This Really Works

Spread it into a sandwich and it changes it completely. Add it next to something simple, like my Broiled Chicken Thighs with Garlic Butter, and it brings everything together without needing anything else.

And if you want something to dip into it straight away, even something like my Sweet Potato Medallions holds up surprisingly well.

It’s strong, yes, but once you get used to it, you start finding reasons to add it to everything.

Creamy Lebanese garlic dip
Creamy Lebanese garlic dip

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Total Time 15 mins
Servings: 32
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

A bold, creamy Lebanese garlic dip made with garlic, oil, and lemon juice. Smooth, intense, and perfect for spreading or dipping.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Prepare the garlic

    Cut cloves and remove the green core.

  2. Blend garlic and salt

    Process until very fine.

  3. Start the emulsion

    Add oil slowly, a little at a time.

  4. Build the texture

    Continue blending until it thickens.

  5. Alternate oil and lemon

    Gradually add both until smooth and stable.

  6. Finish

    Blend until creamy and fully emulsified.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 32


Amount Per Serving
Calories 90kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 10g16%
Saturated Fat 1g5%
Sodium 70mg3%
Potassium 15mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 1g1%

Calcium 2 mg
Iron 0.1 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Why did my toum turn bitter?

That usually comes from the garlic. If the cloves are older or if you skip removing the green core inside, it can give a harsh, bitter taste. Fresh garlic and that extra step make a difference.

How slow is “slow” when adding the oil?

At the start, very slow. A thin drizzle, almost drop by drop. Once it starts to thicken, you can go a bit faster, but the beginning is what sets the whole thing up.

Can I use olive oil instead of sunflower oil?

You can, but it changes the flavor completely. Olive oil makes it heavier and more bitter. A neutral oil keeps it clean and lets the garlic come through properly.

Why is mine still thin and not creamy?

Either the oil went in too quickly or the garlic wasn’t blended finely enough at the start. It needs that initial texture to hold the emulsion.

Can I make it less strong?

Not really without changing what it is. You can add a bit more lemon juice to balance it, but toum is meant to be bold.

How do I fix it if it splits?

Start fresh with a small base, a spoonful of garlic paste or even a bit of egg white, then slowly blend the broken mixture back in. It usually comes back together.

How long does it actually last in the fridge?

About 1–2 weeks in a sealed container. The flavor mellows slightly over time, but it stays stable.

Why does it firm up in the fridge?

That’s normal. The oil solidifies slightly when cold. Just give it a quick stir and let it sit for a few minutes before using.

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