Never miss a recipe!

Enter your email address to subscribe to Harvest to Table free via email:

Measurement Converter

How to use
the Converter?

Hardiness Zone Finder

Find your zone by entering your zip code

National Gardening Association
Hardiness Zone Map

Harvest to Table

Harvest to Table

A practical guide to food in the garden and market

How to Grow Garlic

Filed under: How to Grow, Tagged as: ,

Plant garlic in early spring as early as 4 to 6 weeks before the last average frost date and again in early fall in cold-winter northern regions. Garlic requires cool temperature of 32° to 50°F during its first two months of growth.

 

How to prepare and serve garlic: click here.

 

The differennce between hardneck and softneck garlic? Click here.

 

Description. Garlic is a hardy perennial bulb plant grown for its papery white heads that contain clusters of individual cloves. Cloves are strong flavored eaten raw and mild-tasting cooked. Garlic grows to maturity in about 90 days.

 

Yield. Plant 12 to 16 plants per person.

 

Site. Plant garlic in full sun in loose, well-drained soil that is rich in organic matter. Garlic prefers a soil pH of 5.5 to 6.8.

 

Planting time. Garlic requires cool air temperatures of 32° to 50°F during its first two months of growth when bulbs are formed, but it is not affected by hot weather as it matures. Plant garlic in spring and again in early fall in cold-winter northern regions. Garlic can be planted as early as 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost in spring. Sow garlic in early spring and fall in mild-winter southern regions. Sow garlic during winter in reverse-season climates.

 

Planting and spacing. Grow garlic from cloves or bulblets which are planted with the plump side down. Set cloves 1 to 2 inches deep and 4 to 6 inches apart. Space rows 12 inches apart. Plant plump outer cloves and use small center cloves for cooking.

Water and feeding. Keep the soil moist but not wet early on and slightly dry as bulbs near maturity; this will improve their flavor. Add well-aged compost to planting beds twice a year; fertilizers will decrease the flavor of the garlic bulbs.

 

Companion plants. Beets, lettuce, strawberries, summer savory, tomatoes.

 

Care. Keep planting beds weed free. Pinch away blossoms to focus the plants efforts on bulb formation rather than foliage. When stems begin to yellow, bend them to the ground without breaking them; this is called "lodging" and promotes bulb formation. Avoid planting garlic where onions or garlic have recently grown.

 

Container growing. Garlic can not be grown easily in containers.

 

Pests. Onion thrips may attack garlic. Spray them away with a heavy stream of water.

 

Diseases. Mildew may occur in a warm moist environment. Keep plants dry.

 

Harvest. Harvest bulbs when the tops start to dry, about 2 to 3 weeks after lodging. Bulbs should pull easily away from the stems. Allow bulbs to dry in an airy place for 3 to 4 weeks after harvest, until the outer skins turn papery.

 

Varieties. Brown Tempest, California White, Chesnok Red, Chet's Italian Purple, Elephant, Georgian Crystal, German Extra Heavy, Hillside Rocambole Og,  Inchelium Red, Italian Purple Skin, Leningrad, Lorz Italian, Machashi, Mild French Silverskin, New York White, Polish White, Red German, Red Touch, Romanian Red, Spanish Rojo, Yugolavian.

 

Storing and preserving. Store mature bulbs in a cool, dry location in a net bag. Braid the tops of the plants together with twine and hang them to dry. Peeled garlic cloves can be canned or frozen.

 

Common name. Garlic

Botanical name. Allium sativum

Origin. South Europe

 

Grow 80 tasty vegetables: THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE

 

Never Miss a New Post subscribe to Harvest to Table by entering your email:

(more details)

  • Currently 2.99/5
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Rating: 3.0/5 (337 votes cast)

Harvest to Table's New Encyclopedia:
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide

A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia

The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide: A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide details the very essentials to gain small crop prowess and expertise. Detailed growing guides for 80 vegetables and herbs including:

  • Seed sowing, planting, and transplanting requirements.
  • Site and seasonal growing requirements.
  • Water, light, and nutrition requirements.
  • Detailed growing characteristics: height, root depth, bloom time, and days to harvest.
  • Best varieties for easy care and harvest.
  • Cropping and rotation suggestions.
  • Pest, disease, and environmental troubleshooting guide.
  • Container growing requirements and suggested varieties.
  • Propagation requirements.
  • Greenhouse and coldframe growing suggestions to extend the season.
  • Harvest and storage specifics.
  • Plant origin and history.
  • Identifying photograph of plant at harvest time.
  • Brief description of how edible part is used in the kitchen.
  • Common and botanical names for each plant listed alphabetically.
  • Plant names in Spanish, French, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Portuguese.
  • First and last frost dates and growing season days for every state and 250 cities.
  • Complete index and gardener's glossary of growing terms.

Read more... | Buy the book from Amazon

Leave a comment





Send This Entry To A Friend