Botanical name: Allium sativum
Plant type: Vegetable
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Sun exposure: Full Sun
Soil type: Loamy
Soil pH: Slightly Acidic to Neutral
Garlic is easy to grow and produces numerous bulbs after a long growing season. It is frost tolerant. Beyond its intense flavor and culinary uses, “the stinking rose” is good in the garden as an insect repellent and has been used for centuries as a home remedy.
Planting
- Garlic can be planted in the spring as soon as the ground can be worked, but fall planting is recommended for most gardeners. Plant in the fall and you'll find that your bulbs are bigger and more flavorful when you harvest the next summer.
- In areas that get a hard frost, plant garlic 6 to 8 weeks before that frost. In southern areas, February or March is a better time to plant.
- Break apart cloves from bulb a few days before planting, but keep the papery husk on each individual clove.
- Plant cloves about one month before the ground freezes.
- Do not plant cloves from the grocery store. They may be unsuited varieties for your area, and most are treated to make their shelf life longer, making them harder to grow. Instead, get cloves from a mail order seed company or a local nursery.
- Ensure soil is well-drained with plenty of organic matter. Select a sunny spot.
- Place cloves 4 inches apart and 2 inches deep, in their upright position (the wide root side facing down and pointed end facing up).
- In the spring, as warmer temperatures come, shoots will emerge through the ground.
Care
- Northern gardeners should mulch heavily with straw for overwintering.
- Mulch should be removed in the spring after the threat of frost has passed. (Young shoots can't survive in temps below 20°F on their own. Keep them under cover.)
- Cut off any flower shoots that emerge in spring. These may decrease bulb size.
- Weeds should not be a problem until the spring. Weed as needed.
- Garlic requires adequate levels of nitrogen. Fertilize accordingly, especially if you see yellowing leaves.
- Water every 3 to 5 days during bulbing (mid-May through June).
- A note on garlic scapes: Some folks love cooking the scapes (the tops of hardneck garlic). Whether you trim the scapes or let them keep growing is your preference. We like to stir fry scapes the way we cook green beans—similar with a spicy kick!
Pests
Garlic has very few problems with pests in the garden (in fact, its a natural pest repellent!), and also very few problems with the diseases that plague other veggies. White Rot is one concern, but you should also keep an eye out for the same pests that plague onions.
- White Rot is a fungus that may attack garlic in cool weather. Not much can be done to control or prevent that problem except rotating your crops and cleaning up the area after harvesting. The spores can live in the soil for many years. The fungus affects the base of the leaves and roots.
Harvest/Storage
- Harvest time depends on when you plant, but the clue is to look for yellow tops. Harvest when the tops begin to yellow and fall over, before they are completely dry.
- In Northern climates, harvesting will probably be in late July or August. In Southern climates, it will depend on your planting date.
- Check the bulb size and wrapper quality; you don't want the wrapper to disintegrate. Dig too early and the bulb will be immature. Discontinue watering.
- To harvest, carefully lift the bulbs with a spade or garden fork. Pull the plants, carefully brush off the soil, and let them cure in an airy, shady spot for one to two weeks. We hang them upside down.
- The bulbs are cured and ready to store when the garlic skins are papery and the roots are dry. The root crown should be hard, and the cloves can be cracked apart easily.
- Garlic bulbs may be stored individually with the tops removed, or the dried tops may be braided together to make a garlic braid to hang in the kitchen or storage room.
- Bulbs should be stored in a cool (40 degrees F), dark, dry place, and can be kept in the same way for several months. Don't store in your basement if it's moist!
- The flavor will increase as the bulbs are dried.
- If you plan on planting garlic again next season, save some of your largest, best-formed bulbs to plant again in the fall.
Recommended Varieties
There are three types of varieties of garlic: Softneck, Stiffneck, and Great-headed (Elephant). Most types are about 90 days to harvest.
- Softneck varieties, like their name suggests, have necks that stay soft after harvest, and therefore are the types that you see braided. Especially recommended for those in warmer climes, as it is less winter-hardy than other types. Strong, intense flavor. Recommended varieties: 'Persian Star', 'Mother of Pearl'
- Stiffneck varieties grow one ring of cloves around a stem, there is not a layer of cloves as there are in softneck varieties. They are extremely cold hardy, but do not store as well or long as other varieties. Flavor is more mild than softnecks. Recommended Variety: 'Carpathian'
- Great-headed varieties are not recommended. They are less hardy, and more closely related to leeks than other varieties. Their flavor is more like onion than traditional garlic. Bulbs and cloves are large, with about 4 cloves to a bulb.
Recipes
- Broccoli-Garlic Saute
- Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes
- Garlic and Wine Scallops
- Garlic Fries
- Cranberry-Teriyaki Chicken on Garlic Bok Choy
Wit & Wisdom
A nickel will get you on the subway, but garlic will get you a seat.
–Yiddish proverb
Rub raw garlic on an insect bite to relieve the sting or itch.



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Comments
an inspiring read for garlic lovers/growers
I'm enthralled with "A Garlic Testament" by Stanley Crawford....seasons and growing garlic on a small New Mexico farm....a great mixture of gardening tips and philosophy ...Aldo Leopold on garlic. This is not a commercial...just wanted to share this title.
garlic scapes/sticky cloves
Maybe it's the variety, but I missed a few scapes last summer and did not notice a difference in bulb size...for what it's worth.
My question, it's Sept 29 and I'm planting my cloves. One variety I bought from a local farmer the cloves are almost stuck together, a little sticky/funky...should I NOT plant them? Just that one variety, from that one farm. (I've others from other seed places, and some from my garden from last year, planting about 6 varieties this year) I planted them anyway, but am worried about bringing rot or fungus into my garden.
Seeds from scapes?
I let one of my scapes grow longer just to see what happens and it made a bunch of little seeds in the scape. Are these plantable?
garlic 'scape' seeds.
It is my understanding that YES the 'seeds' from the scape are plantable...however you need to give them 2 years to mature...I've read that you plant them year 1, dig them out, and replant year 2 for bigger heads. I've planted 2 rows this year for the first time...we'll see.
can you plant the seeds from
can you plant the seeds from the flower head and get more garlic or will they just die?
Garlic doesn’t produce
Garlic doesn’t produce flowers or seeds. The individual cloves from heads of garlic are separated and planted. Do not plant grocery store garlic. Find garlic from a gardener friend or local farmer. Individual cloves should be planted, pointed-side up, 2 to 3 inches deep. Each clove will become an entire head of garlic!
correction
garlic does produce both flowers and seeds, but it is much easier to clone the bulbs, so seed isn't commonly sold. the seeds look just like onion seeds, and the scape will grow a flower head if left to do so.
Store bought garlic
I just wanted to letyou know that I planted store bought garlic and I have had good results in their production. The stalks are large,no fungus,green scapes and they are not yellowing as yet.I plan to leave them till June or July before I harvest them .I did ammend the soil before planting and gave them some 10=10=10 in the winter well covered with compost and straw mulch.I paid 79 cents for a large head and planted the large outer cloves in October. Hope to share my crop with my friends who have seen my good results to my sixty to seventy heads growing until harvest.
If u let the scape grow
If u let the scape grow longer the top of it will bust open and it is filled with little seed like bulbs
First time planting
I haven't planted garlic before, and I planted some in May when I planted the rest of my vegetable garden in southeast Michigan. I am now learning that garlic is to be planted in the Fall. However, I have garlic plants that are about 5 inches tall now. Should they be harvested this year or should I let them stay in ground over winter?
Since it is OK to plant
Since it is OK to plant garlic in the Spring, you can safely harvest them when they are ready. Generally, garlic planted in Spring should be ready for harvest by late-July or early August. You'll want to pay attention to when the tops yellow and begin to fall over.
If you'd like, you can plant again in the Fall! It's been noted that planting in the Fall MAY produce bigger and better bulbs. Read above for more info on Fall planting.
Thank you for your interest in the Old Farmer's Almanac and our Web site.
If scapes don't appear?
If scapes are not showing up, is there a problem, or do you just wait longer?
garlic scapes
The scape appear a month or so after the first leaves so maybe it's a waiting game. Also, not all garlic varieties have scapes. Scapes form only on Hardneck varieties.
Don't pitch the scapes!
The first time I planted garlic, I cut off the scapes (what this article calls "flower shoots") when they appeared and threw them on the compost heap. A few weeks later I learned they can be used in cooking. Auggghhh! After I dried my tears, I began to look for garlic scape recipes and in the years since have had great fun with scapes (e.g. pesto).
If left to mature, the scapes will make the plant think it's successfully reproduced so, as the article states, the bulb will not be as robust as it might. However, it's fun to let one or two mature so you can see the teeny tiny "head" of garlic seeds that will develop.
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