Any idiot can grow garlic. Seriously. When's the last time you watched a television special on the "Remarkable Garlic Growing Person"? Never. Because you do not have to be remarkable in any way, shape or form to successfully grow garlic. But you do have to plant it - and the time to plant is October.
Skip right to the instructions.
I'll be planting my garlic in the next couple of weeks. I had an issue with mosaic virus this year which made my garlic ungenerous. It also made it diseased which made me angry. I had to buy all new, disease free garlic to plant this year, instead of using my own stock.
Garlic's planted in the fall and harvested in July. October is the time to plant your garlic for next year's harvest. This right here is a step by step tutorial on how to plant, grow, harvest and store one of my favourite crops - garlic.
Many, many, many, several, too many to count ... years ago, my father brought home some garlic. And THAT is when my garlic growing obsession began.
I'm obsessed with many things, that's how I've learned to do so much and why I can't sleep at night because I'm always plotting, planning or cleaning up after my latest venture. Occasionally I'm getting rid of evidence.
Same for bean sprouts. You can grow bean sprouts at home in 4 days. These are not difficult skills.
For growing garlic you just need some garlic and some dirt. Ready? Let's plant some garlic.
The first thing you need to know is which type you should be planting: hardneck or softneck garlic?
What's the difference between Hardneck and Softneck garlic?
Softneck garlic
- Softneck garlic is best grown in warmer climates.
- Has no stalk that grows up from the centre and therefore doesn't produce a garlic scape.
- Softneck garlic heads are generally smaller than hardneck and have smaller cloves.
- The head of a softneck garlic can be made up of multiple rows of garlic cloves.
- Softneck garlic will store for 6-8 months if kept in optimal conditions.
Hardneck garlic
- Hardneck garlic is best grown in cooler climates.
- It has a long hard stalk that grows up from the centre of the head, producing a scape in June and a flower head later in the season filled with little garlic bulbils which you can use as garlic seed.
- Hardneck garlic is larger than softneck and has bigger cloves.
- Cloves form the head in a single row.
- Hardneck garlic will store for 4-6 months if kept in optimal conditions.
So generally speaking, if you live in a climate where you get lots of very cold temperatures and snow in the winter, plant hardneck. If you live in a warmer climate with mild winters and hot summers, softneck garlic is for you.
How to Grow Garlic
Separate your garlic head into cloves. Just pull them apart. Pick out the biggest cloves for planting.
The flat end of the garlic is the root end.
The pointy end is the tip of the garlic. It needs to point up.
You want to plant the garlic "root" end down and pointy end up. The tip of the clove should be about 3 inches below the ground. The bigger the clove you plant, the bigger the resulting head of garlic will be.
If you sprinkle a little oregano on top of the garlic and squeeze a tomato over everything, in 9 months you'll have grown a delicious marinara sauce.
No you won't.
Plant the garlic cloves so they're around 4 inches apart and their tips are covered by a few inches of dirt.
Cover them up and wait. Through the fall the clove will start to develop roots and maybe even a shoot depending on how warm your weather is.
By the spring with a little help from sun, water and these little guys to aerate the soil, you'll have garlic plants starting! A single clove, produces an entire head of garlic.
Harvesting takes place in July and is accompanied by the traditional garlic harvesting dance. That's followed by curing the garlic and properly storing it - which do not have official dances associated with them. Curing and storing is treated with reverence. Just kidding. I dance for those things too.
How to Grow Garlic.
How to grow hardneck garlic. From planting to harvesting.
Materials
- Heads of garlic
Tools
- Trowel or shovel
Instructions
- Separate your head of garlic into individual cloves.
- Choose the largest cloves for planting.
- Plant the garlic, flat end down (the root end) in a hole that is 3-4" deep. When covered with soil, the tip of the garlic should be around 2" below the soil line.
- Fall planted garlic will develop roots underground in the fall and then go dormant through the winter. In spring it starts to grow again.
- In June, hardneck garlic will send up "scapes". Scapes are the tip of the growing stalk. Cut these off once they loop into a complete circle.
- DON'T THROW THE SCAPES OUT. You can use them for cooking or making a DELICIOUS garlic scape pesto.
- Stop watering your garlic 2 weeks before you harvest. (Around the time the lower leaves on the plant have turned brown.)
- Dig garlic up in July when one half of the leaves are brown. This indicates the garlic is ready to be harvested.
- Cure your garlic by hanging it in a well ventilated, shaded area like a porch. Leave it to dry for 2 weeks. This curing process will help your garlic to store much longer.
- Once cured you can cut the roots off of your garlic and the stem, leaving 1-2" of stem above the bulb.
- Store garlic between 55-65 degrees Fahrenheit. A humidity level of 65% is the best.
Notes
- The bigger the clove you plant the bigger the head of garlic will be.
- If properly stored hardneck garlic will store for around 6 months.
- You can also freeze your garlic cloves. Just separate the cloves and put them in a freezer safe container. Do not remove the skins, they're a protective layer.
- Want garlic powder? Dry extra garlic in a dehydrator and then grind it into homemade garlic powder.
- Softneck garlic is planted and grown the exact same way except it's planted in the spring and there are no scapes to remove.
- If you missed the fall planting for your garlic, don't worry! You can still plant it in the spring and get a good garlic harvest. A gardener at my community garden does this every year. Your garlic heads may just be a little smaller than fall planted garlic.
Can You Use Grocery Store Garlic for Planting?
What's The Best Variety of Garlic to Grow?
Can I Plant My Garlic in the Spring? Because I Forgot/Ran Out of Time/Couldn't Be Bothered To Plant It in the Fall.
How Much Should I Water It?
Water your garlic just like you would any other crop you're growing. The fall is usually a rainy time and once I plant it I don't water it at all. I just let nature run its course. What IS important though is to stop watering your garlic 2 weeks before you harvest. Around the time the lower leaves on the plant have turned brown. This helps speed up curing and the drying of the papers around the head.
When Can I Dig It Up?
How do you dig up garlic? Just rip it out?
Um, no. Don't harvest your garlic by trying to pull and manhandle it out of the ground. Dig it with a shovel, pulling up slightly on the neck.
What kind of dehydrator do you use?
I use an Excalibur dehydrator (it's pretty much what most dehydrating enthusiasts use) for all my dehydrating projects. You can take a look at the Excalibur dehydrator here (this one is white, but mine is black.)
Hands down my favourite garlic recipe is actually one that doesn't use any garlic at all. It uses the garlic scapes I harvest in June, which is yet ANOTHER reason to grow garlic. My garlic scape pesto is delicious on pasta or pizza and stores for a year in the freezer.
Now you have all the information you need on how to grow garlic so get out there and get your hands dirty. Or for the more refined among you - soily.
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Chad
it IS October and i WILL be planting some garlic now - thanks for the idea and for refreshing this helpful post.
Markus
Karen,
Ok, I think I partially understand the re—writes...
I thought before, “cool fingers”.
Now I can see the true beauty of
Hekates with your new post!
I had just put down some native creole and some binigni as well as a bunch of types of greens and peas.
Beautiful post!
Emie
Garlic!!! It's in most everything I cook. I did get my first garlic bulbs from and old Italian man (an uncle of the doctor I worked for) along with his instructions on growing it. 30+ years later I'm still growing garlic and I'm sure some of my current crop are descendants of those original bulbs gifted to me. Food memories are the BEST!
Bonnie Gutierrez
You had me with the oregano and tomato!😲
Eileen
Hey Karen,
Errr... why is the menu button on your site (I’m using my phone) not working? Is it me or you? Sorry.. didn’t know where else to ask this question 😬
Karen
It's me! I'm having it looked into right now. ~ karen!
whitequeen96
Darn, I was looking forward to your photo of the scapegoats! But I found it; so cute!
jacqueline
Longest garlic storage method, one I’ve used successfully for years: Use fresh green garlic with fully formed heads, cleaned of soil. Cut off the leaves just shy of the top of the head and trim long roots to about 1/8". Put garlic heads in a sturdy paper bag and stash in the refrigerator vegetable drawer. The garlic slowly forms dry papery skins on the heads and resists sprouting. Recently used a forgotten head that was 2 years old.
Cheryl Young
If you ever get to PEI, visit Al at Eureka Garlic. Amazing man and a great character. I wrote a story about his garlic business last year. He's got some great tips.
http://saltyisland.com/the-pungent-smell-of-success/
Karen
I'd love to get to PEI. Or anywhere for that matter, lol. ~ karen!
Cheryl
Cats and chickens do make it difficult to travel far I imagine! Probably not too hard to find a cat sitter, but the chickens....hey, there's a business idea! :)
Emie
Great article and quite an interesting man!!! I'd nickname him the "garlic whisper".
Kat
This is how much I appreciate you.
I hate garlic. Am extremely allergic. And HATE it. It's disgusting. Ect, etc.
I read the post / article anyway, cause it's from / written by you.
<3
You make even garlic interesting.
I thought I'd read garlic was supposed to be a squirrel deterrent??
Karen
Ha!!! Well, that's quite a compliment. :) I don't find garlic is a squirrel deterrent but there are those who seem to think so. ~ karen!
Susan
How about shallots? Same process?
Deb M
I had read somewhere that it was best to wait till after the 1st frost to plant. What are your thought on this?
Karen
Hi Deb. I don't go by that. Mainly because I've never heard that rule, lol. But honestly it doesn't matter ALL that much. I aim for the middle of October. You want enough niceish weather left that the bulbs have a chance to grow some roots but not so much good weather that they sprout way out of the soil. Having said that, the first frost for my area is generally around the time that I plant, so if you are unsure of when to plant your garlic, the first frost date is a good way to judge when you should plant. :) ~ karen!
Joe Mota
Hi Karen
Congrats on the new posts etc. Read most of the newer posts and did not see an answer to my question. We have grown garlic for years and have successfully cured it here in Woodstock Ontario. My question is there a good time to wash off the soil after digging the garlic up to get that nice white colour. Some advice out their says to leave the dirt on and just brush it off later so that it dries better but, never suggests when to brush the dirt off.
Thank you
Joe
Karen
Hi Joe. Just give the dirt and bulbs a few days to dry. You want to be able to brush the dirt off without any of the paper layer covering the head to come off. You want to leave as much of the paper on the bulb as possible because it's what protects the garlic. After you've brushed off most of the soil after drying for a few days let the garlic continue to cure until it's done. Then you can, if you like, remove the outermost layer of dirty paper, but NO more than one layer. :) ~ karen!
jody
This post is perfect timing. I got a head of garlic from Dundurn Castle that they were growing in the kitchen garden. Dundurn got the garlic from a family who had been growing it for generations. So excitied to grow my own heritage garlic.
Lynn
I’ve done some reading on companion planting, and garlic seems to be the cure-all for everything. Especially plant garlic around your tomato plants (I guess where they’ll be next year) and around rose bushes. Enjoy!
Darlene E Meyers
I've been holding my breath waiting to hear from you...
😊
Darlene
Great little article. I am in Nova Scotia and love to plant garlic. Forgot to last fall, wasn't happy with myself cause we eat garlic like most drink milk. Every were I go I read plant in fall, not spring but no where have I read why not the spring. So I ignored that advise, wise or other wise. Planted garlic 2 weeks ago and it's growing like mad. Today I dug down deep and lifted a bulb out of the ground, the garlic has a big root system so far. I start all my garlic and onions (spring or fall) by soaking the bulbs in warm water, root ends down, for no more than 24 hours. The roots will sprout, saving value time in the ground. Looking forward to reading more of your website Karen. Great Chattin!
Darlene
Nova Scotia
May
So I have rounded up enough garlic to make this recipe that uses 20 cloves. That's ok. Even if it's oriental, I'm Italian. Forty would be fine. "Oh! There's a little green sprout. I think I'll plant it", I say to myself, smirking inwardly. I am in my mid 70s and have never grown a garlic successfully. I live in nw FL. It's fluctuating madly between 80ish and 40 lately. Today it poured. Three days ago my little garlic hearts were put into random pots. I'm getting spring itchy. I notice on the first walk for the dogs the second day, nothing much happened. They looked taller at the end of the day. Today they were up and standing at an inch and a half. It poured most of the day. It's 12:14 a.m. I can't sleep. I'm going out with my flashlight to see if they're taller. I'll let you know.
Karen
Keep me updated, lol. ~ karen!
Susan
Hi,
Do we only cut the scapes or do we cut the leaves back also?
Karen
Hi Susan! When the time comes you just cut off the scapes. Just pinch or cut them off right where they're coming out of the centre of the leaves. ~ karen!
Devin
Hi Karen!
This past summer was the first time I actually had a real garden and I was decently successful (probably in large part thanks to you!). You're Facebook post reminded me that I have to plant my garlic bulbs this weekend, but I'm somewhat limited in space. I have a 4 by 6 foot raised garden bed and I've already taken everything out of it for the year. Can you plant garlic in a raised garden bed? And if you can, what do you do when the spring comes along and you have to turn the garden and add compost? Do you just avoid the areas where you planted the bulbs? Finally, do you recommend a specific spot in the raised garden bed? I used the square foot method last year, should I just choose a corner and plant it in 1 or 2 square feet? Or should I plant them in a row along one end?
Thanks in advance ?
Devin
I just re-read my comment and realize that I had a typo, I meant to say that I have a 4 by 16 foot raised garden bed.
Tara
Hi I was wondering , going to try and grow garlic for the first time this year, I bought the garlic today at plant store, where do I store them , because I won't be planting them until last of October , what would be the best place
Karen
Hi Tara. Just store the garlic somewhere cool and dry. But even if you don't have a cool, dry place the garlic will be fine until October. :) ~ karen!