The Borneo Post

A visit with the garlic guru yields advice for homegrown bulbs

- By Adrian Higgins

WASHINGTON: One of the most satisfying­ly tactile jobs in the autumn garden is the planting of garlic cloves. You take plump bulbs, which are both firm and silky to the touch, peel off the outer dried tunic and separate the cloves. You might extract from five to a dozen before the central stalk falls away like a discarded pencil.

If your garlic bed is fluffy enough, you can just poke your finger into the soil and plant the clove so its pointy nose is about level with the soil line. By December, you should see grasslike wisps from these points, letting you know that your seed garlic is growing roots and is firmly anchored and entirely safe from the coming freezes.

Come spring, the top growth becomes full and spreading, and by the time the leaves start to dry and wither, in early summer, the single clove has miraculous­ly formed an entire bulb.

Homegrown garlic is both strong and sweet; the flavours are simply more intense than those from bulbs found at the supermarke­t. No cook- gardener should be without it.

Having sold you on the ease and delight of garlic planting, I now have to admit that I haven’t planted garlic for about five years, for a couple of related reasons. My garden is small, so growing garlic meant giving up a fair portion of precious real estate for nine months of the year. In the same span of time, I could grow kale and get continual harvests, or a couple of crops of cut- and- come- again lettuce.

The second problem was that the bulbs were always disappoint­ingly small, about half the size I would like. I put this down to the vagaries of latitude and climate but have come to see that the problem may have had more to do with the gardener. Time to consult an expert.

Tony Sarmiento, who gardens in suburban Silver Spring, Maryland, is a guy versed in the theory and practice of garlic cultivatio­n. From simple raised beds between the neighborin­g garage and his own vine- clad garden shed, he cultivates approximat­ely 120 bulbs a year, setting the cloves in loamy soil in simple grids a hand span apart.

If you look at seed catalogues this time of year, you might think there are almost as many garlic varieties as types of tomatoes. One inventory lists more than 220 named varieties. But many are synonymous, Sarmiento said.

DNA tests have demonstrat­ed that there are only 10 distinct garlic types, and the variations are simply the result of local environmen­tal conditions or traits selected by growers, according to plant researcher­s Gayle Volk and David Stern. “All these names are not particular­ly meaningful,” Sarmiento said. Eight of the 10 are hardnecks, and of those, he finds all he needs in two of them: Porcelain types, which tend to be streaked violet; and rocamboles, with pronounced curly scapes.

The other thing to know is that seed garlic is not cheap - the selling point being that you have disease-free named varieties. I calculated that planting 120 cloves might cost as much as US$ 70. I have known thrifty gardeners who go to the grocery store to pick up some bulbs to break up and plant. This goes against the standard advice - such bulbs may have been treated with growth retardant and may be diseased. You’d also be getting softneck varieties.

Sarmiento instead goes to farmers markets, where he knows the growers and gets a robust-looking porcelain or rocambole type for the garden.

Once you have found one that does well for you, select a few of the biggest to plant the following fall. “It’s always best to plant garlic you’ve grown yourself because it’s adapted to grow in your soil or climate,” he said.

The little show- and-tell basket in front of him contained an eye-popping garlic the size of a baseball and a little short of voluptuous.

“Have you ever grown elephant garlic?” he said. “I wouldn’t, it’s terrible. It’s closer to being a leek than a garlic.” Perish the thought. — Washington Post.

 ??  ?? (Left) Sarmiento demonstrat­es garlic clove spacing in his Silver Spring, Maryland, garden. • (Right) Sarmiento holds garlic bulbs ready for separating and planting. — Photos by Adrian Higgins/The Washington Post
(Left) Sarmiento demonstrat­es garlic clove spacing in his Silver Spring, Maryland, garden. • (Right) Sarmiento holds garlic bulbs ready for separating and planting. — Photos by Adrian Higgins/The Washington Post

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