The Mercury News

What’s that smell? Gilroy Garlic Festival is back!

Tens of thousands to descend this weekend on ‘Garlic Capital of the World’

- By Erin Woo ewoo@bayareanew­sgroup.com

GILROY >> For 33 years, Georgia natives Dave and Pam Dietz have hosted garlic parties in their home just outside Atlanta. Their annual tradition regularly draws 90 guests, all of whom must bring something garlicky to share: pasta, chocolate, dips and more.

This year, for the first time, the Dietzes made the pilgrimage to what may be the biggest garlic party in the world: the Gilroy Garlic Festival.

“It was Dave’s Christmas gift,” Pam Dietz said.

The Dietzes are among a growing band of garlic lovers who travel from out of state and across the globe to binge on the bulb in the Bay Area city that considers itself “the Garlic Capital of the World.”

Cookie Wayte, a fiber artist who makes scarves to sell in art shows, flew in from St. Augustine, Florida. Marla Cohen and Matt Unger, empty nesters and foodies who have traveled all over the world for exotic eats, made the trip from Cincinnati.

The Dietzes, who have owned the festival’s “Garlic Lovers Cookbook” since the 1980s, have been wanting to come to the festival for years. Dave Dietz comes from a long tradition of garlic aficionado­s: His grandparen­ts grew the root known as the stinking rose in Ohio, and both grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren eat it every day.

On Friday morning, the out-of-towners showed up for the festival’s opening day and settled in to watch two teams of first responders compete in a garlic-themed, “MasterChef”-style cookoff, hosted by season nine winner Gerron Hurt.

“I already got a picture with Gerron,” Wayte said.

Wayte arrived decked out in garlic hat and earrings, which she bought two decades ago in anticipati­on of this very moment. She first heard of the Gilroy Garlic Festival a few years before from her sister’s ex-husband, but family visits every July meant she was never able to make the trip. When they canceled this year, Wayte — a retired Delta employee who flies for free — jumped at the chance to come.

“This morning, I got up early and sweet-talked the Garlic City Cafe to make me their garlic soup,” she said. “Breakfast of champions.”

Though Wayte now lives in Florida, she’s originally from Ohio — coincident­ally, very close to where Cohen and Unger live, as they discovered when they met on the bus Friday morning. Cohen and Unger describe themselves as “festival seekers” looking for “the best the world has to offer”: Since their kids moved

out, they’ve traveled around the globe to an “embarrassi­ng” number of festivals, including ones in Germany and France.

In Gilroy, they said, they’ve enjoyed getting to see the farms their produce comes from — including Christophe­r Ranch, which supplies the festival with its signature ingredient.

For that reason, they call their trip to Gilroy educationa­l and say they’re looking forward to a weekend of music and cooking demonstrat­ions, but admit, through laughter, that at the festival they’re excited to “mostly eat.”

Gourmet Alley, the outdoor kitchen that sells the festival’s official food, offers garlicky favorites like shrimp, calamari and scampi, served up by “pyro chefs” whose iron skillets periodical­ly erupt into flame.

And of course, there’s the famous — and polarizing — garlic ice cream, provided free by the cook-off stage. All five visitors gave it good reviews; the Dietzes, who make their own, called it “comparable” to what they serve their guests at home.

“It’s a good starter,” Unger said. “It whets your appetite.”

Luckily for Unger, and the festival’s anticipate­d 100,000 other guests, there’s plenty more to eat.

What you need to know to go

When: Friday-Sunday. Note the varying hours: it’s 10 a.m.-8 p.m. today and 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.

Where: 7050 Miller Ave. in Gilroy. Roads are closed around the festival, so follow the signs on Highway 101 south and other freeways to this year’s parking lots.

How much: Buy online — or at any Raley’s, Nob Hill or Bel Air store — to save $2 per ticket. Tickets are

$18 online/store for adults (or $20 at the gate), $13 for ages 60 or older (or $15 at the gate) and $8 for ages 1016 (or $10 at the gate). Kids 9 and under get in free.

Parking fees will add another $15. Alternativ­ely, opting for the Gilroy Garlic Train that leaves 10 a.m. today and Sunday from San Jose Diridion Station will cost $43 for adults, $38 for seniors and $33 for youths, but ticket prices are included.

How hot: Gilroy temperatur­es are expected to climb to 96 degrees today, historical­ly the festival’s busiest day.

And Sunday, with a high of 90, doesn’t look much better.

Highlights: Cooking competitio­ns will take place all weekend at the cookoff stage. You can hear live music — country, rock ’n’ roll, blues, jazz, swing, reggae — on three stages, but the headliner is Grammywinn­ing country star Colbie Caillat’s 6 p.m. Saturday concert.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? “Pyro chef” Ron Rodriguez cooks up a batch of garlic calamari on Gourmet Alley at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy on Friday. Since 1979, the festival has raised more than $11.7million for local nonprofits and schools.
PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER “Pyro chef” Ron Rodriguez cooks up a batch of garlic calamari on Gourmet Alley at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy on Friday. Since 1979, the festival has raised more than $11.7million for local nonprofits and schools.
 ??  ?? Herbie the Gilroy Garlic Festival mascot welcomes visitors.
Herbie the Gilroy Garlic Festival mascot welcomes visitors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States