Thursday, September 18, 2014

New Garlics For The Garden

Last week we took off for a week in Maine (Mount Desert Island and Acadia National Park). It was a Sunday to Sunday trip so I missed a few Harvest Mondays and indeed, had nothing to show anyway. In a way the timing was fortunate, since I got to visit the 16th annual MDI Garlic Festival in Southwest Harbor. The festival included a farmers’ market, a number of garlic vendors, food vendors, live music, and a canine agility course. We sampled the beef brisket, the pulled pork, the chili, and a roasted garlic brownie (that the wife pronounced to be horrible).

 

The first garlic vendor I encountered was Goosefooté Garlic from Irasburg, Vermont. They are way up in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, off I-91 just south of the Canadian border. It was quite a drive for them to get to MDI but I am glad they came. They had a mountain of garlic piled on a table, all of it just one variety, German Red. It is a Rocambole garlic from Germany discovered on an old farm in Idaho. The bulbs were huge, with just four cloves per 2-3 ounce head. I was hooked immediately and picked out four of the largest heads for planting this fall. The largest head I purchased weighed 2.9 ounces.This is apparently how Margaret buys her seed garlic, from garlic festivals, and it is indeed nice to be able to look at the various varieties, talk to the growers about them, and then pick out your own heads. And for less than a third the price of mail order garlic.

 

German_Red_garlic

 

When we got home, I found another surprise in my mail box – the Duganski garlic I ordered from Territorial. I bought Spanish Roja garlic from them last year and was pleased with both the seed garlic I received and the heads I grew this year. They were by far my most successful garlic in a weird garlic season. I am not so sure I am pleased with the Duganski seed garlic I received. I ordered a little late, so maybe I got the bottom of the barrel.

 

Duganski_garlic

 

Duganski is a marble purple stripe garlic from Kazakhstan with large bulbs and an initial fiery flavor and a mellow aftertaste. It produces large bulbs that are supposed to keep fairly well for a hard neck. The seed garlic I received looks like it was dug too late. The necks are curved and it almost looks like the garlic foliage was starting to fall over. The cloves are starting to separate and the wrappers are loose. You can even see on some of the cloves that the skins are cracked and the clove is exposed. Does the grower of this stuff actually know how to grow garlic? Heads like this will not keep very long. I’m hoping it holds until planting time in late October.

 

With the acquisition of these two new garlics, I decided not to bother trying to acclimate the Sulmona and Viola Francese garlics to my garden and they are now in the dehydrator, all of them. They will be replaced with the two new garlics, and I will be replanting the German Extra Hardy, Red Chesnok, and Spanish Roja for a total of five garlics again. The Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a cold, snowy winter for New England so we will see how these different garlics perform.

7 comments:

  1. It must be nice to be able to pick out garlics in person. The German Red sound very nice.

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  2. That German red is a beaute. I went to my first ever garlic festival a couple of weeks ago. We luckily have one not too far from us in Stratford Ontario - although this is the first time I've been. I wanted to purchase 3 replacement varieties and ended up with 5 (what's new - that always happens with me - can't help myself!) and I too purchased the Duganski although they spelled it with a 'j' at the end (Duganskij). Haven't even planted them yet but already looking forward to the harvest next year!

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    1. Most people probably don't realize the huge variety of garlic available. That's what makes growing your own fun.

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  3. Red Russian Garlic is most common in Eastern Ontario so that is what I tend to grow. But I just picked up some Music Garlic at a local market to plant (in a month or so). Garlic festivals in my area are always so early - late July/early August - when I'm not really thinking of next season yet. But I'll have to pop by some next year and look for new varieties.

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    1. Sure, festivals probably coincide with harvest season. Unfortunately that's when you do have to think about ordering, before they sell out. Music should be a good choice and might keep a little longer than teh Russian Red.

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  4. After trying a half dozen varieties I grow music, have for the past 5 or 6 years. It's a good all purpose one. I had a weird garlic season too. I'm glad to know I'm not alone.

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    1. I think the weirdness was widespread, don't know why. Music is a good one to grow, similar to the German Extra Hardy.

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