There have been cases of poisoning caused by the consumption, in large quantities and by some mammals, of this species. Dogs seem to be particularly susceptible[76].
Range
C. Asia? Original habitat is obscure.
Habitat
Not known in a truly wild situation.
Edibility Rating
5 (1-5)
Medicinal Rating
5 (1-5)
Physical Characteristics
Bulb growing to 0.6m by 0.15m.
It is hardy to zone 8 and is not frost tender. It is in flower from July to August. The flowers are hermaphrodite (have both male and female organs) and are pollinated by Bees, insects.
The plant prefers light (sandy) and medium (loamy) soils and requires well-drained soil.
The plant prefers acid, neutral and basic (alkaline) soils and can grow in very alkaline soil.
It cannot grow in the shade.
It requires dry or moist soil.
Bulb - raw or cooked. Widely used, especially in southern Europe, as a flavouring in a wide range of foods, both raw and cooked[244]. Garlic is a wonderfully nutritious and health giving addition to the diet, but it has a very strong flavour and so is mainly used in very small quantities as a flavouring in salads and cooked foods[2, 9, 14, 27, 33]. A nutritional analysis is available[218]. The bulbs can be up to 6cm in diameter[200].
Bulbils - raw or cooked[K]. An excellent strong garlic flavour, though they are rather small and therefore fiddly to peel[K].
Leaves - raw or cooked. Chopped and used in salads, they are rather milder than the bulbs[200, K]. The Chinese often cultivate garlic especially for the leaves, these can be produced in the middle of winter in mild winters[206].
The flowering stems are used as a flavouring and are sometimes sold in Chinese shops[183].
The sprouted seed is added to salads[183].
Medicinal Uses
Plants For A Future can not take any responsibility for any adverse effects from the use of plants.
Always seek advice from a professional before using a plant medicinally.
Garlic has a very long folk history of use in a wide range of ailments, particularly ailments such as ringworm, Candida and vaginitis where its fungicidal, antiseptic, tonic and parasiticidal properties have proved of benefit[218]. The plant produces inhibitory effects on gram-negative germs of the typhoid-paratyphoid-enteritis group, indeed it possesses outstanding germicidal properties[240] and can keep amoebic dysentery at bay[244]. It is also said to have anticancer activity[218]. It has also been shown that garlic aids detoxification of chronic lead poisoning[244]. Daily use of garlic in the diet has been shown to have a very beneficial effect on the body, especially the blood system and the heart. For example, demographic studies suggest that garlic is responsible for the low incidence of arteriosclerosis in areas of Italy and Spain where consumption of the bulb is heavy[222]. Recent research has also indicated that garlic reduces glucose metabolism in diabetics, slows the development of arteriosclerosis and lowers the risk of further heart attacks in myocardial infarct patients[238, 254]. Externally, the expressed juice is an excellent antiseptic for treating wounds[244].
The fresh bulb is much more effective medicinally than stored bulbs, extended storage greatly reduces the anti-bacterial action[244].
The bulb is said to be anthelmintic, antiasthmatic, anticholesterolemic, antiseptic, antispasmodic, cholagogue, diaphoretic, diuretic, expectorant, febrifuge, stimulant, stings, stomachic, tonic, vasodilator[4, 9, 14, 21, 46, 165].
The juice from the bulb is used as an insect repellent[7, 14]. It has a very strong smell and some people would prefer to be bitten[K]. The juice can also be applied to any stings in order to ease the pain[7, 14]. 3 - 4 tablespoons of chopped garlic and 2 tablespoons of grated soap can be infused in 1 litre of boiling water, allowed to cool and then used as an insecticide[201].
An excellent glue can be made from the juice[7], when this is spread on glass it enables a person to cut clean holes in the glass[7], The juice is also used as a glue in mending glass and china[46].
An extract of the plant can be used as a fungicide[18]. It is used in the treatment of blight and mould or fungal diseases of tomatoes and potatoes[201]. If a few cloves of garlic are spread amongst stored fruit, they will act to delay the fruit from rotting[7].
The growing plant is said to repel insects, rabbits and moles[14, 20].
Cultivation details
Succeeds in most soils but prefers a sunny position in a moist light well-drained soil[1, 14, 16, 37]. Dislikes very acid soils[206]. Tolerates a pH in the range 4.5 to 8.3. The bulb is liable to rot if grown in a wet soil[27, 52].
Hardy to at least -10°c[206].
The bulbs should be planted fairly deeply[1].
Garlic is widely cultivated in most parts of the world for its edible bulb, which is used mainly as a flavouring in foods. This sub-species differs mainly in forming more bulbils on the flowering head, and this flowering head usually coils into 1- 2 loops before opening[200]. Since it produces these bulbils (which make an excellent garlic, though they are rather on the small side) as well as underground cloves, it can be more productive[K]. We often grow this plant for a number of years before digging it up - it forms larger and larger clumps each year, with an abundance of bulbils[K]. There are a number of named varieties[183]. Bulb formation occurs in response to increasing daylength and temperature[200]. It is also influenced by the temperature at which the cloves were stored prior to planting. Cool storage at temperatures between 0 and 10°c will hasten subsequent bulb formation, storage at above 25°c will delay or prevent bulb formation[200, 206].
Grows well with most plants, especially roses, carrots, beet and chamomile, but it inhibits the growth of legumes[18, 20, 54]. This plant is a bad companion for alfalfa, each species negatively affecting the other[201].
Members of this genus are rarely if ever troubled by browsing deer[233].
Propagation
Plant out the cloves in late autumn for an early summer crop[33, 200]. They can also be planted in late winter to early spring though yields may not be so good. Plant the cloves with their noses just below the soil surface[200]. If the bulbs are left in the ground all year, they will often produce tender young leaves in the winter[K].
Bulbils, harvested in late summer, are best sown immediately in pots in a cold greenhouse, planting out in late spring after the last expected frosts[K]. They can also be stored in a cool place over the winter and then be planted outdoors like onion sets. They will not make such a big plant in their first year, however[K].
Cultivars
'De Vivo'
Produces very large bulbs that are easily peeled[183]. It has excellent commercial potential for the restaurant trade, it is one of the largest cultivars of this species[183].
'Early Red'
A rare cultivar with medium-size bulbs, it does well in the mid-Atlantic region of USA[183].
'French'
Medium to large bulbs with dull-purple blotching[183]. Mostly 8 - 10 cloves per bulb, with some doubling[183]. The cloves are light brown to purple blushed[183].
'German Red'
A large bright-purple bulb weighing up to 125 grammes with 8 - 12 cloves per bulb[183]. Yellow fleshed with easy to peel cloves[183].
This cultivar is recommended for those who will use a lot of garlic quickly, or will preserve it by drying or other means[183]. It also produces large topsets, about the size of pinenuts[183].
Optimum vigour, flavour and quality occur when grown in areas with cold winters[183].
'Himalayan'
Produces rough-shaped bulbs up to 6cm in diameter consisting of a core of poorly defined central cloves surrounded by large cloves, mostly on opposite sides of the bulb[183]. They are flavourful and pungent[183].
An extremely cold-hardy plant, succeeding at elevations above 2,500 metres in the Himalayas, it also produces bulbils lower on the stalk and even at the top of the bulb[183].
'Russian'
A strong-growing plant, it produces large underground bulbs, plus smaller bulbils on the above ground stems[183]. The quality is excellent[183].
A very winter hardy plant[183].
'Spanish Roja'
A very large gourmet type[183]. The skin is reddish, the bulb forming about 10 cloves with smaller bulbils on the top stems[183]. An excellent keeper, it is good fresh and has a pungent flavour, it peels easily[183]'
A winter hardy plant[183].
[K] Ken Fern Notes from observations, tasting etc at Plants For A Future and on field trips.
[1] F. Chittendon.RHS Dictionary of Plants plus Supplement. 1956 Oxford University Press 1951 Comprehensive listing of species and how to grow them. Somewhat outdated, it has been replaces in 1992 by a new dictionary (see [200]).
[2] Hedrick. U. P.Sturtevant's Edible Plants of the World. Dover Publications 1972 ISBN 0-486-20459-6 Lots of entries, quite a lot of information in most entries and references.
[4] Grieve.A Modern Herbal. Penguin 1984 ISBN 0-14-046-440-9 Not so modern (1930's?) but lots of information, mainly temperate plants.
[7] Chiej. R.Encyclopaedia of Medicinal Plants. MacDonald 1984 ISBN 0-356-10541-5 Covers plants growing in Europe. Also gives other interesting information on the plants. Good photographs.
[9] Launert. E.Edible and Medicinal Plants. Hamlyn 1981 ISBN 0-600-37216-2 Covers plants in Europe. a drawing of each plant, quite a bit of interesting information.
[14] Holtom. J. and Hylton. W.Complete Guide to Herbs. Rodale Press 1979 ISBN 0-87857-262-7 A good herbal.
[16] Simons.New Vegetable Growers Handbook. Penguin 1977 ISBN 0-14-046-050-0 A good guide to growing vegetables in temperate areas, not entirely organic.
[18] Philbrick H. and Gregg R. B.Companion Plants. Watkins 1979 Details of beneficial and antagonistic relationships between neighbouring plants.
[20] Riotte. L.Companion Planting for Successful Gardening. Garden Way, Vermont, USA. 1978 ISBN 0-88266-064-0 Fairly good.
[21] Lust. J.The Herb Book. Bantam books 1983 ISBN 0-553-23827-2 Lots of information tightly crammed into a fairly small book.
[27] Vilmorin. A.The Vegetable Garden. Ten Speed Press 0 ISBN 0-89815-041-8 A reprint of a nineteenth century classic, giving details of vegetable varieties. Not really that informative though.
[33] Organ. J.Rare Vegetables for Garden and Table. Faber 1960 Unusual vegetables that can be grown outdoors in Britain. A good guide.
[37] Thompson. B.The Gardener's Assistant. Blackie and Son. 1878 Excellent general but extensive guide to gardening practices in the 19th century. A very good section on fruits and vegetables with many little known species.
[46] Uphof. J. C. Th.Dictionary of Economic Plants. Weinheim 1959 An excellent and very comprehensive guide but it only gives very short descriptions of the uses without any details of how to utilize the plants. Not for the casual reader.
[52] Larkcom. J.Salads all the Year Round. Hamlyn 1980 A good and comprehensive guide to temperate salad plants, with full organic details of cultivation.
[54] Hatfield. A. W.How to Enjoy your Weeds. Frederick Muller Ltd 1977 ISBN 0-584-10141-4 Interesting reading.
[76] Cooper. M. and Johnson. A.Poisonous Plants in Britain and their Effects on Animals and Man. HMSO 1984 ISBN 0112425291 Concentrates mainly on the effects of poisonous plants to livestock.
[165] Mills. S. Y.The Dictionary of Modern Herbalism. 0 An excellent small herbal.
[183] Facciola. S.Cornucopia - A Source Book of Edible Plants. Kampong Publications 1990 ISBN 0-9628087-0-9 Excellent. Contains a very wide range of conventional and unconventional food plants (including tropical) and where they can be obtained (mainly N. American nurseries but also research institutes and a lot of other nurseries from around the world.
[200] Huxley. A.The New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. 1992. MacMillan Press 1992 ISBN 0-333-47494-5 Excellent and very comprehensive, though it contains a number of silly mistakes. Readable yet also very detailed.
[201] Allardice.P.A - Z of Companion Planting. Cassell Publishers Ltd. 1993 ISBN 0-304-34324-2 A well produced and very readable book.
[206] Larkcom J.Oriental Vegetables John Murray 1991 ISBN 0-7195-4781-4 Well written and very informative.
[218] Duke. J. A. and Ayensu. E. S.Medicinal Plants of China Reference Publications, Inc. 1985 ISBN 0-917256-20-4 Details of over 1,200 medicinal plants of China and brief details of their uses. Often includes an analysis, or at least a list of constituents. Heavy going if you are not into the subject.
[222] Foster. S. & Duke. J. A.A Field Guide to Medicinal Plants. Eastern and Central N. America. Houghton Mifflin Co. 1990 ISBN 0395467225 A concise book dealing with almost 500 species. A line drawing of each plant is included plus colour photographs of about 100 species. Very good as a field guide, it only gives brief details about the plants medicinal properties.
[233] Thomas. G. S.Perennial Garden Plants J. M. Dent & Sons, London. 1990 ISBN 0 460 86048 8 A concise guide to a wide range of perennials. Lots of cultivation guides, very little on plant uses.
[238] Bown. D.Encyclopaedia of Herbs and their Uses. Dorling Kindersley, London. 1995 ISBN 0-7513-020-31 A very well presented and informative book on herbs from around the globe. Plenty in it for both the casual reader and the serious student. Just one main quibble is the silly way of having two separate entries for each plant.
[240] Chopra. R. N., Nayar. S. L. and Chopra. I. C.Glossary of Indian Medicinal Plants (Including the Supplement). Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. 1986 Very terse details of medicinal uses of plants with a wide range of references and details of research into the plants chemistry. Not for the casual reader.
[244] Phillips. R. & Foy. N.Herbs Pan Books Ltd. London. 1990 ISBN 0-330-30725-8 Deals with all types of herbs including medicinal, culinary, scented and dye plants. Excellent photographs with quite good information on each plant.
[254] Chevallier. A.The Encyclopedia of Medicinal Plants Dorling Kindersley. London 1996 ISBN 9-780751-303148 An excellent guide to over 500 of the more well known medicinal herbs from around the world.
Readers Comments
Plants for a Future does not verify the accuracy of reader comments,
use at your own risk. In particular
Plants For A Future can not take any responsibility for any adverse effects from the use of plants.
You should always consult a professional before using plants medicinally.
Allium vineale
Michael J. Orlove D.I.C., D. Phil
Sun, 25 Jul 1999
Universe!
Dear Rich, 24-July-1999
I discovered your page with the following URL:
http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/pfaf/onions.html
In it you made reference to Allium ursinum, as "wild garlic". I
always
thought A. ursinum was a rare species in North American woods,
and
that in Britain and North America the term was usually applied to
A vineale. It is also applied to A. canadesne as you know, and also
feral populations of A. sativum whose origin in the New world is
considered
mysterious, Native Americans and early White settlers have both been
suspected of introducing it, or possibly it spread on its own without
human agency (which I doubt). A. vineale is a tubular leaved species
but it is much more closely related to A. ampeloprasum, A. sativum,
A., scorodoprasum, A. shaeonoprasum, and A. rosem than to A. cepa,
or A. fistulosum. It is the one that is a pest in wheatfields because
of the similarity of its bulbils in shape and density to wheat kernels,
making mechanical separation very difficult.
what has fascinated me so much about A. vineale is its extreme
variation
in umbel contents even within a local population. some plants have
flowers some bulbils, and some both. When bulbils are few or absent
in the umbel, the blossoms are VERY showy --being companulate instead
of ovatge.
At such times they are purple instead of green. The very showy form
is known as A. V. capsuliferum in reference to its seed capsules.
the half and half (bulbils and blossoms) form is called A. V. typicum,
and the all bulbil one is A. v. compactgum. Two dark pigmented
bulbilforms
are also described, one reproduces like compactum, and is called A.
v. fuscescens, and the other appears to have viviparous bulbils, but
the "sprouts" are actually non-vestigal blades on scale leaves on the
bulbils, and is known as A. v. crinitum. crinitum usually has one
or 2 ovate flowers per umbel which are lavender or purple in color.
All sorts of intermediates exist between these forms. Here in Ithaca
fuscescens-like ones have flowers, and crinitum like ones don't or
crinitum like ones will have many flowers and viable flowers with
many capsuls forming.
I once found a clump of capsuliferum surrounded by a vast field of
hundreds and thousands of typicum. Those typicum near the capliferum
had purple flowers like the capsuliferum, but the ones farther out
had the green flowers typical of typicum. The blossoms of this species
are usually visited by tiny ants, sweat bees, or nothing at all, but
the capsuliferum where being actively and aggressively visited by
large bumblebees (Bombus pennsylvanicus --a large pocket maker, related
to the British species B agrorum, but as big as B. terristris). Large
paper wasps (Polistes fuscatus) were equally present and interested
in the nectar.
An article by Hugo Iltis in the 1940's (it was either in Scientific
Monthly or Atlantic Monthly) claimed that this showy capsuliferum
form made it as far north a as North Carolina, and . v. typicum was
as good as you could get in the Northeast.
Nevertheless this wonderful clump of capsuliferum I found was in
the Bronx! that was in 1979, and it continued to persist there until
1983. could this have been global warming? the real question was this
capsuliferum more related to the non - sexual nonspecific neighbors
around it, or capsuliferum in N. Ccarolina? did it evolve denovo from
non-sexual or less sexual forms?
Many biologists say it is a mystery how sex evolved to begin with
(the origin - of- sex question" and it is equally a mystery how sex
stays in the population and doesn't get selected against (the
maintenance
- of -sex question). John Maynard Smith (at the University of Susex),
Goeffrey Parker (University of Liverpool), and George Williams
(University
of the State of New York at Stonybrook) have become famous elucidating
and trying to solve this mystery. It seems that mating with a stranger
may further the fitness of your offspring, but it appears not enough to
justify throwing half-of your genes away, as a female does when mating.
Plants with both cleistogamous and chasmogamous flowers, like Violo
sp., Impatiens capensis (Orange balsam), and I. noli-tangeri
(touch-me-not),
and the very similar North American I. palida, not to mention the
hog peanut, Amphicarpaea xxx, present a similar example of this mystery.
What are your thoughts on this issue? How far north does A. v.
capsuliferum
make it in Britain? I have found capsuliferum in Interlaken, N. Y.
Near Ithaca, N. Y. where Cornell University is, but these ones were
not as tall or showy as the ones from the much warmer Bronx. but they
were capsuliferum, and made good seed. I have 2 accessions of them,
one from a bulbil, and the other from a seed collected from the same
umbel in Interlaken.
I have been unable to get them to blossom or even bolt with bulbils
in my garden, just getting non scapigqarous growth every spring.
There is some folklore in this country that A. vineale takes on its
capsuliferum form when in the vacinity of an underground stream, and
dowsers exploit the information provided by the occurrence of the plant
in particular instances.
Well I must go now, Please forgive my sloppy typing, I am disabled
and it takes me eons to proofread things. Incidentally, are you in
Cornwall, or Yorkshire?
Some day I will, if I only live, compare the DNA of different forms
of A. V. vineale from different locations. the Bronx material seems
to be now absent from the original site, I have been back 3 times
over the years, and the material I collected now exists as seed in
cold storage, but I lack access to it over a technicality (it was
shipped to another storage facility instead to Harvard where I was
going to grow it out, due to an accident, and it would take a very
large sum to recover it, as well as the permission of the person who
became its accidental owner who is not willing to release it to me.
this is very frustrating.
sincerely yours,
Michael J. Orlove D.I.C., D. Phil
Allium sativum ophioscorodon
Vaidya K.S.jayahsree
Tue Sep 18 2007
Allium sativum is named Lashuna in Sanskrit language , the language of Ayurveda. among the manifold pharmacological activities attributed to garlic few to add to the list given on this page. Garlic is a very effective galactogogue. To enhance the lactation/breast milk secretion garlic coves are boiled in milk and given to the lactating mother. garlic is also known for its fertility effect.
In young children garlic and jaggery paste acts as an effective remedy for respoiratary illness like coungh and cold.
Add a comment/link:
Discussion Monitor
To have posts to this page mailed to you enter your email address here:
(Your email address will not appear on the webpage or be passed on to third parties).
All the information contained in these pages is Copyright
(C) Plants For A Future, 1996-2008.
Plants For A Future is a charitable company limited by guarantee, registered in England and Wales.
Charity No. 1057719, Company No. 3204567,
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License. You
can copy, distribute, display this works and to make derivative works but: Attribution is required, and it's Share Alike (GNUish/copyleft)
i.e. has an identical license. We also ask that you let us know (webmaster@pfaf.org) if
you link to, redistribute, make a derived work or do anything groovy with this information.