
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Garlic
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Before you choose a variety of garlic, you need to consider your climate, which determines whether you plant a hardneck or softneck variety. Then you need to consider your cooking because different varieties have different taste profiles, from mild to sweet to bold to spicy!
Hardneck Garlic
Hardnecks are the best choice for Northern gardeners. This variety is extremely cold hardy for harsh winters. These grow one ring of fat cloves around a hard stem, with fewer but larger cloves per bulb than softnecks.
Bonus! Hardnecks produce flower stems, aka “scapes,” which must be cut to encourage the bulbs to reach their full potential. The scapes themselves are an early summer treat, delicious if chopped into salads or added to stir-fries.
Popular hardneck varieties: ‘Music’ (on the mild side yet rich and mellow); ‘Chesnok Red’ (mild and sweet, creamy texture when roasted); ‘Early Italian’ (sweeter flavor that won’t overpower dishes); ‘German Red’ (robust, classic garlic flavor which cooks love); ‘Spanish Roja’ (strong and hot, heirloom with classic garlic flavor).
Softneck Garlic
Softnecks are more common with Southern gardeners, growing well in warm climates with warm winters. They have more intense flavors and tend to grow bigger bulbs with smaller cloves per bulb because energy is not being diverted to top-set bulblets like hardnecks.
They do not have scapes, but they store better than hardnecks. Like their name suggests, they have necks that stay soft after harvest and, therefore, are the types that you see braided together.
Popular softneck varieties: ‘California White Early’ (classic moderate garlic flavor, most popular grocery store type, harvest in spring); ‘California White Late’ (harvest in summer); ‘Inchelium Red’ (wonderful but mild garlic flavor, superior storage life); ‘Silver White’ (classic garlic, great storage, excellent for beginner); ‘Lorz Italian’ (hot and zesty heirloom, popular with cooks).
Elephant Garlic
Elephant garlic isn’t a true garlic, but it is grown similarly to hardneck varieties, requiring a long, cool growing season in zones 3 through 9. Most types take about 90 days to harvest once growth starts. Despite its size, it has quite a mild flavor, more similar to onion and shallots than traditional garlic. Bulbs and cloves are large (up to one pound each!), with just a few cloves to a bulb.
See our complete video that demonstrates how to grow and harvest garlic!
Cooking Notes
- Learn how to make your own garlic powder to easily spice up a recipe.
- Roasted garlic bulbs are also a favorite of ours!
- Around the summer solstice (late June), hardneck garlic sends up a seed stalk or scape. Allow it to curl, then cut off the curl to allow the plant to put its energy into bulb formation. Use the scapes in cooking the same way you would garlic bulbs. We like to stir-fry scapes the way we cook green beans—similar, with a spicy kick! Note that they get more fibrous and less edible as they mature.

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It sounds fine to us, assuming it’s loose, good-draining soil. Garlic likes compost (which you have mixed in) and especially likes raised gardens to avoid wet feet.
Do I water these bulb?
You are planting cloves (not the full bulb). Water the garlic cloves if they are dry. Just be careful not to allow water to collect around the roots because this can cause rot.
Hello, thank you so much for your tips.
I tried to grow garlic from a garlic clove as I saw in different videos. I grew the roots in water and waited weeks before to put it in earth. Months later (I don't remember if it was 4 or 5) I took it out from the earth (lots of cloves grew around it) and let it dry 2 weeks. Then I started to cut it and noticed it doesn't smell garlic at all, it has a raw smell. I guess I did something wrong during the process. My question is: Do you think is it still edible?
Hi Fanny,
Yes, uncured garlic is edible, but does not keep for as long. If you store it in sealed containers in the fridge, the garlic will last up to 2 weeks longer.
I planted garlic in June later than I should have it isn't ready looks like green onions can I leave till next year? Hope so ty
Hi Regina, For the sake of all reading this, we really do recommend planting garlic in the fall versus spring. Garlic require a natural dormant period that includes cold temperatures. When you plant in the fall, the garlic starts growing roots until the temperatures freeze and then waits until spring to continue growing. This allows the garlic plants to get a head start on root growth and then explode out of the ground once temperatures warm up in spring.
If you plant in the spring, the seeds you find are usually for softneck garlic as softneck does not need as much (or any) cold exposure like hardneck garlic. However, if you plant in the spring again, it must be very early—as the soil is workable and long before you would consider planting any other garden crops. When you plant garlic so late in the spring, it will often just form rounds which are single clove bulbs. These rounds are perfectly good to eat and can be replanted in fall. They will usually form good sized bulbs with multiple cloves the next summer. If you leave the garlic in the ground, just note it will almost always be smaller than fall-planted garlic and will sometimes not form cloves.
This was my 5th season replanting German Red cloves that I had harvested the year before with very good results. This years harvest the bulbs were much smaller (live in Vermont with a very wet spring/early summer). Is it time to purchase new bulbs for planting this fall ?
Hi Jeff,
After many years of replanting from the same string of bulbs, they begin to get smaller sometimes. Yes, it would help to purchase new bulbs of garlic for planting this fall, but since gardening is an experiment, try planting some cloves from the small bulbs from this year’s harvest as well. You never know for sure, the bulbs might end up huge next year, but with a backup of newly purchased garlic as well. We hope this helps!
Thank you very much, just the information I was looking for! I live in the Southern USA and I am looking to planting a batch of Garlic this fall.