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softneck types

Listing 1 - 7 from 7 for softneck types

Garlic, Commercial Vegetable Production Guides, North Willamette Research and Extension Center
... bulb of certain cultivars and types. Bulblets are especially common in elephant garlic. Softneck garlic is also referred to as Silverskin, artichoke, or Italian. Softneck types are best represented by the varieties California Early and California Late (also categorized as artichoke types ...
oregonstate.edu

Publication: Garlic Production in the Home Garden
... Softneck garlic does not form a woody stalk but has flexible leaves that can be braided. Bulbs of softneck types usually have more individual cloves and yield higher than hardneck types. Softneck types ...
www.ianrpubs.unl.edu

Garlic
... are the key data. Classes and Flavor The highest-level division is into "hardneck" and "softneck" types (see the discussion down the page under "Biology"). Very broadly speaking, hardnecks have more ... for these results: Asiatic and Turban types: a few months Rocambole and Purple Stripe types: 6 months Porcelain and Artichoke types: 8 to 10 months Silverskin (including Creole) types: up to a full ...
growingtaste.com

justgardeners.com
... . Try it in your own mashed potato recipe. There are two subspecies of garlic: softneck (Sativum sativum) and hardneck (Sativum ophioscorodon). Softnecks are harder to peel than hardnecks making ... are easier to peel and more flavorful than their softneck brothers: Rocambole, Purple Stripe and Porcelain. There are many different types of garlic within each of the sub-categories. Culinary ...
justgardeners.com

Growing Garlic In The Bay Area
... grown around the world in a myriad of conditions. Rocambole types need those original conditions to thrive, whereas Artichoke types seem to do well just about anywhere. Silverskin, Purple-Stripe ... make the bulbs larger, whereas not cutting may increase disease resistance and storability. Experiment again...) Softneck garlic signals maturity with the browning of the outside leaves. Don’t wait for ...
www.berkeleyhort.com

Explore Cornell - Home Gardening - Vegetable Growing Guides - Growing Guide
... past 3 years. Varieties Browse garlic varieties at our Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners website. Softneck varieties (Allium sativum var. sativum): So called because their necks stay soft at ... varieties. Varieties found in supermarkets are most often softnecks. Includes Silverskin and Artichoke types. Stiffneck varieties (Allium sativum var. ophioscorodon): A single ring of cloves surrounds a ...
www.explore.cornell.edu

Garlic-Herb of the year 2004
... are edible, while others are strictly ornamental. We feature many different types in a section of our teaching garden at Elm Bank. ... bottoms of leaves. Growing Garlic There are two basic types of garlic: hardneck and softneck. Some hardneck garlics: Rocambole - is the most widely grown ... the tops. When cooked it still has lots of flavor. Some softneck garlics (better type to use if you plan to braid it ...
www.neuhsa.org