When it comes to doing your own veggie patch, the first ingredients that should spring to mind are foods that you can use in your every day cooking. And one particular plant that comes to mind is garlic, a pungent bulb that can be used in roasts or marinades.

Fortunately, we've put together a guide on growing garlic in Australia, planting garlic and growing garlic from a clove. And when it's ready to be eaten, you'll know how and when to harvest.

Where to plant garlic

If you're looking to grow your own garlic, the soil and temperature is crucial.

The best time to plant garlic on the Australian calendar is in March or early April in warmer climates. In cooler parts of Australia, spring is preferable.

In your garden, you should look for a spot exposed to sun. The soil should also be well-drained.

Growing garlic from a clove

  1. Separate the cloves and plant the largest ones into moist soil, 15 cm apart. Push them in, pointy end up, until they sit just below ground level.
  2. Apply a slow-release fertiliser at planting and against three months later. In spring, apply a nitrogen-based fertiliser to fatten out the bulbs.
  3. Don't water the soil until the cloves have germinated, which should be about two weeks after planting. Water often enough from then on to keep the soil moist but not cold and sodden.
  4. Mulching helps keep weeds away and the soil moist. Use straw to about 3cm deep, which will fall to about 2cm over winter.

Take note

Rather than plant garlic bought from supermarkets, buy your bulbs from nurseries that have a range of named varieties. This way you can choose the garlic that suits your particular taste. And you can be sure it will grow.

growing garlic

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Soil

Select an area where garlic or its relatives (e.g. onions, shallots, leeks or chives) have not been planted the previous year, in full sun with fertile and free-draining soil.

You can improve heavy or sandy soil by turning it, working through manure or compost on top.

The soil should have a pH of between 5.5 and 7.

How do you know when garlic is ready to harvest?

Typically, homegrown garlic are ready about seven to eight months after being planted. Typical signs that garlic is ready to be harvested includes green leaves turning brown and flower stems beginning to soften.

If the garlic is buried close to the surface, you're able to pull them out by the leaves. Otherwise, if too deep, use a gardening fork to carefully lift them out.

Softneck Garlic

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Garlic Varieties

There are two main types of garlic: softneck garlic and hardneck garlic, with several types falling under those categories.

Softneck garlic

Softneck garlic is arguably the most common type that you'll see in supermarkets. Generally a white colour, the skin is thin with multiple layers of cloves.

Silverskin garlic

This variety has a strong flavour and is perfect if you want to grow garlic with a long shelf-life.

Artichoke garlic

Identified by having fewer yet larger cloves, artichoke garlics can be recognised by sometimes having purple spots on its skin. Flavour is not nearly as intense as silverskin garlic.

Hardneck Garlic

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Hardneck garlic

Hardneck garlic has a much firmer stalk, a couple inches in length while the bulb carries over 100 cloves. Typically, this variety doesn't last as long as softneck varieties.

Rocambole

Rich in taste, rocambole peels effortlessly. Doesn't keep as long as other varieties, just six months.

Porcelain

Similar in flavour to rocambole, porcelain garlic only has several cloves covered by a white casing. Porcelain garlic tends to keep for around eight months.

Purple stripe

Like their name suggests, this hardneck variety is identified by bright purple stripes on its outer layer. Purple garlic will usually last for six months.

Care Instructions

It's important that during the growing process, your home-grown garlic is well cared for. Choose a high-nitrogen fertiliser to help feed the plants. As the weather warms up after winter, garlic can form flower stalks. Ensure that you remove the stalks to maximise growth of the actual garlic bulb.

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Alex Pierotti

Alex has high hopes of being the next Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen. He lives for Pinterest, knows his way around a toolbox and frothed millennial pink before it was in fashion. When he's not catching up on old episodes of Better Homes and Gardens, you'll find him tending to his veggie patch or plating up a mean roast lamb (with all the trimmings).