Siberian Hardneck Marbled Purple Stripe Garlic - Sustainably Grown

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bulbs
Allium sativum

Despite its name, Siberian thrives in both cold and warmer climes.

An heirloom variety known for its creamy cooked texture and robust well-rounded flavor that doesn’t overpower other ingredients in a dish. Long storage potential of 6’7 months. Siberian garlic contains a very high amount of allicin, an antimicrobial compound that helps support the body’s cholesterol levels and immune system.

Hardneck variety. 35-55 cloves per pound. Hardy in zones 3’8.

Items from our perennial plants warehouse will ship around September 30 through October.

ships in fall
ECOThis item is sustainably grown

6223 Siberian - Sustainably Grown

A: 0.5 lb
$16.50
Check for new listings in early June
B: 2 lb
$58.00
Check for new listings in early June

Additional Information

Marbled Purple Stripe Garlic

Mottled purple striping on the skins of both clove and bulb. The leaves tend to be broader and bulbs tend to have fewer cloves than Purple Stripe varieties, though the cloves are often larger and more squat in appearance; 4-7 per bulb. This hardneck group produces bulbs that store well and are excellent for roasting.

Scapes curl and coil dramatically; small bulbils. 30–50 cloves per pound.

Hardneck Garlic

Hardneck garlic has a hard stalk in the center of the bulb, and (the vast majority of the time) only one ring of cloves. Plant grows an edible scape, a tall leafless stalk with a flower-like top. Not braidable, but can be tied in attractive bundles and hung.

Cut off the scape before it uncurls to get the best bulb size. Not easy on a commercial scale, but on a smaller scale it’s not much work, plus fresh tops are great in salads, stir-fries, pickles, pesto! If you leave the tops on, the below-ground bulb will likely be smaller, but you’ll get a membrane full of bulbils, which you can plant if so inspired.

Hardnecks are closer to wild garlic, and have a greater range of character and more complex flavor than softneck. Hardnecks are much hardier, thus recommended for cold climates.

Softneck garlic (which we’ve offered in the past) produces multiple rings of cloves and a soft braidable top. Softneck types have mostly lost the ability to produce a stalk with flowering parts—but sometimes they bolt and produce extra “cloves” in the stem. Growers like softneck varieties for their extra-long shelf life in cold storage.

Seed Garlic

The bulb size, the skin color, the flavor, and the size and number of cloves are partly determined by genetics, and partly by soil and weather. Our size standard for a seed garlic bulb is 2" diameter, but we reserve the right to ship smaller garlic in difficult crop years. Fedco requires every lot of garlic to test negative for both garlic bloat nematode and white rot.

All our garlic is hardy Zones 3-8. See the USDA Hardiness Zone map for more information.