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  2. Here’s a Complete Guide To Growing Garlic in Your Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/easy-grow-garlic-keep-handy...

    Here's what you need to know to plant, grow, and harvest garlic for cooking at home. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ...

  3. Garlic production in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlic_production_in_China

    Garlic production in China is significant to the worldwide garlic industry, as China provides 80% of the total world production and is the leading exporter. [1] Following China, other significant garlic producers include India (5% of world production) and Bangladesh (1%). [2] As of 2019, China produced 23 million tonnes annually.

  4. Allium ursinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_ursinum

    Allium ursinum, known as wild garlic, ramsons, cowleekes, cows's leek, cowleek, buckrams, broad-leaved garlic, wood garlic, bear leek, Eurasian wild garlic or bear's garlic, is a bulbous perennial flowering plant in the amaryllis family Amaryllidaceae. It is native to Europe and Asia, where it grows in moist woodland. [2]

  5. Garlic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlic

    Description. Allium sativum is a perennial flowering plant that grows from a bulb. It has a tall, erect flowering stem that grows up to 1 m (3 ft). The leaf blade is flat, linear, solid, and approximately 1.25–2.5 cm (0.5–1.0 in) wide, with an acute apex. The plant may produce pink to purple flowers from July to September in the Northern ...

  6. Alliaria petiolata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliaria_petiolata

    Sisymbrium alliaria (L.) Scop. Alliaria petiolata, or garlic mustard, is a biennial flowering plant in the mustard family (Brassicaceae). It is native to Europe, western and central Asia, north-western Africa, Morocco, Iberia and the British Isles, north to northern Scandinavia, [2] and east to northern Pakistan and Xinjiang in western China. [1]

  7. Allium tuberosum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_tuberosum

    Allium tuberosum is a rhizomatous, clump-forming perennial plant growing from a small, elongated bulb (about 10 mm; 13 ⁄ 32 inch, across) that is tough and fibrous. [7] [6] [8] Unlike either onion or garlic, it has strap-shaped leaves with triangular bases, about 1.5 to 8 mm (1 ⁄ 16 to 5 ⁄ 16 in) wide. [9]

  8. Allium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium

    Allium flavum (yellow) and Allium carinatum (purple) Allium is a genus of monocotyledonous flowering plants with hundreds of species, including the cultivated onion, garlic, scallion, shallot, leek, and chives. It is one of about 57 genera of flowering plants with more than 500 species. [4] It is by far the largest genus in the Amaryllidaceae ...

  9. Allium triquetrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_triquetrum

    Allium triquetrum is a bulbous flowering plant in the genus Allium (onions and garlic) native to the Mediterranean basin. It is known in English as three-cornered leek or three-cornered garlic, in Australia as angled onion[4] and in New Zealand as onion weed. [5] Both the English name and the specific epithet triquetrum refer to the three ...