Hard Neck

CHESNOK RED – Purple Stripe Garlic

Rusty Fence Ranch – Santa Rosa, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF) [1645003]           

Beautiful Purple striped wrappers. The best baking garlic. Very aromatic with an abiding flavor. Often
selected by restaurants for its fine flavor. Easy to peel and stores 4-6 months.

CRÉME DE LA RASA – Purple Stripe Garlic

Rusty Fence Ranch – Santa Rosa, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF) [1796003]           

Creme de la Rasa is considered a hot garlic with rich sweet undertones. It’s fine flavor pairs well with cheese
and is delicious in baking. Tolerates a range of growing conditions and soil moisture. This is a Mid-season
harvest. Stores 6-8 months under proper conditions.

ITALIAN RED – Rocambole Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)   [1645005]       

Rocamboles are considered to be the best tasting of all garlic varieties. Italian Red Rocambole has a thin skin
covering the cloves, making it easy to peel. The flavor is rich and complex, and lends itself to being used either
raw or cooked. The Italian Red is seldom harsh tasting and caramelizes well because of its high sugar content.

NATIVE CREOLE – Creole Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)         [1645006]

A creole garlic with a high sugar content, moderate heat & rich flavor. One of the longest storing of all the creole
garlics. 7 -10 bright colored evenly sized cloves around a central hard stem. One of the best for eating raw.

ROSE DU LAUTREC– Creole Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)       [1645012]

Rose is a French Creole variety with complex flavor that adds depth to dishes where only a small amount of
garlic is required. It is pungent and sweet, and is commonly used in France in the Soup-a-l-ail-Rose du
Lautrec.

ROCKY RED – Purple Stripe Garlic

Rusty Fence Ranch – Santa Rosa, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)          [1796004]  

Rocky Red has a balanced flavor that’s quite hot when eaten raw. Rocky Red grows in a range of different
conditions and is tolerant to wet soils. Expect to harvest in the middle of the season. The garlic will last well for
6-8 months. Store in a cool, dry place, with good air circulation.

SPANISH BENITEE – Creole Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)         [1645010]

A creole variety originally from the Andalusia district of Spain. It is delicious, rich & easy to eat raw because of
its mild nature. Rather than a hot taste, it has a warmth that is pleasant and easy on the palate. It grows best in
warm winter climates. Red wrappers covering a bulb that tends to be larger in size compared to other creoles.
Long storage 8+ months. Where winters are milder (like our area) garlic is planted from October thru January.

SPANISH ROJA – Rocambole Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)   [1645009]

Gourmet garlic famous for flavor! Light purple streaks on 7-13 easy-to-peel cloves. Suited to colder climates.
May not yield well where winters are too mild. Very popular with market gardeners and restaurants. Brought
to the Northwest before 1900; often called “Greek Blue” by Northwest gardeners.


Soft Neck

INCHELIUM RED – Artichoke Garlic

Rusty Fence Ranch – Santa Rosa, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)            [6278001]

From Inchelium, WA; on the Coleville Indian Reservation. The bulbs are large- to 3+ inches in diameter. 8-12
cloves of good size. Mild, but lasting flavor, with a hint of hot! Dense cloves store well, as flavor strengthens.
This vigorous variety won a Rodale taste test of 20 garlic strains, named “very best of the soft necks.”

NORTHERN ITALIAN RED – Silverskin Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)          [1645000]

This garlic has a sweet /spicy balance. The clove size is generally large and as a soft neck variety, is ideal for
braiding. In 1974, Yael Bernier’s neighbor gave her 10 heads of this garlic to grow. The seed was from Northern
Italy. This garlic is from those original heads of garlic.

SICILIAN – Artichoke Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)       [1574001]

A true Sicilain heirloom garlic. This is a softneck variety that stores well. Sicilian produces creamy white cloves
that are mild to moderate in heat and pungency, and very rich. Adds pizzazz to pasta dishes, grilled meats,
stir-fries, salad dressings, and marinades.

SILVERSKIN – Silverskin Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)      [1645014]

Silverskin garlics are the type most often found on supermarket shelves due to their very long storage life. They
are a very high yielding softneck variety & do well in a wide range of climates. Bulb wrappers are fine & smooth.
They have long been the most popular garlics for braiding because of their pliable necks & smooth, shiny skin.

SUSANVILLE – Artichoke Garlic

Bernier Farms – Healdsburg, CA (Certified Organic – CCOF)       [1645013]

Susanville has a long shelf life. One of the best varieties for roasting. The mild but true garlic flavor is a hit with
all garlic fans. Good for braiding and stores for 6-9 months.

2025 Seed Garlic Selections

How to Grow Garlic

When To Grow

Garlic is planted in the autumn, survives bitterly cold winters as an  underground plant (or grows frost-hardly leaves where winters are mild to moderate),  resumes rapid growth when the weather warms in spring, and bulbs in summer. In the North,  plant  4-6 weeks before the ground freezes. This gives the plant time to make good root  development but not enough time to make leaf growth. Where winters are milder, garlic is  planted from October through January. Where winters are so severe or where snow cover is so  unreliable that garlic freezes out, softneck varieties are planted in spring.

Soil Preparation

Garlic can survive in poor soil so long as it does not become waterlogged.  But to make nice bulbs, garlic needs fertile soil with lots of organic matter. Bulbs must be dug  cleanly, so the soil must remain uncompacted through the long growing season. Growers with clayey soils should add a lot of compost before planting; those blessed with lighter soils having  naturally loose texture need add only small amounts of organic matter, or grow and till in  green manures prior to planting.

Planting

Break the bulb into individual cloves. There will be a mixture of large and small cloves. Small cloves usually grow small bulbs, so plant only the larger ones.  Use the small cloves in your kitchen. We work hard to provide you with the largest possible bulbs for planting. Where winter is mild plant cloves one inch deep, root side down; where winter is severe, put them inches deep and mulch lightly, immediately after planting. In spring, the garlic will have no trouble pushing through an inch of mulch. Minimum spacing on raised beds is 4 x 8 inches. To grow the largest bulbs, try spacing your plants 6 x 12 inches.

Growing

Most of the work comes after garlic has overwintered. It must be kept well weeded. Take care not to damage the shallow roots when cultivating. Garlic needs to be moderately fertilized as soon as it begins growing in spring. Organic gardeners can side dress a little chicken manure or sprinkle ½ – 1 gallon of seed meal (cottonseed, canola, linseed, soymeal) alongside each 50 foot row. The plants also respond very well to foliar fertilizer, sprayed every ten days to two weeks, but remember: nitrogen is garlic’s major requirement. While the plant is rapidly growing new leaves, keep the soil moist as you would for any other leafy green like lettuce or spinach. When summer arrives, garlic stops making new leaves and starts forming bulbs. Once “bulbing” begins fertilizing is useless, maybe even harmful to getting the best quality bulbs

Seed Stalks

“Hardneck” varieties put up a tall, woody flowering stalk that usually grows bulblets at the top. But if the plant is allowed to put its energy into these “seeds”, the bulb forming below ground will end up smaller. So we cut seed stalks off as soon as the flower head has reached 8-9 inches tall.

Harvesting

Gauging the right time to harvest is very important. Dug too soon, the skins won’t have formed around each clove. Hardneck bulbs, if dug too late, may have begun to spread apart in the soil. Each year the timing is a little different so rather than watch the calendar, observe the plants. As the bulbs mature the leaves brown off. When there are still five or six green leaves remaining on the plant, dig and examine a plant every few days to check the bulb. (Note: immature bulbs that haven’t fully developed skins around their cloves can be chopped up like onions and make delicious additions to cooking.) In very good garlic ground (very fluffy soil) the plants might be pulled by hand, but it is usually better to loosen the soil first with a spading fork. Immediately brush off the soil from around the roots, very gently. Drying is the essential part of curing the bulbs. Do not wash them in water. Immediately move the newly dug garlic out of direct sunlight. 

Curing

Plants can be tied by their leaves or stalks in loose bundles of 8-12 plants and hung under cover. Or, spread the plants in single layers on screens, drying racks, or slatted shelves. Garlic stores longer if it is cured with its stalk or leaves attached. Good air circulation is absolutely essential. The plants should cure from three weeks to two months, depending on the humidity and amount of air circulation. Some growers use a fan in the curing shed. After curing, you may trim the roots. If the garlic is to be kept in sacks, cut the stalks off ½ inch above the bulb and gently clean the bulbs with a soft bristle brush, taking care not to strip off the papery skin. 

Storing

Hang garlic in netted sacks, so there is air circulation on all sides. Or, hang the dried bunches, or make and hang braids of the softneck types. Perfect storage conditions are 45-55 deg F at 50% RH. Keeping garlic below 40 deg F actually makes garlic sprout.

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