Solo garlic

 Solo garlic, also known as single clove garlic, monobulb garlic, single bulb garlic, or pearl garlic,[1] is a type of Allium sativum (garlic).[2] The size of the single clove differs from approximately 25 to 50 mm in diameter. It has the flavour of the garlic clove but is somewhat milder and slightly perfumed. The appearance is somewhat akin to that of a pickling onion, with white skin and often purple stripes. Solo garlic offers the advantage, compared to traditional garlic, of being very quick and easy to peel.

Solo garlic
Single clove garlic.jpg
Single clove garlic
SpeciesAllium Ampeloprasum
Views of the bulb
Solo garlic packaged with different language names

Single clove garlic has been grown at the foothills of the Himalayan Mountains for about 7,000 years.[1] It is not a single variety of garlic, but rather a product of specific planting practices.[1] As a result, single cloved versions of variants such as Allium nigrum are also available.

GrowthEdit

Small bulbs of solo garlic can be obtained by planting the bulbils of any variety of garlic.[3] However, commercial production comes from areas where garlic is likely to produce a solo bulb due to environmental factors.[citation needed] The climate in these areas, combined with careful cultivation, leads to a large percentage of the garlic crop failing to split into multiple cloves.[citation needed]

IndiaEdit

In Hindi, it is known as ek kali ka lehsun or ek kali lahsun, (Hindiएक कली का लहसुन), in the Malvi language, it is called ekal kuli (एकल कुली) and 'bitki lassan'. It is mostly found in the central part of India and the major producing States are Madhya Pradesh and some parts of Rajasthan but the biggest supplying districts were Neemuch and Mandsaur. They are grown after Diwali festival in Rabi Season in the month of November and December and harvested in February and March. In comparisons to Chinese Solo garlic, Indian Single clove garlics are smaller in size--around 1-2 cm--and more cylindrical in shape. Their skin is mostly white, with light purple lines appearing on some garlic bulbs.[citation needed]

PeruEdit

A variety of monobulb garlic is sometimes found in markets in central Peru. It is known locally as ajo trompo "top garlic" due to the shape, which resembles a toy top. The skin is pure white. The flavor is as described above, mild and slightly perfumed. The origin is unknown, but it likely was brought to South America by Chinese immigrants.[citation needed]

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 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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