Identify Crows Garlic

Crow Garlic (Allium vineale )

How to Identify Crow Garlic

Edible

Scientific Name
Allium vineale

Family
Amaryllidaceae

Also known as
Wild garlic, onion grass, crow garlic or stag’s garlic, compact onion, false garlic, wild onion.

Habitat
Native to Europe, northwestern Africa and the Middle East. The species was introduced in Australia and North America, where it has become a noxious weed. Fields and roadsides to elevations of 450 metres in Britain, often a serious weed of pastures

Description
A perennial, bulb-forming species of wild onion. All parts of the plant have a strong garlic odour.

Identifying Features:

  • Leaves – The leaves are slender hollow tubes, 15–60 cm long and 2–4 mm thick, waxy texture, with a groove along the side of the leaf facing the stem.
  • Flowers – The inflorescence is a tight umbel surrounded by a membranous bract in bud which withers when the flowers open. Each individual flower is stalked and has a pinkish-green perianth 2.5 to 4.5 mm (0.10 to 0.18 in) long. There are six tepals, six stamens and a pistil formed from three fused carpels. Mixed with the flowers are several of yellowish-brown bulbils.
  • Fruit – The fruit is a capsule but the seeds seldom set and propagation usually takes place when the bulbils are knocked off and grow into new plants. Plants with no flowers, only bulbils, are sometimes distinguished as the variety Allium vineale var. compactum, but this character is probably not taxonomically significant.
  • Bulb – The underground bulb is 1–2 cm diameter, with a fibrous outer layer.

Uses

Food

While Allium vineale has been suggested as a substitute for garlic, there is some difference of opinion as to whether there is an unpleasant aftertaste compared to that of common garlic (A. sativum). It imparts a garlic-like flavour and odour on dairy and beef products when grazed by livestock. It is considered a pestilential invasive weed, as grain products may become tainted with a garlic odour or flavour in the presence of aerial bulblets at the time of harvest. Wild garlic is resistant to herbicides, which cannot cling well to the vertical, smooth and waxy structure of its leaves.

Medicine

The whole plant is antiasthmatic, blood purifier, carminative, cathartic, diuretic, expectorant, hypotensive, stimulant and vasodilator. A tincture is used to prevent worms and colic in children, and also as a remedy for croup. The raw root can be eaten to reduce blood pressure and also to ease shortness of breath. Although no other specific mention of medicinal uses has been seen for this species, members of this genus are in general very healthy additions to the diet. They contain sulphur compounds (which give them their onion flavour) and when added to the diet on a regular basis they help reduce blood cholesterol levels, act as a tonic to the digestive system and also tonify the circulatory system.

Known Hazards

There have been cases of poisoning caused by the consumption, in large quantities and by some mammals. Dogs seem to be particularly susceptible.

Harvesting

The leaves are available from late autumn until the following summer, when used sparingly they make a nice addition to the salad bowl. Bulb – used as a flavouring. Rather small, with a very strong flavour and odour. The bulbs are 10 – 20mm in diameter. Bulbils – raw or cooked. Rather small and fiddly, they have a strong garlic-like flavour.

Potential lookalikes

Often confused with wild grasses when not in flower, but rubbing the leaves gives the distinctive garlic smell. A poisonous lookalike is Star of Bethlehem Ornithogalum umbellatum. Poisonous to humans and animals so please make sure you properly identify your Field Garlic before consuming it.

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