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Can you eat society garlic leaves?

Can you eat society garlic leaves?

The flowers and leaves of society garlic are edible. The flowers are often used in making soups and salads.

What does society garlic attract?

Society garlic flower Tulbaghia has lilac-pink flower colors small in size. The flowers grow in large umbels at the top of long stems. The blossoms are tubular and have six petals. The flowers are fragrant showy and attract pollinators such as hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees.

What plants look good with society garlic?

In a sunny, hot space, a group planting of society garlic spreads into an eye-catching ground cover. For a striking walkway edging, alternate it with lavender-blooming black mondo grass (Ophiopogon planiscapus “Nigrescens”).

Where does the society garlic plant come from?

Society Garlic Plant Care. Society garlic (Tulbaghia violacea) is a perennial flowering plant native to South Africa. Although it is not a true garlic, its leaves smell faintly of garlic and are useful for culinary purposes. Deer avoid eating this plant, but there is no evidence that it repels them from your garden.

When to plant society garlic in South Africa?

A native perennial to the grasslands of South Africa, society garlic has delicate, fragrant blossoms. This plant does well in rock gardens, sunny borders, herb gardens, and containers. Society garlic blooms in the summer and can last through the fall. This low maintenance, heat- and drought-tolerant plant makes a great complement to any garden.

What can you do with a society garlic flower?

Garnish any dish, such as a salad or dessert, with a society garlic flower. Aside from its culinary use, crushed leaves from this plant can also be rubbed on the skin to repel fleas, ticks, and mosquitoes.

Which is the best variety of society garlic?

More Varieties of Society Garlic. This variety of Tulbaghia violacea has lavender blooms held above attractive green foliage with silver margins. Tulbaghia violacea ‘Variegata’ bears lavender-pink flowers almost identical to the species, but its straplike foliage is striped green and white.