Allium carinatum


Allium carinatum, the keeled garlic or witch's garlic, is a perennial plant up to 60 cm tall. It is widespread across central and southern Europe, with some populations in Asiatic Turkey. It is cultivated in many places as an ornamental and also for its potently aromatic bulbs used as a food flavoring.
;Varieties
Numerous botanical names have been coined within the species at the varietal level, but only two are recognized:
Allium carinatum produces a single small bulb rarely more than 15 mm long, flat leaves, and an umbel of purple to reddish-purple flowers. The flowers are on long pedicels and often nodding.

Distribution

Allium carinatum is considered native to the Mediterranean Region from Spain to Turkey, north to Sweden and the Baltic Republics. It is naturalized in the British Isles

Cultivation

A. carinatum subsp. pulchellum
and the white flowering form A. carinatum subsp. pulchellum f. album
have both gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit.