Allium ampeloprasum is a member of the onion genus Allium. The wild plant is commonly known as wild leek or broadleaf wild leek. Its native range includes southern Europe, southwestern Asia and North Africa, but it has been cultivated and naturalized in many other countries.

Allium ampeloprasum has been differentiated into five cultivated vegetables: leek, elephant garlic, pearl onion, kurrat, and Persian leek.

Etymology

The specific epithet ampeloprasum derives from the Greek ampelos ("vine") and prason ("leek"), literally meaning "vine-leek" or "leek of the vineyard".

Description

Wild populations produce bulbs up to across. Scapes are round in cross-section, each up to tall, bearing an umbel of as many as 500 flowers. Flowers are urn-shaped, up to across; tepals white, pink or red; anthers yellow or purple; pollen yellow.

Distribution and habitat

Allium ampeloprasum is an ecologically diverse species complex and the progenitor of several key cultivated varieties, including the common leek (A. porrum L. sensu stricto), characterized by its robust "pseudostem," and the A. kurrat Schweinf, which is grown for its slender leaves. Despite their physical differences, these forms remain closely related to, and fully interfertile with, the wild tetraploid A. ampeloprasum, which is widely distributed in the Mediterranean basin.

The plant's native range is southern Europe to southwestern Asia and North Africa,

The species may have been introduced to Britain by prehistoric people, where its habitat consists of rocky places near the coast in south-west England and Wales.

Conservation

The plant is protected by law in Israel as well as York County, Virginia, where it is commonly known as the "Yorktown onion".

Cultivation

Allium ampeloprasum is the source of several vegetables, most notably:

  • Leek (var. porrum)
  • Elephant garlic or great-headed garlic (var. ampeloprasum)
  • Pearl onion (var. sectivum)
  • Kurrat (var. kurrat), Egyptian leek or salad leek. This variety has small bulbs, and primarily the leaves are eaten.
  • Persian leek (A. ampeloprasum ssp. persicum). A cultivated allium native to the Middle East and Iran, grown for culinary purposes and called tareh in Persian. The linear green leaves have a mild onion flavor and are eaten raw, either alone, or in food combinations.

Some sources (especially archeological ones) refer to each of these as a separate species, but they are now united as A. ampeloprasum.

In culture

The plant is mentioned as shaḥm el-arḍ in an 11th-century Mishnah commentary.

<gallery>

Image:Elephant Garlic (Allium ampeloprasum).jpg|Spathe unfurling to reveal buds

Image:Elephant Garlic (Allium ampeloprasum) 2.jpg|Spathe fully unfurled

File:Allium ampeloprasum MHNT.BOT.2006.46.12.jpg|Allium ampeloprasum - MHNT

</gallery>

See also

  • Allium tricoccum
  • Ramsons

References

  • PROTAbase on Allium ampeloprasum
  • Allium ampeloprasum in Guernsey
  • Flora of Israel Online