Dan R.
Yelp
Wikipedia says there are two major subspecies of garlic, divided into ten major groups, further broken down into "hundreds of varieties". .
I didn't count how many different types I saw yesterday, but I sure saw a boatload of garlic. White, purple, green, black, round, oval, thin, gigantic, big, small... get the picture?
The Hudson Valley Garlic Festival traces its origin to 1989 as a promotional event organized by a single garlic farmer when Pat Reppert (now known as the Garlic Queen) hosted about one hundred guests to promote her new business. Today, the festival draws 50,000 guests over a weekend.
We really enjoyed the festival. Over fifty Garlic farmers sold their Noah's Ark-like selections of garlic, seven bands performed on five stages, plus roving dancers and puppeteers, lecturers (how to store garlic) and cooking demonstrations (garlic guacamole) under the tent, hundreds of vendor booths, scores of food vendors, a climbing wall, and a craft area for the kiddies.
The food choices definitely had a garlic theme - as I saw signs hawking garlic pulled pork sandwiches, garlic poutine (served with a Canadian flag), garlic ice cream and gelato, garlic knot rolls, garlic roast pork, garlic plantain slices, garlic breads and focaccias, garlic chocolate bars, garlic jams and spreads, garlic relish on your burgers, garlic rice balls, garlic french fries, garlic popcorn, garlic corn on the cob, and garlic shrimp.
The grounds are very nice, with lots of paved walkways in case of muddy inclement weather. The festival is big, but not massive, so you can really walk around and see everything in 4 hours or so. And if you get tired, you can plop yourself down on one of the many hay bale benches and hear some music -remember there are 5 stages sprinkled around the grounds.
We had a great time.