AbstractInvestigation of the relationship between the sulphate nutrition of garlic (Allium sativum) and wild onion(A. vineale) and their flavour strength is now reported. The plants were grown in a glasshouse in sand culture at two concentrations of sulphate in the nutrient medium and their flavour strength determined by sensory, biochemical and gas chromatographic methods. These observations have furnished further examples of environmental control of flavour components. The garlic plants in the two groups differed significantly in their fresh weights per plant. Their sulphur contents also showed that deficiency of this nutrient had been established in spite of the relatively large amount of sulphur introduced in the original cloves. The ratios of total sulphur content in the two groups of plants and of their flavour strengths as determined by total pyruvate values and taste threshold concentrations, respectively, were approximately constant (about 5). Total peak areas in the gas chromatograms increased with increasing (sensory) flavour strength. The garlic plants grown in sand culture were morphologically atypical, possibly because of the high moisture content of the growth medium, but their odour, taste and gas chromatograms were qualitatively indistinguishable from those of field‐grown garlic which grew normally. Similar but more pronounced differences of flavour strengths were obtained with A. vineale and in this case the difference in flavour strengths between the deficient and normal plants was about 13‐fold. The gas chromatograms of the deficient plants were almost completely lacking in the peaks which are characteristic of Allium sp.The discrepancies between initial and final sulphur contents of the deficient plants are discus
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