Salt percentage / 3.5%

3.5% salt for Garlic

21.0 days at 68 °F · pH target 3.50 · outside typical range

Salt calculator

Enter your vegetable weight and a salt percentage. We return the exact salt mass in grams, plus teaspoons for each common grain.

grams
%

Grain matters: one teaspoon of Diamond Crystal weighs half as much as one teaspoon of fine sea salt. Weigh in grams when you can.

35g salt
6.15 tsp 2.05 tbsp 1.23 oz

Based on Fine sea salt at 5.69 g/tsp.

Flavour-forward. Ferment will be slower; brine will taste salty. Good for pickles and hot-sauce mashes that need long shelf life.

All salt grains
GrainGramsTeaspoonsTablespoons
Diamond Crystal kosher35 g12.324.11
Morton kosher35 g7.292.43
Fine sea salt35 g6.152.05
Pickling / canning35 g6.362.12

About Garlic

Lower water content (59%) means garlic ferments slowly and benefits from honey or brine as carrier. Fermented honey-garlic is traditional medicine across cultures. Note: honey-ferments are NOT lacto-ferments — they rely on natural yeasts + lactic bacteria from the garlic itself once diluted; honey alone is antimicrobial.

Fermentation data

Default salt
2.5%(you are viewing 3.5%)
Salt range
03%
Time at 68°F
21.0 days
pH target
3.50
Water content
59%
Preferred styles
fermented honey garlic, garlic paste, black garlic precursor

Note: 3.5% is outside the typical range for Garlic (03%). The recommended default is 2.5%. View 2.5% + Garlic.

Technique

For honey-garlic: peel whole cloves, submerge in raw honey (important — not pasteurized), loose lid (CO2 escape), flip daily for first 2 weeks, ferment 4-6 weeks. Mixture becomes thinner + darker + milder over time. Safe at room temp indefinitely due to combined honey + garlic antimicrobial action + resulting pH <4.5.

Salt level notes at 3.5%

Kimchi salting is a 2-stage process: 3.5-4% dry salt → 2-4 hour rest (flip halfway) → 3x rinse → paste application. The salt drawn into the water during rest is what rinses away. Final kimchi effective salt is ~2%.

Safety: Flavour-forward. Ferment will be slower; brine will taste salty. Good for pickles and hot-sauce mashes that need long shelf life.

Explore other salt levels for Garlic

Sources

For educational use only. Consult your local food safety authority for commercial production.