4% 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.
Grain matters: one teaspoon of Diamond Crystal weighs half as much as one teaspoon of fine sea salt. Weigh in grams when you can.
All salt grains
| Grain | Grams | Teaspoons | Tablespoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diamond Crystal kosher | 40 g | 14.08 | 4.69 |
| Morton kosher | 40 g | 8.33 | 2.78 |
| Fine sea salt | 40 g | 7.03 | 2.34 |
| Pickling / canning | 40 g | 7.27 | 2.42 |
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 4%)
- Salt range
- 0–3%
- 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: 4% is outside the typical range for Garlic (0–3%). 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 4%
Never use 4% for final dry-salted sauerkraut — way too salty. Only for pre-ferment rinse stages or for dilute brines (kvass) where the resulting beverage is drunk diluted or cooking vinegar.
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
- Fermentation Culture — honey fermentation safety
- NCHFP (UGA) — Fermented and Pickled Products
- Sandor Katz, The Art of Fermentation (Chelsea Green, 2012)
For educational use only. Consult your local food safety authority for commercial production.