Harvesting Onions

By Mwillis
This morning I harvested my first-ever home-grown onions.

Since this year is the first time I have grown onions, I can't claim any particular expertise, but I have certainly learned a few things along the way. The first thing is that some onions perform better than others. The red ones seen above are "Red Baron", grown from sets, and they have not done very well - I think fully 50% of them have bolted - but the "Sturon" ones (one of which is seen above) have done much better. I know the Sturon ones were heat-treated (which inhibits bolting), but I don't know whether the Red Baron ones were. I suspect not.
I have also learned that onions should be planted at wider spacings than those I used. I planted mine about 6 inches apart, but I think 8 or even 10 inches would have been better. I felt that the massive tangle of foliage inhibited the onions' growth, stopping them receiving enough light and moisture. But then, I suppose if you want small onions you should plant them closely and if you want big ones you should plant them wider apart.
I know from what I have read that onions are generally considered ready when the foliage flops over and begins to go brown. Like this maybe?

"Sturon"


Well, anyway, this morning I decided that some of them were looking ready so I lifted a few to try them. Only one of the Sturon had "flopped", but several of the Red Baron. Since I wasn't 100% sure of my judgment I only lifted a small number, just in case they turned out to be too immature.

These onions are not huge, but then they are not tiny either. Let's call them "medium-sized"!

Now it has never been my intention to keep any onions for long-term storage. I could never hope to grow enough of them to make this worthwhile. Besides, both brown and red onions are easily and cheaply available in every supermarket. My plan is to use the home-grown ones as gourmet salad-ingredients very soon after lifting, at the "green" stage when they are still very juicy. Today's batch was therefore immediately stripped of their outer skins and brought into the kitchen:

I used 3 of the 5 to make one of our favorite salad dishes - quick-pickled onions. The onions are thinly sliced, sprinkled with sea-salt and then doused in Red Wine vinegar and allowed to steep for a couple of hours.

The onions go slightly softer, but still retain much of their original "bite" as long as you don't leave them to stand for too long.

Our verdict? Delicious. Sweet and tangy. Definitely worth growing!