Learn how to grow onions from seed or sets with our complete guide
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Types
Onion varieties are categorized based on whether they’re “long-day,” “short-day,” or “day-neutral” varieties. This is because they are “photoperiodic,” meaning that they grow in response to day length—the number of daylight hours needed to trigger bulb formation.
Short-day onions grow best in the southern United States, between 25° and 35° north latitude. Start bulbs when day length reaches 10 to 12 hours. The earlier short-day onions are planted, the larger they get. In the South, onions can be planted in the fall and overwintered. Since they continue to grow throughout the winter, they will be ready for harvest in the spring.
Intermediate, or day-neutral, onions are best suited to the middle tier of U.S. states, approximately between the 32° and 42° latitudes. Start bulbs when day length reaches 12 to 14 hours.
Long-day onions grow best in the northern states, between latitudes 37° and 47°. Start bulbs when day length reaches 14 to 16 hours.
Do not try to fool Mother Nature: Short-day onions planted in a long-day zone will result in small bulbs—not an early harvest.
Long-day varieties:
- ‘Yellow Sweet Spanish’: large, round shape; yellow-white.
- ‘First Edition’: high-yielding, stores well, flavorful, creamy-yellow
- ‘Red Wethersfield’: flat bulbs that store well, white flesh, red-skinned
- ‘Aisa Craig’, ‘Walla Walla’: huge bulbs
- ‘Buffalo’, ‘Norstar’: produce early but keep only until late December
- ‘Copra’, ‘Southport Red Globe’, ‘Sweet Sandwich’, ‘Yellow Globe’: keep well
- ‘Red Florence’: heirloom; 4- to 6-inch-long, dark purple-red, torpedo shape; mild, sweet
- ‘Ailsa Craig’: heirloom; named for a Scottish island; large, up to 8 inches in diameter; average 2 pounds; pale yellow skin, globe shape; mild, sweet
- ‘Gold Coin’: cipollini; 1-1/2- to 3-inch yellow flattened bulb; pungent flavor sweetens when cooked
Short-day varieties:
- ‘Stuttgarter’: sold in sets, early maturity with a slightly flat shape, yellow
- ‘White Bermuda’: extremely mild, with thick, flat bulbs; white
- ‘Red Burgundy’: good table onion with mild, sweet white inside; short-term keeper
- ‘Crystal Wax White Bermuda’: a great onion for pickling when harvested at pearl size
- ‘Hybrid Yellow Granex’: sweet, Vidalia type
- ‘Red Creole’: heirloom; 3- to 4-inch, dark red globe shape; pungent
- ‘Southern Belle’: ruby color throughout
- ‘Texas 1015-Y Supersweet’: stores well
- ‘Yellow Granex’: Vidalia type; 3- to 4-inch, yellow, flattened globe shape; crisp; said to be the sweetest of the super sweet
Day-neutral or intermediate varieties:
- ‘Candy’: golden, thick-flesh, jumbo bulbs; stores well
- ‘Red Stockton’: large, red-ringed, white-flesh bulbs
- ‘Super Star’: large, sweet, white bulbs
- ‘Purplette’: mini onion, at 1-1/2 inches; glossy, burgundy red when raw; pastel pink when cooked or pickled; mild, sweet
- ‘Southport Yellow Globe’: early; 2-1/2- to 3-1/2-inch thick-skin yellow globe; mild, sweet
Gardening Products
Cooking Notes
To make onions taste milder, soak them in milk or pour boiling water over the slices and let them stand for 20 minutes. Rinse with cold water.
Chopping onions can sometimes look daunting: There’s the skin and the layers… Where to begin? Check out our tips for chopping onions in four easy steps. Onion skins actually have several health benefits, too, so don’t throw them out!
Check out more tips on using onions in the kitchen and cooking them correctly.
More Like This
There are many reasons for lack of bulbing. Is your soil rich in nitrogen? Onions are heavy feeders and need nitrogen at planting and while growing until they bulb up. Is your soil loose and crumbly--not too compact? Did you plant at the right time? This is often an issue. We don't know where you live, but June sounds late. Did you plant with the right spacing and not too deep? It they are planted more than an inch deep, they won't bulb up well. Did they get enough water to bulb? Please review this planting guide for more tips.
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