Allium cepa
Allium cepa is best known for the bulb onions, so widely used in almost all cultures and cuisines. This lesson is about growing them, and also their subtype, spring or salad onion, or scallion, used at an immature stage before they bulb.
Shallots are Allium ceps var. aggregatum, formerly called ascalonicum, from their origins in Ashkalon in Canaan. Shallots are closely related to onions and smaller in size. They have a softer cell structure, meaning they soften more readily when sautéed.
As with lettuce, this lesson is a visual feast for you, with so many of my photos from the last 14 years. Why 14? In 2006, I bought a digital camera!
I am not discussing perennial onions (Allium fistulosum) here, known colloquially as Welsh onion, Japanese bunching onion and many other names. Those plants do not make bulbs and keep growing new stems, a good way to have regular supplies of green onion.
- Seeds of Japanese bunching onion, such as the variety Ishikura, are sold as an alternative to Allium cepa salad onions. The selling point is that fistula onions do not bulb and make longer stems.
- Against that, I find them more prone to mildew – see ‘Diseases’ below.
Harvest period
- Days from seed to first harvest: for bulbs 140–160, overwintered 260
- Days from seed to first harvest: for salad onions 80–100, overwintered 190–24
Best climate is warm summers, continental or temperate, not too humid.
Why grow them
My customers, and friends helping in the kitchen to prepare food, remark on how my onions make them cry so much!
Why does chopping an onion make us cry? They release a substance, syn-propanethial-S-oxide, which irritates the eyes’ tear glands. Perhaps from high levels of sulphur, which is healthy.
- Most onions of commerce are grown with synthetic fertilisers which increase the water content, probably without a corresponding increase of micronutrients. They are therefore agreeably mild, with less flavour and pungency.
- Onions of all kinds have many health benefits, such as the vitamin C in raw onion, and chromium, which helps regulate blood sugars.
- With traditional digging and the wide spacing normally recommended, onions involve a lot of weeding and work per amount of harvest.
- With no dig and closer spacing, onions are easy to grow and harvests are so good!
I am diabetic type 1 and eat a lot of onion – it’s almost my staple vegetable ahead of potatoes. As a treat, I love them roasted, which heightens the sweetness.
Pattern of growth
Onions are hardy annual and biennial. For food, we grow them for their first-year stage of stems and bulbs. They overwinter as bulbs, then grow again and flower in the second summer. Or we can overwinter them as seedlings, to harvest in the following spring and summer.
Salad onions are bred to grow long, whiter stems, while others are bred to swell more at the base. There is a fine line between these two categories, a quality difference. Best results are from respecting the varietal descriptions, but it’s possible to grow salad onions for bulbs, and bulb onions for eating green – see the variety Lilia below.
- Leaf growth is healthiest through spring, especially late spring (May) when leaves suddenly grow tall and strong.
- They lose vigour by the summer solstice, when bulbs start to swell noticeably.
By late summer and autumn, green leaves are less healthy because they are out of season. Meanwhile, sow more onions in late summer, which overwinter as small seedlings with well-grown roots. They grow rapidly from early spring.
- Autumn-sown bulb onions swell for an early harvest from late spring, but do not store as well as spring-sown bulb onions
Suitable for containers/shade?
The tidy leaves of onions make them ideal for containers. You will get the most value from growing the fistulosum types, for repeat harvest of green leaf and stem.
Be careful with growing onions in shade, because this may allow mildew to develop towards midsummer. They do grow in the shade, but are healthier and stronger in full sun.
Follow with:
After salad onions in spring, you can plant almost any vegetable. You may want to spread some compost, if none was applied in autumn, before transplanting the onions.
After bulb onions finish in summer, your choices depend a little on the exact timing of the space coming clear. They include, as transplants, not sowing direct:
- Kale at close spacing, for medium leaves in autumn.
- Multisown beetroot, for small to medium roots by late autumn.
- Bulb fennel.
- Celery for small heads by mid-autumn.
- Salads such as endive, lettuce and radicchio.
- Chinese cabbage and other brassicas, such as pak choi and salad rocket, but with no rush to transplant them – see Lesson 13, Course 3A.
See also ‘Interplanting’ above.