Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Yellow onions are typically available throughout the year, [4] grown between spring and fall, and then stored for the rest of the year. [4] It is the most commonly grown onion in northern Europe, [2] and it makes up 90% of onions grown in the United States. [4] They should be stored at cool room temperature in a dark place.
Yellow or brown onions are sweet, with many cultivars bred specifically to accentuate this sweetness, such as Vidalia, Walla Walla, Cévennes, and Bermuda. [29] Yellow onions turn a rich, dark brown when caramelised and are used to add a sweet flavour to various dishes, such as French onion soup. [30]
Varieties include the hybrid Yellow Granex, varieties of Granex parentage, and similar varieties as recommended by the Vidalia Onion Committee and approved by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture. The onions are named after Vidalia, Georgia, where they have been historically grown. The cultivation of Vidalia onions started in the early 1930s.
Allium flavum, the small yellow onion [4] or yellow-flowered garlic, [5] is a species of flowering plant in the genus Allium. A bulbous herbaceous perennial , it is native to the lands surrounding the Mediterranean , Black , and Caspian Seas , from areas like France and Morocco to Iran and Kazakhstan .
List of onions may refer to: List of Allium species ; Allium is the onion genus, with 600-920 species, making it one of the largest plant genera in the world List of onion cultivars ; cultivars of the onion ( Allium cepa )
Allegheny onion Allium allegheniense Small Aspen onion Allium bisceptrum S. Watson var. palmeri (S. Watson) Cronquist Autumn onion Allium stellatum Fraser ex Ker Gawl. Bear garlic, Ramsons, Wild Garlic Allium ursinum L. Beegum onion Allium hoffmanii Ownbey Bigelow's onion Allium bigelovii S. Watson Black garlic Allium nigrum L. Blue Mountain onion
The potato onion (also known as an Egyptian onion, underground onion [1] or multiplier onion) [2] is a group of varieties [3] which Maud Grieve calls Allium × proliferum [1] but has also been classed in the Aggregatum Group of Allium cepa, similar to the shallot. [3]
Yellow onions with cross section Try #2. I took this shot to try and improve on Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Onion. I cut an onion in half to show the cross section, and did not use such a shallow DoF. Nominate and support. - Andrew c 16:18, 17 October 2006 (UTC) Comments: