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Nature gives us answers if you know where to look.

Harvesting Onions

Onions take a long time to grow, but when it comes time for harvesting onions, it’s incredibly satisfying, and worth the wait. Here in Southern California we plant onions by seed in the fall, or by “sets” in spring.  By the middle of summer, those sets and seeds have turned into full-blown onions that actually resemble something you’d buy in the supermarket. It’s amazing!

In late March, someone gifted us with their leftover onion sets. These are not the tiny bulbs you find at most nurseries in mesh bags. These are actual live plants that have gone dormant for shipping. They look like withered green onions, and most seed catalogs sell them in bunches of 50 or 100 per variety. Inevitably there are leftovers for small-space gardeners. Best to go in on it with friends…

Growing Onions

Someone once told me that growing from live plants is better and more reliable than growing from those bulbs. Apparently, those bulbs aren’t always suited for your latitude (short vs. long day onions). Anyway, these babies took off right away. In about a week they went from looking dead to being lush and green, and some even started bulbing up!

A yellow onion ready for harvest
A yellow onion ready for harvest

The key to knowing when to harvest is in watching the neck of the plant. When the onion stops growing, the tops flop over at the neck. That’s your signal to pick.

Nature gives us answers if you know where to look.
Nature gives us answers if you know where to look.

Pull the plant, but leave it in the bed/field to dry out for a few days in the sun. If it’s raining where you are, then take the onions indoors or to a covered area with plenty of air circulation. This allows the skin to dry out and starts the curing process.

Part of our onion harvest.
Part of our onion harvest.

Once the initial drying period is over, transfer the onions indoors to continue drying on screens or newspaper until the neck and stems have dried out and turned brown. It may take a few weeks (we put them next to our garlic in the garage). At this time you can brush off excess dirt.

After the onions become thoroughly dry, trim off the roots and stems, or braid them like garlic for hanging. Store in mesh bags or old pantyhose (clean, of course). They can also be stored in a crate with good ventilation. We store them in baskets here at Gardenerd HQ.

For more information about storing onions and how quickly to use them (which depends on the variety grown) click here.

 

This Post Has 5 Comments

  1. DonnaT

    Is it ok to trim some of the top off after pulling? Ie; just the long greens?

    1. Christy

      Good question, Donna. It’s best to let the foliage die back before putting the onions up for storage (or braiding them for hanging storage). If you want to use the bulbs fresh, feel free to cut off tops and roots right away. But otherwise, wait until they die back if you want them to last.

  2. Gerald Crawford

    How can I store bulb onions in hot Southern California? My garage is not air conditioned. Today the air temproation Any recommendations where to store after dying the onions. I had a bumper crop of Walla Walla, large and very sweet and I would like to store them for later use.

    1. Christy

      Hi Gerald, it’s tricky here because very few of us have basements (I’d dig one if I could!). I usually cure my onions on newspaper for a couple weeks, then store them in a basket in a dark pantry as long as they will last. I have also dehydrated sliced alliums (mostly shallots) for shelf-stable storage that lasts for years. It’s more labor-intensive, of course, but it works. Most advice I see implies having a basement or cool, dark, dry place to store onions with good ventilation. You can chop them up and freeze them in plastic bags. They cook up nicely straight from the freezer. You could hang them in mesh bags, and I’d throw in an ethane gas absorber or two for good measure. Try this and see how it goes.

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