Guest guest Posted September 23, 2007 Report Share Posted September 23, 2007 To help stop the tears, cut the onion root side first. I am not sure why this works but it does. Sue Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2008 Report Share Posted September 12, 2008 Very cool! i've never tried to grow onions, other than scallions. You can slice up your onions, and I mean a LOT of onions, and throw them in the crockpot with a stick of butter. (Yes, i said a STICK.) Fill that sucker up to the top! Let them cook all day on low until the melt down into golden brown caramelized goodness. then you can pack them into little bags and freeze them. Just take one out when you want to add it to a soup, stew, etc. On low, it might take as long as a full day to caramelize. But it is sooooooo worth it. I do this when I have a big bag of onions that are starting to go bad. It's a good way to use up a LOT of onions in a hurry. I don't know how you normally make your caramelized onions, but this method is very good! I've done it with garlic occasionally too. Other than that, the only thing I can think of is putting them in the dehydrator and turning them into soup/stew bits. It seems a shame to do that with the fancy onions. let us know what you come up with. I know you'll have a great idea! Cyndi In a message dated 9/11/2008 10:18:13 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, stringweaver writes: I didn't know we could send pictures to the group! Thanks especiallyfor the Cardinal picture, I really miss those since I've moved west ofthe rockies.Here's yesterday's onion harvest.... the big one, there's nothing toscale it to in the picture, it's about 7 inches across and must weighwell over 1 1/2 pounds. I think it would be cool to stuff it for adinner party. I have a red one just as large. Most are going to beabout 6 to 10 ounces I think. After they've dried for a week or twoI'll trim and sort them and weigh them.I have lots of long keeping yellow Copra and red Zeppelin, which willgo in the basment for winter use. I also have lots of not goodkeepers, flat white italian Cipollines and red Tropeo. I wonder if Ican make up pints and pints of caramelized onion and freeze them?I'll make several onion tarts and freeze those, though I'm fastrunning out of room in my freezer. Can you freeze french onion soup?Other ideas?Ellen-- "You never can tell with bees." Winnie-the-Pooh Messages in this topic (1) Reply (via web post) | Start a new topic Psssst...Have you heard the news? There's a new fashion blog, plus the latest fall trends and hair styles at StyleList.com. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2008 Report Share Posted September 12, 2008 On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 10:08 AM, <cyndikrall wrote: > Very cool! i've never tried to grow onions, other than scallions. I've had terrific results with onions ever since I started buying starts, rather than sets. Starts are pencil sized onion seedlings-if you've got space and light you can grow them yourself, but they need to be started in december for april planting. I get mine from Dixondale farms. They arrive in mid april, I go out in the garden, poke holes in the ground about 6 inches apart and 3 to 4 inches deep and drop in the starts, rain fills in the holes. They need a good amount of water, fertilization and weeding. The Copras keep like rocks in my basement for months-I'm still using them in late spring, and then I can thin the new plants for spring and summer onions. > You can slice up your onions, and I mean a LOT of onions, and throw them in > the crockpot with a stick of butter. (Yes, i said a STICK.) Fill that sucker > up to the top! Let them cook all day on low until the melt down into golden > brown caramelized goodness. then you can pack them into little bags and > freeze them. Just take one out when you want to add it to a soup, stew, etc. > On low, it might take as long as a full day to caramelize. Oh yum! I found a similar recipe,using olive oil instead of butter-and it said 12 hours on low-but start checking after 8 hours. I'll do a batch of small ones whole and a batch of sliced. My favorite way to cook beans is to caramelize onions, add roasted red pepper and frozen beans and let them all cook together. As soon as peppers get red ripe I'll buy dozens from the local stand, roast them and freeze. Green beans will be a snap this winter, no need to cook the onions or peppers. Caramelized onions, stuffed between the skin and bird makes a terrific roast chicken. Toss them in pasta, on potatoes or winter squash, in stir fries, on sandwiches, baked in paper with fish and peas, roasted with lamb and red currents, or with pork and blackberry pickle. I think I can use several crockpots worth. I'll try both the butter and olive oil versions. > Other than that, the only thing I can think of is putting them in the > dehydrator and turning them into soup/stew bits. It seems a shame to do that > with the fancy onions. let us know what you come up with. I know you'll have > a great idea! no need to do that, I'll have onions in the basement. I read that french onion soup freezes quite well (without the bread and cheese). And I'll get some little tart pans and make individual onion quiches to freeze for later... I'm going to run out of room in my freezer. I have a friend interested in a party to make pierogies, stuffed with onion, cheese and potato for freezing, so that will whittle down my onion pile and the monster potato harvest I'm expecting in a week or two. mm, pierogies are the best winter comfort food. Slice cabbage and onions thin, saute them in butter and add thawed pierogies. Best for after skiing or shoveling, they're loaded with calories. My crockpot will be full of tomatoes cooking down for sauce tomorrow, I'll try onions sunday. Ellen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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