Mastering The Art of Growing Onions

Why do we love alliums so much? In the garden ornamental species delight and put on a show few other bulbs can compete with, but it’s the vegetable garden – or shall I say in the kitchen where the genus really delivers. Leeks, shallots, garlic and bulb onions – what more can I say? Humans would miss alliums as much as salt, but that won’t happen – at least in my garden.

Recently, as I prepare for a new growing project, I am finding myself deeply interested in mastering the culture of culinary alliums – onions, both large sweet and hard, storage types, green onions fresh and tender, giant leeks for soups and braises, and then the more unusual alliums, from small boiling onions to our own native species – the ramps.

I can’t grow them all at one time, but this year, I am revisiting a few for this project – and beginning with the most common of all, the onion, I felt that I should share what I have learned, from expert growers in England who raise onions for competitions where some can reach silly sizes near ten pounds each, to new methods for raising onions that’s changing how many of us raise these kitchen staples in our own gardens.

Onions aren’t as fool-proof or easy as one may at first think. Sure, one can shove a few onion sets (small bulbs) into a pot, a window box or in the garden and still harvest reasonable shoots, green onions and perhaps a crop worth eating, but more often than not, the final harvest results in something more akin to extra hot small onions hardly worth the trouble.

Here are some facts to top-line what I’ve learned over the years.

1. There are two groups of onions, broadly speaking – long day types which are the hard storage onions such as yellow Spanish, white and red types – the sort we all use for cooking in the kitchen all winter long, and the type that can make us cry, and then there are the short-day types- those sweet Vidalia and Walla Walla onions, high moisture content, with little patience for storage. If an onion comes from Oregon, Washington or Georgia, most likely it’s one of these sweet types – and while a favorite of many, do know that while many will suggest advice for growing these in the North, if one lives in the North East, they results will always be less than fabulous when raising these sweet, winter growing onions, for our season is simply too short.

For practical reasons, I am going to limit the onion portion of this post to a focus on the summer growing, long day length onions, as these are more growable elsewhere outside of the Pacific Northwest and the south.

Many in the onion family enjoy raised beds, but not pots or containers. These leeks and green onions (foreground) are interplanted thickly with some early white turnips and a couple of parsley and self-sown dill plants, but in a few weeks, they will have more space in which to mature once the turnips are ready.
Onion seedlings in a seed tray. Sown in February, these are sown closer and divided later, but the best results come from seed sown individually into seed cell trays, where each seedling gets their own little pot.


THE BEST QUALITY ONIONS COME FROM PLANTS RAISED FROM SEED – Serious onion enthusiasts are extremely particular about both the varieties of onions they grow, and about how they raise them. Often raised for competition (really, just check out the many videos on Youtube on raising exhibition onions so enormous – 5 lbs –  that one would feed a family of 10!). Good varieties are hard to find as sets, but pre-started seedling or young onions can now be found offered by some plant catalogs. They may look dried out a bit, but most will produce larger bulbs than onion sets.

Onion seed  must be sown very early – Many gardeners sow seed as early as January in the Northeast, sometimes I wait until mid February but any later and one might be better with onion sets or onion starts. Grow seedlings cool and bright, raising them under grow lights or in a cool greenhouse.  Onion seedlings transplant well, so one can raise many seedlings in a flat – cells are not necessary and one can carefully separate plants with little harm.

You may be wondering if you could simply sow seed early in the ground directly, and the answer is yes – in fact most commercial farmers – the onion farms raise their plants from seed directly sown, even in the north, but the challenge for home gardeners with seed sown directly will be weeding and timing. Onion seedlings are slow growing at first. With early snowmelt, the seeds can be sown as soon as the soil can be worked, perhaps in late February or March in New England, or in Minnesota, seeds are can be sown as late as mid- April outdoors, but most growers will recommend  seedlings started indoors for practical reasons – as the home grower will only need a few dozen plants, or perhaps a hundred or two, and seed raised seedlings grown without stopping will produce the largest onions.

Now, size isn’t the goal here, for who really needs a 5 pound onion, but a one pounder is fine, as is a half pound onion. I believe that a range of sizes in more useful, but if you’ve ever raised onions from sets in a hot summer, you know how useless onions sometimes become – small, hard and spicy hot, a few unappealing golf ball sized onions makes the idea of raising them unlikely.

Here are my tips for how to raise the best onions in the home garden.

1. CHOOSE NAMNED VARIETIES – Start with good varieties for your area – this means selecting hard storage long day length onions if you live north of the 35th parallel and raise onions in the summer, or choosing super sweet types if you live in the Pacific Northwest, Texas or in Georgia, south.

2. PREP ONION SOIL PROPERLY –
Onions are ridiculously heavy feeders which I know might turn some gardeners off given current trans and thoughts about fertilizer, but the facts are simple – rich soil and frequent applications of nitrogen will give you onions like those found in the stores. If you was small onions that are too hot to eat, then just plant onion sets, little to no fertilizer and let them dry out often – but who needs that?

Now, if you decide to just swallow your values and fertilize, there are a few options – some growers have success with organic sources,  so feel free to try kelp and fish meal, but really – with onions – chemical sources will get you the best results.

3. USE FERTILIZER – HIGH NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS, AND IN MINERALS
In order to simplify fertilizer tips here, let me just lay it out there – onion crops require A VERY rich soil that is very high in nitrogen and phosphorus. Onions are bulbs, and like most bulbs with scales that are modified leaves, they require a growing season with early nitrogen sources, uninterrupted moisture – which means drought will force onions to bulb-up too early – and a good, consistent source of phosphorus. In addition to high nitrogen, onions need the right balance of minerals, trace elements and sulfur.

 Given this, onions are one of those crops which I like to geek-out on when it comes to nutrients.  I buy separate fertilizers (most are Espoma brand). This will allow you to apply a band of pure granular nitrogen and phosphorus. alongside plants. While most summer vegetable crops  will produce well with one application of Nitrogen, onions demand much more – most growers depend on 3 or 4 applications.

However, one can over-do it with Nitrogen. One must stop applying nitrogen 4 weeks before harvest, as onions can get too lush with continual applications of Nitrogen as plant near harvest size. Excess will produce onions with thick necks (stems)  and will also inhibit maturity. It’s all about balance, as as with many ornamental bulbs – they want to start out and grow early with lots of Nitrogen, but gradually wean themselves off to a diet higher in Phosphorus. Remember, they are bulbs.

 If your soil is low in sulfur, a bit added will help both the nitrogen uptake, and the onion heath – however, high sulphur can make onions taste hotter which something one may not want especially if raising sweet onions. For most growers, the basic knowledge about sulphur is this – long-day storage onions grown in the north are  found to be able to access sulfur in soil more readily than southern grown short-day onions like Vidalia. Thankfully, in the North, the long day length varieties seem to be able to access enough sulfur from soils while supplemental  sources must be applied more in the south.

As with most crops, pH affects the availably of most nutrients, so be sure that your soil is tested properly, and this goes for onion bed soil as well.  The optimal pH range for onions is 6.2 – 6.5. Use dolomitic lime to reach this range if necessary early in the season. If you are serious about growing your own food, do yourself a favor and purchase a rechargable electronic pH meter and take the time to adjust the soil based upon crop needs. Onions just happen to be one of those crops which can produce significantly better crops in the home garden if the right nutrition and pH rules are follower precisely.

 I like to take some tricks and tips from the highly competitive exhibition onion growers (in the UK) and from the onion farmers  who raise crops for commercial distribution. Most growers know what onions need, and be they conventional or organic, take heed when it comes to keeping onion crops happy and productive. First, most apply a band of Phosphorus (0-20-0) directly under the layer of soil where you will plant – the reasoning is that strong early root growth will enable plants to access more moisture and nutrients.

Some organic growers use kelp meal which offers micro nutrients and minerals, as well as a granular humic acid augmented with high nitrogen fish emulsion. A slow release nitrogen source could come from an application of cottonseed mead turned into the soil in the autumn, but as it can take long to decompose and become useful to onion plants, the soil would need to be Warmer than 60 degrees as plants find that accessing Nitrogen in cold soil futile. Don’t waste your money.

Raising onions and leeks in cell trays will give you better results when setting out in the spring. 

Many home gardeners in Zone 5 -6 find seedling starts available via mail or at the garden center, which are an acceptable option to onion sets, but often they lure the home grower into thinking that they can raise a southern winter short-day variety like ‘Walla Walla Sweet’ or Vidalia. Sadly, the results are often less than satisfactory given summer heat and day length so look for bundles of storage onion varieties instead.

Weeding is an art when it comes to onion culture. Space, and no competition helps.

The storage onions are often large, yellow or white storage varieties selected as good storage or exhibition varieties that can grow large such as ‘Ailsa Craig’ (not ‘Alisa Craig!) or ‘Patterson’. Tow varieties I am raising this year in addition to an heirloom red.

Onion seedlings can be sown thickly and divided when planting, but I now opt for growing them singly in cell trays, which gives me a larger onion.


Choosing between onion sets, onion seedlings or those from Seed?

Honestly, I grow onions by all three methods, but the best varieties will come from those raised from seed. The challenge with raising onions from seed isn’t difficulty, it’s that they must be started early – often as early as January. Bright sunlight will ensure the strongest plants, and a greenhouse is ideal, but artificial light if one can keep plants cool, will work too.

Adventurous and serious growers will sow directly outdoors, but as with green onions, this takes longer both for germination and the challenge of identifying onions through the weeds. Pre-Started seedlings sold in bundles is an excellent option, or onions sets, which are essentially boiler onions grown to a small size, and then harvested to be set into the ground in the north. These have their advantages and also disadvantaged. They are the easiest to fine, but are more likely to bolt into bloom if subjected to stress (low moisture, heat and low fertilizer) which will render the onion useless, and they won’t get you to the giant, spectacular onions which are possible from seed.

The choice is up to you. Some competitive growers have great success with bundles seedlings of Ailsa Craig, which are available at many mail order nurseries if ordered early, but if you are a purist and want to raise a crop of onions that will supply your family with onions through the winter, plant on 2 80- foot rows raised from seed.

I will say that Ailsa Craig has been the go-to source for nearly 100 years for exhibition onions ( I have a 1923 catalog with a full page ad for seed), but most of us must plan early irregardless of our sources and growing method – for onions simply require some knowledge to be able to master.

Storage onions can be picked while green, but that will impact your harvest. If you want large storage onions in the late summer, keep them growing all summer long- and this means lots of water and food. Otherwise, they will go dormant by early August, and you will end up with small onions.

What can go wrong:

Onions have their problems.

Have your onions ever bloomed before drying out? Onions can bolt into seed early if treated poorly, which will ruin the bulb, while others might ‘bulb-up’ early if grown lean or subjected to drought, which will result in small, hard onions. Nitrogen applied too late in the growing season will stimulate voracious growth which will result in onions with thick necks or stems, and basically won’t ‘turn off’ the onion from growing. This can result in an onion that won’t dry out well, or store well. As most of us, I am assuming, are not storing our onions for long periods this really isn’t a problem, but if you are a homesteader or planning on growing an entire year’s worth of storage onions, note that nitrogen should be cut off 4 weeks before digging and drying.

GREEN ONIONS – How to grow good Green Onions in the garden

Green onions, scallions or scullions (?)  are an entirely different crop. Specific green onion varieties must be used, many are Asian or Japanese, and very choice and productive as a home garden crop. The problem is that few people grow them well. The basics are that you must start with good varieties which are noted as being specific green onions, and you must sow them direct. This means no 6 packs, no sets, and no pre-grown plants.

This can get a bit tricky for one reason – baby green onions in the garden can get lost- they look too much like grass, so weeding in the early spring is tricky. Green onions simply must be sown directly into cool soil early in the spring. After that, one just has to wait and observe. They won’t require thinning, but they are slow to both emerge and to mature, not unlike carrots. Still, I highly recommend growing your own, for if you are like me, and cook often, they are one of those weekly staples and there is nothing like a bunch of freshly picked green onions – so superior to store bought.

Sow seed just thickly enough so that plants can mature to be a half inch in diameter, (some seeds can touch). Tidy, neat rows are best sown in April and just note that they will look like nothing other than lawn grass until mid- June. After that? Plan on a weekly harvest until frost – great for the home chef and foodie, this endless supply of green onions (and yes, there are red varieties too) are superior in both texture and flavor than commercially grown green onions. They cut into tiny, crispy slices as they have never be crushed in a box and shipping buy air. I just love them.

Green onion seedlings can be sown thickly, and can be confused with grass when they are young, but nothing beats a freshly picked green onion for recipes – ask any chef.

Garlic and Leeks growing in my garden last year. Raised beds works well, but avoid culture in containers unless they are large, raised beds or 100 gallon drums – leeks need space.



LEEKS

Other Onion Crops – Raising Leeks in the Home Garden

Leek culture is fun, but they do occupy space year-round, requiring an early start via seed indoors in January and then setting out in early spring into stone free sifted soil which – well, let’s face it – there are some financial leek growers around (such as men who live in the UK like these guys), In American, the leek suffers from a lack of history in both cuisine and in garden culture, which is ashamed, for in so many ways, it is the queen of the alliums, adding subtle flavor and gentle elegance to most every dish it is added to, let alone the joy of braised leeks. Whenever I cook with leeks someone will comment on their lovely scent, with warm butter and olive oil, the scent of leeks is sublime.

Leek seedlings are planted deep, in a trench and in a hole in early April. Soil is then hilled in, as the season progresses – the goal here is to achieve a long, white stalk with green leaves higher up on the plant.

Competitive leek growing in the UK aside (saving that for another post!), in our home gardens, leeks can offer a challenge, but if one chooses to grow leeks in the home garden, one can assume that one is not only a more informed gardener, but surely a bit competitive – at least, not one to shun when challenge is faced. Leek growers tend to ‘bring it on’ when it comes to growing their vegetables, and actually enjoy taking the extra steps to achieve leek greatness (the same goes for parsnips by the way!).

James Crockett of PBS’ famed Crockett’s Victory Garden show from the 1970’s introduced many of us to the specifics of proper leek growing, which begins with sifting compost and soil as one would do for a deep, soft, friable soil often reserves for perfection of root crops like parsnips and carrots, but since leeks are not technically a root crop but a bulb, they demand extra soil amendments and treatment throughout the season, beginning with a rich soil with added compost and nitrogen, but also  planted deeply as seedlings, sometimes nearly a foot deep if the seedlings are long, as just a few inches are needed to emerge out of the soil. Most growers begin with a trench, with added composted manure, hilled to the side, and then brought down to fill the trench as the seedlings grow through the spring and summer.

The competitive growers can offer us some valuable tips as well, even though our kitchens hardly need a leek which is 12 inches in diameter or a meter long. Small leeks are nice too, but there is no such thing as ‘baby leeks’ no matter what your gourmet market says. Small leeks are merely poorly grown leeks. The home grown leek is lovely in the garden, graceful in foliage and form, and a row or two of leeks can look attractive for the entire season. IN winter, they are one of the vegetables which can be harvested late, after frosts and sometimes even in snow (however, protection will be needed in the far north, nothing that a deep mulch of straw won’t fix – the truth is, leeks will freeze if temps drop too low below zero.).

Leek seedlings in my greenhouse this year, in late February.

I start my leek seed early, in most years late January or early February as the seedlings can be tiny and grass like. Leeks are the first seeds I sow for the coming season. The Brits are more aggressive, starting their seed in November or even earlier in cold greenhouses, but that is both impractical and not that effective for those of us in northern North America, but the goal is to have strong, leek seedlings by mid April to set out into the prepared bed. Seedlings should be pencil thick, or about a 1/4 thick if grown well.

 Trenching is the traditional method of growing leeks, with seedlings set in about 6-8 inches apart while I prefer 9 – 10 inches as I like to get leeks growing rich and thick. I use a granular 10-10-10 mixed into the soil first just below the surface scratched in, and then topped off with a water soluble feed to kick-start root growth and to take advantage of cool weather growth.  Leeks are one or the few veggies I set into the grown using a dibble – a pointed stick, which makes a nice, deep hole perhaps 6-8 inches deep. Any stick will do of course, with the goal here to set the seedling in deep. A bit of soil filled into the hole is required, but newer methods are emerging, most advise the grower to allow the rain to fill in the rest of the hole with soil as the leek seedling grows.

In the UK competitive leek and onion growing is practically a sport. (photo courtesy of The Mirror) but visit You Tube and search for Competitive Onions or Leeks and see what exists. If you want to try growing a leek larger than a child or a ten pound onion, you will be thrilled. To achieve such size, growers have many secrets, but most begin in the autumn of the precious year with sowing seed in cool greenhouses.

Since soil is key for leeks, nutrition is something one should take some time to perfect. If you didn’t have success with leeks in the past, it’s more likely due to soil nutrition than anything else. The truth is, leeks are one of those vegetables referred to as ‘heavy feeders’, and balanced is best (10-10-10), while 10-20-10 might be more effective if you can find it as technically, the plant is a bulb. If you can find an organic food with this analysis the certainly use that – I use both organic and chemical fertilizer as I am a horticulturist and home grower, and err on the side of most horticulturists that all fertilizer is chemical (hello periodic table), but if you go all ‘organic’, note the analysis particularly with fish emulsion which can be higher in nitrogen which you want to avoid. A dry organic mixture is OK for use with leeks as they are a long-season crop, and granular dry mixes often need more time to become available to plants, but will require soil prep in the following autumn to provide maximum effect.

Leeks are rather care free throughout the summer however, with good watering and a monthly feed will suffice, and some hilling of soil might be necessary. Beyond that, by late summer or autumn, the leeks will look large and spectacular in the garden, and if so, may just need some careful lifting as needed in the kitchen with a pitch fork around October. Leave the rest in the garden for use on an as-needed basis.

Ramps are a rare, seasonal treat in the North East with a flavor which combines garlic and onion. Are they over rated or not?  Well, they can only be foraged and while a few farms are raising a few in beds, they are unlikely to ever become a big, commercial crop. They still offer a delightful option to many foodies during the few weeks when they are available.

Ramps – the luxury of rarity.

Ramps both delight and confuse me. To be honest, I buy mine from a secret source but I am always confused as to how to cook them and enjoy them, it’s not above be to simply acquire something just because I know it is rare – I figure that I will learn to appreciate the item after I figure out how to appreciate them better (my cilantro theory, the goes for raw oysters, avocados and kidneys – the may come from some strange competitive gene that only appears in the youngest sibling who wants to earn some weird exclusive respect from their parents simply because their older siblings ‘failed’ such ‘tests’.

Why is it that native treats – those picked in the woods or found while one is foraging which are usually the most sought after by b both foodies and plant people. Spring is the season for Ramps – the frustratingly rare and hard-to-afford $20 a pound woodland allium which shows up in fancy food markets for a few weeks in April even around here, although New York State is the chosen spot where it grows wild and is foraged.

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Comments

  1. Wow, thank you for such a detailed post. We've been struggling with onions here in Central Oregon. My grandfather grew them by the truckload in the Willamette Valley 2 hours away. Didn't realize so much went into this. Thanks for all the tips.

    Cheers,
    Jason

  2. I wonder these Ramps you're writing about – are these Allium tricoccum or Allium ursinum? They look very similar, and sounds like taste similarly as well (garlic-ish). The latter grows freely in UK (and throughout a Europe and Asia). Also a trendy thing here in restaurants. Once, in April – we were in the Kew gardens, and their restaurant had a lovely spring soup with added wild garlic which apparently their pick themselves in the Kew park! It was a lovely soup indeed.
    I tried to establish them in my garden (bought bunch of bulbs), it seems to be growing, but probably will take years and years until it really colonise the space…

  3. We have a small yard and grew onions once, but we used them up real quick so now we growi garlic instead. A clove goes in the ground in fall and you pull out a bulb in spring. Doesn't take up much room and you'll have garlic till the next harvest.

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  6. Hey Matt,

    I really enjoy your well researched article.I am a newbie on vegetable gardening.I never see onion like that. I looking for gardening blog, for information on vegetable gardening

  7. Great post, I loved the content of your post hope to have more opportunity to see all their contents.

  8. Hi Matt, I love your blog and have learned so much.

    I know this is a years-old post, but in the intervening years a new (to us) pest has reached us here in Connecticut, the allium leaf miner. Two years in a row I lost hundreds of gorgeous leeks in mid-Autumn; the best fatties I was saving for Winter eating! Seemingly one week they were fine, the next full of little maggots tunnelling from the tips down to the heart. A gut turning experience.

    Hopefully you haven’t met this one yet, but just wanted to pop in and suggest to cover your alliums in Summer with insect fleece to keep out the egg-laying flies. I’m covering my garlic too, just in case.

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