I buy the red sets in the garden centre,I got electric variety in the autumn,the variety might vary depending where you live,what they grow for stock near you. I hadn’t seen electric variety in the GC for a few years,they were good when I grew them last time. Never noticed a label saying heat treated,they say on the pack plant autumn or spring
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Onions 2023.
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Just sowed a tray of zebrune shallots in the GH. Although looking at the weather forecast I may bring them indoors until germinated.
With regard to taste I grew Long Red Florence last year and the 2 or 3 (!) that made it to maturity did taste noticeably sweet when roasted. Am hoping zebrune will be similar.
The onions sown in January have been in the unheated GH for a few weeks now and looking ok so far.
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Today I harvested the autumn sown onions as the stalks had flopped over. They are a reasonable size, look decent and are drying in the garage. I would have left them a week or so longer but am going away so decided to go for it.
The main crop onions and shallots are having a weekly soak as the weather is currently not obliging.
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We stopped growing ordinary onions after a bout of 'rust' (or something similarly bad, can't remember). And we've never really had a decent crop of spring onions before, but we tried the purple ones this year - Lilia. They can be 'dual purpose' apparently, if you let them get really big I suppose. Anyway they are great, very tasty we've eaten most of them, some quite big ones. The pic is of a few clumps that are left. They were sown a pinch of seeds into a small cell to start them off and then planted out when they were about 10cm high.
1 PhotoTo see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower
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Am slowly working my way through the onions that I lifted and stored in the garage. Have to say I am going to grow them again, I do think they taste fresher than shop bought, particularly raw and am finding it really handy to pop into the garage and cut one off. As others say you can get a lot of onions in a pretty small space so think I will go for them again. I’ll plant the autumn sown ones as it fills a bed that could otherwise be empty then they can be lifted and I could use the bed again for other crops. This year I am using it for a mixed bed of extra plants I didn’t have space for elsewhere - so some sweetcorn, cauliflowers, broccoli and a pumpkin.
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Originally posted by annie8 View PostI do think they taste fresher than shop bought, particularly raw
I think it must be my soil, as I get it no matter what variety I grow. Apparently onions get more or less pungent based on the sulphur content of the soil they are grown in, so I guess mine must be fairly high in sulphur (despite being neutral pH, not acidic).
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