A Cooks Guide to Cooking With Onions
Onions, subtle or strong have played a key role in culinary
history. Here is a guide to cooking with onions.
Yellow storage onions:
Probably the most familiar of all onions, you see em all the
time at your local grocery store, sold in red net bags. These
are hot and make you cry. Good in any heated dish or where
subtlety is not an issue.
White storage onions:
Hot with a slightly cleaner flavor than yellow onions. Often
used in Mexican dishes. Sold in blue net bags or individually.
Spanish onions:
Larger, less hot, more sweet, incorrectly referred to as
Bermudas. Can substitute for sweet onions. Sold individually.
Red onions:
Sharp, sweet flavor. Raw, these can be added to any salad. When
cooked, they tend to lose some of their flavor. Sold
individually.
Boiling onions:
Small, about 2 inches in diameter, yellow or white storage
onions. Hot before cooking, they are best left whole. Good in
soups and stews. Sold in bulk.
Pearl onions:
These sweet onions, about 1 inch in diameter, are good marinated
or pickled. Boiling onions can be substituted for them. Sold by
the pint.
Green onions:
Young bulb onions picked before maturity. Good raw or cooked. A
great substitute for red or sweet onions. Sold in bulk.
Sweet onions:
Sold as Bermuda, Maui, Texas 1015, Vidalia, Sweet Imperial, Wall
Walla and other regional names. These onions are low in heat,
high in sweetness. The smaller ones tend to be hotter then the
larger ones. Excellant raw, delicate when cooked. Great for
making bloomen onions or onion rings. Avaiable individually.
Leeks:
Tend to be very hot, course and chewy. Cooked, they develope an
oniony flavor; sauteed, they become buttery in texture. You can
substitute a yellow storage onion, however it wont taste the
same. Sold indiviually.
Scallions:
The white bulb is mild, good cooked or raw. The chopped greens
add flavor, as well as color, to any recipe, use as a substitute
for chives. Available in bunches.
Shallots:
Like tender, delicate onions? These are great as a base for
sauces, excellent in omlets too. Great for braising and
roasting. Recommend you don't eat'em raw. Generally sold by the
pound.
Well there you have it, "A Cooks Guide to Cooking With Onions".
If you would like more information about onions and/or cooking
with onions, visit the following websites:
http://www.sweetonionsource.com A website for all things oniony.
Recipes for appetizers to desserts. Hosted by Oregan based Jan
Roberts-Dominguez, author of "The Onion Book".
http://www.onions-usa.org National Onion Association,
headquarters in Greeley Colorado. I've lived in Colorado since
1991, just recently discovered that Colorado is one of the
nations top 10 onion producing states. Onions are grown in three
areas of Colorado, the Front Range, the Arkansas Valley (25
miles from where I live) and the Western Slope.