News:

Picture posting is enabled for all :)

Main Menu

Bunching onions

Started by bupster, January 20, 2006, 14:38:39

Previous topic - Next topic

bupster

Got bunching onions through from HDRA's heritage seed catalogue today. What in god's name do I do with them? :o
For myself I am an optimist - it does not seem to be much use being anything else.

http://www.plotholes.blogspot.com

bupster

For myself I am an optimist - it does not seem to be much use being anything else.

http://www.plotholes.blogspot.com

amanda21

Errrrrr.........bunch them??    ;)
http://ihateworms.blogspot.com/  - Why then do I so want an allotment?

bupster

Har har har.  :D

They're Welsh onions, to clarify (I have a vague recollection of a vaguely Welsh name). They've sent me three little baby sets, and apparently they don't do all that many of them, so these are very special and I want to get them right. There's very little information on the web.
For myself I am an optimist - it does not seem to be much use being anything else.

http://www.plotholes.blogspot.com

amanda21

:D

Are we looking at normal round kind of onions or spring onion type onions - I have to admit never heard of them before.....but that's not surprising really - I'd never had Butternut Squash until last year!  Such a sheltered life....... ;D
http://ihateworms.blogspot.com/  - Why then do I so want an allotment?

Larkspur

Hi Bupster you plant them like onion sets, the recommended distance is 9" apart.
You pull the leaves off and use them like spring onions when they are mature. I have never grown them but I remember my father doing so.

Larkspur

Oh, and despite being called Welsh onions they are really Japanese bunching onion ???s??????????? ??? ???

amanda21

??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???  Welsh?  Japanese? soooo confused now.......   ;)
http://ihateworms.blogspot.com/  - Why then do I so want an allotment?

Larkspur

Thats two of us then ;)

growmore

#8
Welsh onions look like big chives.They don't bulb just multiply from bottom  growing in to biggish clumps.They are perennial. .. You can use them 12 months of the year..They  are usually  propagated by splitting a clump and setting the splits out ..I have had them for years and have never known em go to seed..  Do you want a pic of em?? ..cheers ..Jim
Cheers .. Jim

supersprout

Yes please, post a pic - it really helps to see what one be aspiring to! ::)

amanda21

What kind of strength in flavour are they please?  Do you eat them like spring onions ie raw in salads etc or to season or like leeks?  Cheers - I just love the varied advice I get on here! :)
http://ihateworms.blogspot.com/  - Why then do I so want an allotment?

grawrc

I used to grow them when the kids were little (in their twenties now). I liked the fact that you could pull the green stalks and then lift the root and use them like shallots, saving back one ot two to repeat the process.  I think they are perannial but I usually left some and lifted some each year. It's so long ago I can't remember taste but think they were comparable to onions/shallots.

growmore

#12
Here's some pics i took on Saturday of welsh onions for Super Sprout...
The first  pic is a clump of them ..Second is some broke off from bottom and peeled..
Cheers. Jim
Cheers .. Jim

supersprout

Thank you growmore, grr I can't seem to see the pics (only the spaces where they should be)  ???

growmore

Think there's a prob at the mo with pics.  I seem to have lost lots of folks avatars.will try them again later if they dont show.Cheers ..Jim
Cheers .. Jim

lorna


growmore

Me too ..think it's fixed  :)  Jim
Cheers .. Jim

supersprout

Yep, can see fine growmore! Thank you, now I know what they should look like  ::) ;D

Powered by EzPortal