Monday, August 3, 2020

White Onions



Onions or Allium cepa is known only from cultivated varieties. A related wild species is found in Central Asia. There are several varieties of onions most commonly seen in this white variety and a red variety. Here is a brief explanation of the plant from Wikipedia: Onion
The onion plant has been grown and selectively bred in cultivation for at least 7,000 years. It is a biennial plant, but is usually grown as an annual. Modern varieties typically grow to a height of 15 to 45 cm (6 to 18 in). The leaves are yellowish- to bluish green and grow alternately in a flattened, fan-shaped swathe. They are fleshy, hollow, and cylindrical, with one flattened side. They are at their broadest about a quarter of the way up, beyond which they taper towards a blunt tip. The base of each leaf is a flattened, usually white sheath that grows out of the basal plate of a bulb. From the underside of the plate, a bundle of fibrous roots extends for a short way into the soil. As the onion matures, food reserves begin to accumulate in the leaf bases and the bulb of the onion swells.
Lately, some cultivated onions in the United States have been recalled because of potential salmonella poisoning.  

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