Alliums·Established·Spring through summer

Vidalia sweet onion

Allium cepa

Distinctly sweet, very mild, almost without pungency; closer to fruit than to standard onion.

Category
Alliums
Peak form
Raw in salads and salsas; thin-sliced on sandwiches; roasted
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
6

About Vidalia

The Vidalia sweet onion is the regional Georgia cultivar grown in a specific 20-county area around Vidalia, Georgia, in the low-sulfur soils of that region. Federal trade protection (since 1989) restricts the Vidalia name to onions grown in that designated region — similar to Champagne in France or Parmigiano-Reggiano in Italy. The low-sulfur soil produces onions with dramatically reduced pungency and noticeable sweetness — eating raw Vidalia is similar to eating a sweet apple. Walla Walla (Washington State) is the West Coast equivalent, with similar low-sulfur soil and similar sweetness profile. Both are spring-summer onions — they don't store well beyond their harvest window.

Variety profile

Botanical
Allium cepa
Flavor
Distinctly sweet, very mild, almost without pungency; closer to fruit than to standard onion.
Texture
Crisp and juicy raw; can be eaten raw without overwhelming pungency; doesn't caramelize as well as yellow (too much water).
Peak form
Raw in salads and salsas; thin-sliced on sandwiches; roasted whole; battered as 'blooming onion'.
Season window
Spring through summer (Vidalia season is roughly April to August); doesn't store beyond season.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Outside Vidalia season (September through March), labeled 'sweet onion' product is typically Peruvian or Mexican sweet onion — comparable but not identical.

Cross-references

Related categories

Related origins