Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 1 2
Results 26 to 45 of 45
  1. #26
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    valley of the heart's delight
    Posts
    2,480
    Quote Originally Posted by east or bust View Post
    Just ask Stanley Yelnats what he thought about onions

    Saved the fucker’s life
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6562654/

    Youtube doctor on medcram takes NAC (chemical found in onions) as covid prophylactic. On the 'doesn't hurt, might help theory'
    10/01/2012 Site was upgraded to 300 baud.

  2. #27
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    truckee
    Posts
    23,273
    I love onions. Is it OK to not like olives?

  3. #28
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    Behind the Zion Curtain
    Posts
    4,890
    Here’s some KQ onions wallawing (sic) in my back yard. I love the onions.

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	4690AD43-EF6C-4005-B6FE-2BFAA2AAA624.jpg 
Views:	54 
Size:	1.32 MB 
ID:	336763

    How do people feel about purple freedom fries?

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	8F9AECFD-A68D-4AAC-9283-28C890075E77.jpg 
Views:	59 
Size:	624.1 KB 
ID:	336764

  4. #29
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Alta
    Posts
    2,959
    When I worked as a cook, I once worked with another cook who told me he refused to eat or cook with onions. I simply responded that his statement explained why he was such a shitty cook. It’s an essential ingredient in basically every cooking culture and for very good reason. All you fuckers who hate onions probably put ketchup on your hotdogs and think ranch with pizza is acceptable


    Sent from my iPad using TGR Forums

  5. #30
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Posts
    2,374
    Quote Originally Posted by east or bust View Post
    Just ask Stanley Yelnats what he thought about onions

    Saved the fucker’s life
    I thought it was garlic; it's been a while.

    As for the OP... TL;DR and the topic title was sufficient.

    Thumbs down on anything flavored with onion powder though.

  6. #31
    Join Date
    Feb 2020
    Posts
    3

    Red face onion oh my god

    this is a big price problem

  7. #32
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Suckramento
    Posts
    21,474
    Quote Originally Posted by old goat View Post
    I love onions. Is it OK to not like olives?
    No.
    Quando paramucho mi amore de felice carathon.
    Mundo paparazzi mi amore cicce verdi parasol.
    Questo abrigado tantamucho que canite carousel.


  8. #33
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    SE USA
    Posts
    3,421
    Since you asked HATE onions. Always envision eating tapeworms. Uuggghhhh.
    "Can't you see..."

  9. #34
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    EWA
    Posts
    22,015
    As Walla Walla Sweet Onion harvest nears completion, a new breed is making its mark


    (yes... yes... I know... his mask is down....)



    For generations at Locati Farms rare pink onions found during harvest among the yellow to light brown-skinned Walla Walla Sweets in the fields would be tossed out with rotten bulbs and onions that bolted when they prematurely went to seed.

    Michael J. Locati, the fourth-generation grower and current owner and operator of Locati Farms and Pacific Agra Farms, remembers over a decade ago asking his father, Ambrose Locati Jr., from whom he learned to farm, if there would ever be a market for Walla Walla Sweet Onions of a different hue.

    After consulting with his uncle, Michael F. Locati, the veteran Sweet grower for whom the younger Locati was named, as well as seeking the advice of a few others, he decided to make a fun new project of the colorful orb.

    The younger Locati began picking out the rosier onions to plant. He would then sow the resulting seeds, a cycle that continued for a decade, each generation of onion growing deeper in color.

    The onion is an heirloom of the Walla Walla Sweet Onion, sweet and similar in taste, but with different pigment, Locati said as he cut a piece and tasted it.

    “Very similar. You know, like, if that was a regular red onion, I’d be crying,” he said.

    As the onion is only debuting its second big year on the market, Locati is still working on marketing.

    “Its hard for someone to look at this and be like, ‘Is that sweet?’ Even though yeah, there’s a little bit of bite, but if you were just the average consumer, you’re going to look at that and say like that’s a hot onion,” he said.

    The onion with the deep red skin and layers of pink inside is called Walla Walla Rosé Sweet Onion.

    “I figured the name rosé was pretty catchy with the wine country,” he said.

    Locati said Walla Walla Sweet Rosé is now at 10% of Pacific Agra Farms’ products and plans for future expansion.

    A newfound discovery of the Walla Walla Sweet Rosé is that it lasts much longer than the yellow Walla Walla Sweet Onion.

    These are still available for purchase through the end of August as harvest finishes for Walla Walla Sweet Onions by mid-month.

    Locati said the business is fortunate market values have not been affected by the coronavirus pandemic because its focus is “fresh market onion,” This means the onions are in the field, lifted, cut, topped, moved to the air floor, transported over a line and put into a box. By seven to 10 days, it’s shipped and stocked at Walmart, Safeway, Fred Meyer, and other grocery stores.

    He said having retail customers instead of foodservice customers allows the operation to keep its markets during the pandemic.

    The coronavirus pandemic brought enough other changes to the operation, including a reduction from four people on the windrows to two. But it hasn’t slowed harvest down.

    Temperature checks and sanitizing measures have increased; everyone is socially distanced and wearing masks. Locati said guidelines from the Center for Disease Control are followed.

    Anyone who feels ill or has a fever is sent for a COVID-19 test, whether negative or positive, they go home for a 14-day quarantine along with any spouse or partner, which is more stringent than CDC guidelines, he said. No employees have tested positive with the coronavirus.

    The sad reality of the pandemic is its push toward further mechanization and technology.

    “Things like this push us to be more mechanical and try to find mechanical harvests and ways to pack onions, not at the fault of the employee. This is obviously an environmental thing, and it kind of weighs on me,” Locati said.

    “They have families to feed just like I have a family to feed, and I want to support them, and I want them to be successful, but I can’t with government regulations,” he said.

    He said three years ago, Walla Walla River Packing, the curing and packing company with which Locati Farms is a partner, would have more than 100 people working on packing onions and now there are only 70.

    “It’s hard to find people that want to do the job, so that is an issue. But there’s also the issue of trying to keep people safe and not needing these people all crunched together anymore, so its kind of a double-edged sword,” he said.

    He said one of the machines added more recently to the packing plant was a palletizer, which provides automatic means for boxing and stacking cases.

    Another machine added a few years ago was the IQ Ellips Elisam, an optical sorting system that uses photo technology to package onions by size.

    Before the coronavirus pandemic, Pacific Agra Farms was affected by the flooding in early February. The deluge took a quarter or more of the operation’s acreage of Walla Walla Sweet Onions.

    To make up for the loss and recover their acreage, Walla Walla Sweet Onion starts were brought up from Arizona. Each was planted by hand.

    “Overall, as far as harvest goes, we’ve been very fortunate,” Locati said.
    When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something. To do something." Rep. John Lewis


    Kindness is a bridge between all people

    Dunkin’ Donuts Worker Dances With Customer Who Has Autism

  10. #35
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    In rain shadow of the Sierra CC,NV
    Posts
    3,878
    Quote Originally Posted by altacoup View Post
    When I worked as a cook, I once worked with another cook who told me he refused to eat or cook with onions...
    Maybe he was Hare Krishna?
    They do not use/allow onions or garlic, as it is offensive to lord krsna.
    They substitute with asafoetida, which is supposed to be pretty noxious in itself.



    Sent from my SM-G950U1 using TGR Forums mobile app

    ...Remember, those who think Global Warming is Fake, also think that Adam & Eve were Real...

  11. #36
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    slc
    Posts
    17,999
    Quote Originally Posted by altacoup View Post
    When I worked as a cook, I once worked with another cook who told me he refused to eat or cook with onions.
    That's like a porn star that doesn't give BJs.

  12. #37
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    It's Full of Stars....
    Posts
    4,865
    What we have here is an intelligence failure. You may be familiar with staring directly at that when shaving. .
    -Ottime
    One man can only push so many boulders up hills at one time.
    -BMillsSkier

  13. #38
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    United States of Aburdistan
    Posts
    7,281
    Quote Originally Posted by Dantheman View Post
    That's like a porn star that doesn't give BJs.
    wow you must really like onions.

  14. #39
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Suckramento
    Posts
    21,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Marshall Tucker View Post
    Since you asked HATE onions. Always envision eating tapeworms. Uuggghhhh.
    I wonder what Freud would say about that
    Quando paramucho mi amore de felice carathon.
    Mundo paparazzi mi amore cicce verdi parasol.
    Questo abrigado tantamucho que canite carousel.


  15. #40
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Alpental
    Posts
    4,172
    The Onion Fields is a good movie to watch if you don’t like onions
    “I have a responsibility to not be intimidated and bullied by low life losers who abuse what little power is granted to them as ski patrollers.”

  16. #41
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    STL
    Posts
    13,297

    Anyone who doesn't like onions is an idiot

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	IMG_3189.jpg 
Views:	27 
Size:	1.02 MB 
ID:	336850Click image for larger version. 

Name:	IMG_4803.jpg 
Views:	32 
Size:	1.08 MB 
ID:	336851Click image for larger version. 

Name:	IMG_3853.jpg 
Views:	34 
Size:	1.25 MB 
ID:	336852Click image for larger version. 

Name:	IMG_2963.jpg 
Views:	23 
Size:	1.03 MB 
ID:	336853Click image for larger version. 

Name:	IMG_3516.jpg 
Views:	21 
Size:	1.11 MB 
ID:	336857

    I like onions, had my own brand once. Ica, peru.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  17. #42
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Sandy, Utah
    Posts
    14,410
    I live very close to what they refer to around here as the "black dirt" area. Rich farmlands. They grow LOTS of onions. So much so that within miles of any farm you smell onion in the air.

  18. #43
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    Shadynasty's Jazz Club
    Posts
    10,249
    I can’t eat onions, they tear me up. Garlic, too. I love onions and miss them but also hate them cause they make eating out pretty difficult. I did miss garlic until I ate something with lots of garlic and it was gross. I was a garlic overuser, but now I find it off-putting.
    Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.

  19. #44
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    General Sherman's Favorite City
    Posts
    35,378
    I keep catching the thread title out of the corner of my eye as "Anyone who doesn't like Ohioans is an idiot".

    Some debate to be had there I'm sure.



    Anyway, there's only one true sweet onion: Vidalia.
    I still call it The Jake.

  20. #45
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    PNW
    Posts
    7,382
    Quote Originally Posted by BobMc View Post
    Here’s some KQ onions wallawing (sic) in my back yard. I love the onions.

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	4690AD43-EF6C-4005-B6FE-2BFAA2AAA624.jpg 
Views:	54 
Size:	1.32 MB 
ID:	336763

    How do people feel about purple freedom fries?

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	8F9AECFD-A68D-4AAC-9283-28C890075E77.jpg 
Views:	59 
Size:	624.1 KB 
ID:	336764
    The color is no issue. Calling them Freedom Fries makes me want to barf tho.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •