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party_music50

Told it was a "Polish Onion"

party_music50
last year
last modified: last year

My sister (SE Mass) was given these plants and told they were Polish Onions. What are they? The blades are flat and more grass-like than onion-like. They're about 8" tall now and apparently ready to plant out.





eta: just did an edit to cross-post on the Veg forum … and now adding Allium forum.

Comments (36)

  • Jay 6a Chicago
    last year

    Is this onion for culinary use? Could you show us what the bulbs look like?

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    Yes, culinary use, and the bulbs don't look like I expected! They seem to be attached to each other with very fibrous roots... almost like rhizomes:







  • Jay 6a Chicago
    last year

    Do the leaves have a slight garlic smell and taste? Perhaps garlic mustard, Allium tuberosa? Poland has been growing onions for centuries, and there is no specific entity called 'Polish Onion', that comes up when I google it.

    party_music50 thanked Jay 6a Chicago
  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Jay, you meant Garlic chives! I know garlic mustard too well. lol! Yes, that seems to fit. The taste seems to be sweet (grass-like) and more like garlic than onion. Thank you! I think we'll like these, although keeping them potted makes sense to me. :)

  • fig_insanity Z7b E TN
    last year

    Perhaps some species of Tulbaghia? Common name is "society garlic".

    There are some types of Allium fistulosum, the bunching, non-bulbing form of onion, that are called Polish onion. But they are just cultivars that originated in Poland, where the onion is the national vegetable. That isn't what you have.

    Are there bulbs on your plants that I'm just not seeing? It appears to have mostly fleshy roots with maybe a slight swelling at the base of the leaves.

    party_music50 thanked fig_insanity Z7b E TN
  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    I pulled one up and tried to wash it off to see it better... there's really not much of a bulb. The brownish fiber is tough -- the entire base is very firm and stiff.








  • Jay 6a Chicago
    last year
    last modified: last year

    I've had garlic mustard on the brain lately, because it is that time of year, oops.🙊🤣

    All the Allium species in North America have bulbs. you speak Pollish?

    It looks close to, or maybe Tulbaghia, but a flower would help nail it.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    Jay, my Polish is very limited! The woman who gave them to my sister is from Poland, so these ”onions” are not from North America. The flowers will tell us more, so I guess we just wait now. :p

  • Jay 6a Chicago
    last year

    Is there still a vegetable forum here? I remember there were some onion/garlic experts over there.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    There is, Jay. And I was just told that it will have beautiful white flowers.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Looks like my cross-post worked to add the Veg forum.

    A white flower indicates it can’t be ‘society garlic’, because that has a pink flower, right right?

    peren.all, I find all different (inconsistent) images for garlic chive roots/bulbs online. Can you show what yours looks like with either your own photo or referring to images online?


    Thanks, everyone for the help!

  • peren.all Zone 5a Ontario Canada
    last year

    There are white flowering Tulbaghia. I will try to get a pic but I will be racing against much needed rain that is imminent.

    party_music50 thanked peren.all Zone 5a Ontario Canada
  • farmerdill
    last year

    Just judging by the photos, I would say you have leeks.


  • floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
    last year

    No, I’m certain they are not leeks. Completely different roots, growth habit and coloration.

  • cindy-6b/7a VA
    last year

    There is also an Allium forum.

  • robert567
    last year

    Maybe the "Polish" is a bad joke? Like a fake onion? Root rhizomes seems little like onions.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    I agree that they’re not leeks.


    As I said, the woman who gave them to my sister is from Poland. She doesn’t know the English name(s) for them and calls them ”Polish Onions”.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    Thanks, Cindy, I just added the Alliums forum.

  • carolb_w_fl_coastal_9b
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Also agreeing definitely not garlic chives. I have loads of them growing for many years and none have that purple coloration on the base.

    party_music50 thanked carolb_w_fl_coastal_9b
  • floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
    last year

    Perhaps a variey of Allium fistulosum? There are red stemmed versions.

  • macranthos
    last year

    Does she know the Polish name for them?

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Still trying to find out — she has gone to Poland.


    Thanks, carolb, for confirming it’s not garlic chives.


    I potted them up and they’re not doing anything. lol.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    wahoo! I'm back with a teaser! :) Since I wasn't sure about what this plant was, I stuck it in a gallon container and grew it in a mostly sunny location... not ideal, so it hasn't done much all summer. We got a few inches of rain over the past few days and I just noticed that these flower buds have sprung up out of nowhere. They sit round 10- 12" high now... I'll post more photos when the flowers open! :)




  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    rats, photo didn't post? Trying again:



  • robert567
    last year

    Well, the mystery is starting to flower just like Garlic Chives, same time, same type of bud. See if the flower matches. Not sure which other onions flower in late Summer.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    I wondered if this would be a normal bloom time for it…. it’s been in less than ideal growing conditions in a pot. No change in the flower buds yet, other than having taller stems, because it’s been dark and rainy here.

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    Flowers still haven’t opened:



    They’re really whimpy — ordinary pencil for scale:





  • carolb_w_fl_coastal_9b
    last year

    Looking a lot more like garlic chives now...

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    So weird that they didn’t seem like garlic chives when I got them. They don’t look like much in the pot, but the tall flower stems are cute so far.

  • John D Zn6a PIT Pa
    last year
    last modified: last year

    There's a Czech onion called "Early Yellow Globe". The bulb is 6mm in diameter about a 1/4". The bulb neck diameter is 1.4 MM, kind of wimpy. The link is to the USDA ARS site. Click on Observation and Show five rows and change that to all rows.

  • zeedman Zone 5 Wisconsin
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Almost certainly garlic chives. I grow a generic cultivar of the species (A. tuberosum) and it looks identical to the photos posted here. My patch has been expanding slowly since 2016, and is in full bloom now. A really good late summer flower to attract pollinators, bees & other insects are swarming over it. I'll try to post a photo. A nice flower for edible landscaping, and controllable if not allowed to seed.

  • shaxhome
    last year

    Really don't see the problem with identifying it as garlic chives. A scrunched small piece of a leaf and a sense of smell would be definitive...

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year
    last modified: last year

    Flowers are finally opening! stems are around 15” tall. If this confirms that it’s garlic chives, then why were some convinced earlier that it wasn’t GC based on the base/bulbs/roots?


    eta: individual flowers are about 5/8" wide.





  • robert567
    last year

    Yes, the flowers look like Garlic Chives. Maybe they were more like onions the Polish lady liked, nothing wrong with that, instead of a Polish cultivar of onion.


    I dug up some that were getting shaded, they are very easy to grow and spread. The roots look just like the roots in pics 5 and 6, a small cluster of small oblong brownish "bulbs" with white roots spreading out. The roots do superficially look like a perennial large grass than a regular Chives plants

  • party_music50
    Original Author
    last year

    Ok, then, I have garlic chives. I will let my sister know too. Thanks, everyone, for all the help!


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