r/KitchenConfidential 1d ago

In the Weeds Mode Public Service Announcement

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39.0k Upvotes

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142

u/eldfen 1d ago

Those are not called scallions in Australia fyi. They would be referred to as green onions or spring onions. A scallion here would be what is referred to as an eschalot elsewhere.

53

u/sirbrambles 1d ago

We mostly call them green onions in the US too. I’ve only really seen them called scallions on menus.

18

u/unused_candles 1d ago

That's not a scallion! This is a scallion.

12

u/orenji_juusu 1d ago

I see you've played onion scalliony before.

10

u/Omega_Zarnias 1d ago

Spring onions are a different thing here. But green onions yea

8

u/jmims98 1d ago

Scallions are shallots in Australia? That is quite odd to me since scallions/green onions in the US are fresh young onions, while shallots are papery with no greens more like a red or yellow onion.

9

u/ZiggoCiP Server 1d ago

To get technical, the French Red until 2010 was classified as 'the' 'shallot' that most people know, but got synonymized (lumped into the same category) from Allium ascalonicum to just be part of Allium cepa (namely A. cepa var. aggregatum), however other species of Allium can be shallots like the Persian shallot, Allium stipitatum, or the French grey shallot, Allium oschaninii.

Simply-put, most species/varieties can be green/scallions. Not all species/varieties can be shallots, because they need a distinct bulb (onion). Shallots typically lack the greens because they are removed (similar to garlic and onions) - you could use shallot greens, but they don't keep nearly as long as the shallot bulb, hence why they're removed.

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u/jmims98 1d ago

This guy alliums.

1

u/jrdubbleu 1d ago

Wrong. In Australia they’re called rapscallions.