Chopping onions in 4 easy steps

By / Food / March 22nd, 2018 / 6
Chopping onions in 4 easy steps

Onions, with their potent, eye-watering smells, are the bane of many a home chef’s meal prep. But the tear-jerking nature of chopping onions isn’t the only concern — cutting it correctly without dicing a finger is up there. Follow these steps to save your fingers as you chop.

The First Chop

  • Place the onion on its side.
  • Slice off the top and bottom, creating two flat ends.
  • Stand it up on one flat end.
  • Place the blade across the top, so the edge intersects the bull’s eye at the centre of the onion.
  • With your thumb and forefinger, hold the rounded sides, making an arch with your hand over the knife.

The Slice

  • Slice straight down through the onion’s centre.
  • Take one half (set the other aside); peel off the skin.
  • Place it on its broad, flat side with the top and bottom facing left and right.
  • Place the knife parallel to the “top” flat end, with the fingers of your free hand resting on the “bottom” end.
  • Cut the onion crosswise, slicing off semi-circles parallel to the flat ends.
  • Once you’ve cut the whole length, flip these semi-circles sideways to make a little stack.

The Dice

  • Hold the stack on the rounded side and position your blade parallel to the flat end — the stack will slide around a bit, so be careful.
  • Slice down across the flat edge of the onion, creating “matchsticks” — the natural lines in the onion cause these matchsticks to fall apart into cubes.
  • Continue until the entire stack is chopped.

The Final Chop

Not all of the matchsticks will separate; help them by chopping crossways across your pile until it’s all diced.

Repeat The Slice, The Dice and The Final Chop with the rest of the onion and presto: a chopped onion! That wasn’t too painful … *sniffle*


Want more in-the-kitchen education? Read “Slice, Peel, Devein, Hull – Using a Paring Knife” by Shannon Fitzpatrick.

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Looking at the small things that make life great and the people who create them.

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