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Is it safe to eat green onion slime?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowSlimy inside of green onionsIs it safe to eat sprouted onions?dark black furrows in sweet potatoesChopped onion versus dried minced onionAre bunya-bunya nuts safe to eat if the shells are moldy?Onion has yellow center. Is it safe to eat?Are my patially green and budded potatoes safe to eat?Is it safe to eat non-green tea leavesWhat is the white goo in the middle of some hard-boiled egg yolks?safety of “tin” cans dented in shippingIs my chicken stock still safe to eat? Left on stove on low-medium heat, partially uncovered +9 hours so it reduced
I just harvested some scallions from the garden, where it's getting bit chilly (late November in Seattle).
After chopping them, I realized that their insides were covered in a gelatinous, slippery, viscous goo!
What is it? Is it safe to eat?

food-safety onions
add a comment |
I just harvested some scallions from the garden, where it's getting bit chilly (late November in Seattle).
After chopping them, I realized that their insides were covered in a gelatinous, slippery, viscous goo!
What is it? Is it safe to eat?

food-safety onions
1
@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28
add a comment |
I just harvested some scallions from the garden, where it's getting bit chilly (late November in Seattle).
After chopping them, I realized that their insides were covered in a gelatinous, slippery, viscous goo!
What is it? Is it safe to eat?

food-safety onions
I just harvested some scallions from the garden, where it's getting bit chilly (late November in Seattle).
After chopping them, I realized that their insides were covered in a gelatinous, slippery, viscous goo!
What is it? Is it safe to eat?

food-safety onions
food-safety onions
edited Mar 9 '17 at 17:30
Community♦
1
1
asked Nov 21 '12 at 21:57
EmmettEmmett
2361410
2361410
1
@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28
add a comment |
1
@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28
1
1
@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28
add a comment |
11 Answers
11
active
oldest
votes
Normally, people associate slime with "inedible" because some bacterial colonies can build up slime on spoiled food. But there are plants which naturally produce slime, and it is as edible as any other part of the same plant. Slimes are most common in algae, but I have also seen them in other plants such as hyacinth greens, and scallions have it too, although in normally not that much. But if you mash a "dry" scallion or the greens of a typical yellow onion, they still feel slimy, while other alliums become slimy on cooking, for example leeks.
Physically, slime is just a special kind of gel. As long as it is not of bacterial origin, it is not a sign of spoilage, and it is highly improbable that a living green plant without signs of sickness will be full of colonies of spoilage bacteria. So, I would declare it good to eat.
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
add a comment |
I found an interesting discussion on the subject that is more anecdotal than hard facts but the consensus is that if the onions are fresh and not wilted or obviously spoiled, the goo is normal and edible, albeit a bit gross, and you can try just rinsing them thoroughly.
add a comment |
I believe it is how the plant stores energy for the winter etc. I've typically seen it show up only after a recent watering. so if the plant hasn't been watered recently before pulling up or cutting, you normally won't see that.
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
add a comment |
The older (more mature) green onions tend to accumulate a slimy mucus like coating on the internal wall as they get larger in size. Since I do not like the feel or appearance of the gel like substance, I slit the green shaft lengthwise
. Then I thoroughly rinse the slime off then dry with a paper towel to remove the last remaining remnants of the goo. I then throw the onions into my soup pot along with the rest of the vegetables.
add a comment |
I believe this gel is naturally occurring in spring onions.It does look a bit yuk but just rinse it out of the hollow stems if you don't want to eat it. Nothing to do with G.M.O.
add a comment |
I have no idea what is actually inside the gel but I believe it to be plant derived. FYI The gel is on the inside of the plant NOT growing on the outside. I have been eating it forever because it is packed with green onion flavor! It's rare that green onions in the store have this gel because they are often more on the dehydrated side in my opinion or perhaps they are grown not to be so jelly because consumers might find it weird. I look at the gel as a delicacy and tend to use the gooier parts for cooking rather than the drier shaft if the recipe calls for limited quantities of green onions. I am perfectly fine. Not even have I turned a shade of green :-P
Another example that I can use for the seattle-ite is you know when you cut a fresh Washington state onion and it produces that white milk upon the first slice? It's the juices from the onion which is very juicy cause its fresh. You don't always see this with other onions because they are probably not that fresh even though they are perfectly edible and flavorful. Hope this helps!
add a comment |
When you've cut off the tops you can see down the tubes, if slime is visibly present then isolate and discard or rinse concern away, continue cleaning/prepping as before. Then you can move on too.
add a comment |
Yeah, I just discovered the clear gel substance in the organic scallions green shafts for preparing salad. For years we have eaten scallions, never saw gelatin inside the vegetable. I ate some of it after smelling the stuff. Appears to be a plant gelatin and the flavor is fresh with a very light scallion flavor. Still alive and kicking'. I believe this stuff is as nutritious as the rest of the plant.- Audrey Siani
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
Lots of plants have gelatinous fibre.I'd check on this,but if it is,it's good for you.It grips to old debris in your intestine as it passes and cleans it out.
add a comment |
The only time I've seen this slime is from the green onions I've grown myself, so unless the big companies are breaking into my garden and poisoning my food I think it's fair to say it's natural.
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
add a comment |
I have bin a chef for 35 years & have never seen slime like this on any of the thousands of green onion i have prepared until today .& anyone that tells me this is normal is lying,slime has bin & always will be a sign that the food is not eatable .
In my opinion this is another product of food engineering (AKA: G.M.O) & that is something that no one in the world should be consuming or ingesting & should be avoided at all cost
we should eating vegetables that are naturally grown in organic gardens & not this poison the big companies call food
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
add a comment |
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11 Answers
11
active
oldest
votes
11 Answers
11
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
Normally, people associate slime with "inedible" because some bacterial colonies can build up slime on spoiled food. But there are plants which naturally produce slime, and it is as edible as any other part of the same plant. Slimes are most common in algae, but I have also seen them in other plants such as hyacinth greens, and scallions have it too, although in normally not that much. But if you mash a "dry" scallion or the greens of a typical yellow onion, they still feel slimy, while other alliums become slimy on cooking, for example leeks.
Physically, slime is just a special kind of gel. As long as it is not of bacterial origin, it is not a sign of spoilage, and it is highly improbable that a living green plant without signs of sickness will be full of colonies of spoilage bacteria. So, I would declare it good to eat.
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
add a comment |
Normally, people associate slime with "inedible" because some bacterial colonies can build up slime on spoiled food. But there are plants which naturally produce slime, and it is as edible as any other part of the same plant. Slimes are most common in algae, but I have also seen them in other plants such as hyacinth greens, and scallions have it too, although in normally not that much. But if you mash a "dry" scallion or the greens of a typical yellow onion, they still feel slimy, while other alliums become slimy on cooking, for example leeks.
Physically, slime is just a special kind of gel. As long as it is not of bacterial origin, it is not a sign of spoilage, and it is highly improbable that a living green plant without signs of sickness will be full of colonies of spoilage bacteria. So, I would declare it good to eat.
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
add a comment |
Normally, people associate slime with "inedible" because some bacterial colonies can build up slime on spoiled food. But there are plants which naturally produce slime, and it is as edible as any other part of the same plant. Slimes are most common in algae, but I have also seen them in other plants such as hyacinth greens, and scallions have it too, although in normally not that much. But if you mash a "dry" scallion or the greens of a typical yellow onion, they still feel slimy, while other alliums become slimy on cooking, for example leeks.
Physically, slime is just a special kind of gel. As long as it is not of bacterial origin, it is not a sign of spoilage, and it is highly improbable that a living green plant without signs of sickness will be full of colonies of spoilage bacteria. So, I would declare it good to eat.
Normally, people associate slime with "inedible" because some bacterial colonies can build up slime on spoiled food. But there are plants which naturally produce slime, and it is as edible as any other part of the same plant. Slimes are most common in algae, but I have also seen them in other plants such as hyacinth greens, and scallions have it too, although in normally not that much. But if you mash a "dry" scallion or the greens of a typical yellow onion, they still feel slimy, while other alliums become slimy on cooking, for example leeks.
Physically, slime is just a special kind of gel. As long as it is not of bacterial origin, it is not a sign of spoilage, and it is highly improbable that a living green plant without signs of sickness will be full of colonies of spoilage bacteria. So, I would declare it good to eat.
answered Nov 23 '12 at 23:24
rumtscho♦rumtscho
82.7k28191357
82.7k28191357
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
add a comment |
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
7
7
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
Specifically, this stuff is mucilage, and AFAIK it's considered a desirable trait in some other edible plants, like okra and cactus.
– Josh Caswell
Dec 10 '12 at 1:43
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
@JoshCaswell People actually like okra being slimy?
– JAB
Oct 20 '17 at 19:54
add a comment |
I found an interesting discussion on the subject that is more anecdotal than hard facts but the consensus is that if the onions are fresh and not wilted or obviously spoiled, the goo is normal and edible, albeit a bit gross, and you can try just rinsing them thoroughly.
add a comment |
I found an interesting discussion on the subject that is more anecdotal than hard facts but the consensus is that if the onions are fresh and not wilted or obviously spoiled, the goo is normal and edible, albeit a bit gross, and you can try just rinsing them thoroughly.
add a comment |
I found an interesting discussion on the subject that is more anecdotal than hard facts but the consensus is that if the onions are fresh and not wilted or obviously spoiled, the goo is normal and edible, albeit a bit gross, and you can try just rinsing them thoroughly.
I found an interesting discussion on the subject that is more anecdotal than hard facts but the consensus is that if the onions are fresh and not wilted or obviously spoiled, the goo is normal and edible, albeit a bit gross, and you can try just rinsing them thoroughly.
answered Nov 22 '12 at 0:41
Kristina LopezKristina Lopez
2,36111120
2,36111120
add a comment |
add a comment |
I believe it is how the plant stores energy for the winter etc. I've typically seen it show up only after a recent watering. so if the plant hasn't been watered recently before pulling up or cutting, you normally won't see that.
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
add a comment |
I believe it is how the plant stores energy for the winter etc. I've typically seen it show up only after a recent watering. so if the plant hasn't been watered recently before pulling up or cutting, you normally won't see that.
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
add a comment |
I believe it is how the plant stores energy for the winter etc. I've typically seen it show up only after a recent watering. so if the plant hasn't been watered recently before pulling up or cutting, you normally won't see that.
I believe it is how the plant stores energy for the winter etc. I've typically seen it show up only after a recent watering. so if the plant hasn't been watered recently before pulling up or cutting, you normally won't see that.
answered Dec 25 '15 at 22:37
DaveyJonesDaveyJones
211
211
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
add a comment |
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
Hello Davey — your post adds additional information, but doesn't answer the OP's core question of whether the slime is safe to eat. Perhaps you'd like to edit your answer, so as to include your opinion about that.
– ElmerCat
Dec 25 '15 at 23:39
add a comment |
The older (more mature) green onions tend to accumulate a slimy mucus like coating on the internal wall as they get larger in size. Since I do not like the feel or appearance of the gel like substance, I slit the green shaft lengthwise
. Then I thoroughly rinse the slime off then dry with a paper towel to remove the last remaining remnants of the goo. I then throw the onions into my soup pot along with the rest of the vegetables.
add a comment |
The older (more mature) green onions tend to accumulate a slimy mucus like coating on the internal wall as they get larger in size. Since I do not like the feel or appearance of the gel like substance, I slit the green shaft lengthwise
. Then I thoroughly rinse the slime off then dry with a paper towel to remove the last remaining remnants of the goo. I then throw the onions into my soup pot along with the rest of the vegetables.
add a comment |
The older (more mature) green onions tend to accumulate a slimy mucus like coating on the internal wall as they get larger in size. Since I do not like the feel or appearance of the gel like substance, I slit the green shaft lengthwise
. Then I thoroughly rinse the slime off then dry with a paper towel to remove the last remaining remnants of the goo. I then throw the onions into my soup pot along with the rest of the vegetables.
The older (more mature) green onions tend to accumulate a slimy mucus like coating on the internal wall as they get larger in size. Since I do not like the feel or appearance of the gel like substance, I slit the green shaft lengthwise
. Then I thoroughly rinse the slime off then dry with a paper towel to remove the last remaining remnants of the goo. I then throw the onions into my soup pot along with the rest of the vegetables.
answered Mar 16 at 18:00
Glenda K GrahamGlenda K Graham
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
I believe this gel is naturally occurring in spring onions.It does look a bit yuk but just rinse it out of the hollow stems if you don't want to eat it. Nothing to do with G.M.O.
add a comment |
I believe this gel is naturally occurring in spring onions.It does look a bit yuk but just rinse it out of the hollow stems if you don't want to eat it. Nothing to do with G.M.O.
add a comment |
I believe this gel is naturally occurring in spring onions.It does look a bit yuk but just rinse it out of the hollow stems if you don't want to eat it. Nothing to do with G.M.O.
I believe this gel is naturally occurring in spring onions.It does look a bit yuk but just rinse it out of the hollow stems if you don't want to eat it. Nothing to do with G.M.O.
answered Jan 8 '16 at 6:32
aafkedowneyaafkedowney
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
I have no idea what is actually inside the gel but I believe it to be plant derived. FYI The gel is on the inside of the plant NOT growing on the outside. I have been eating it forever because it is packed with green onion flavor! It's rare that green onions in the store have this gel because they are often more on the dehydrated side in my opinion or perhaps they are grown not to be so jelly because consumers might find it weird. I look at the gel as a delicacy and tend to use the gooier parts for cooking rather than the drier shaft if the recipe calls for limited quantities of green onions. I am perfectly fine. Not even have I turned a shade of green :-P
Another example that I can use for the seattle-ite is you know when you cut a fresh Washington state onion and it produces that white milk upon the first slice? It's the juices from the onion which is very juicy cause its fresh. You don't always see this with other onions because they are probably not that fresh even though they are perfectly edible and flavorful. Hope this helps!
add a comment |
I have no idea what is actually inside the gel but I believe it to be plant derived. FYI The gel is on the inside of the plant NOT growing on the outside. I have been eating it forever because it is packed with green onion flavor! It's rare that green onions in the store have this gel because they are often more on the dehydrated side in my opinion or perhaps they are grown not to be so jelly because consumers might find it weird. I look at the gel as a delicacy and tend to use the gooier parts for cooking rather than the drier shaft if the recipe calls for limited quantities of green onions. I am perfectly fine. Not even have I turned a shade of green :-P
Another example that I can use for the seattle-ite is you know when you cut a fresh Washington state onion and it produces that white milk upon the first slice? It's the juices from the onion which is very juicy cause its fresh. You don't always see this with other onions because they are probably not that fresh even though they are perfectly edible and flavorful. Hope this helps!
add a comment |
I have no idea what is actually inside the gel but I believe it to be plant derived. FYI The gel is on the inside of the plant NOT growing on the outside. I have been eating it forever because it is packed with green onion flavor! It's rare that green onions in the store have this gel because they are often more on the dehydrated side in my opinion or perhaps they are grown not to be so jelly because consumers might find it weird. I look at the gel as a delicacy and tend to use the gooier parts for cooking rather than the drier shaft if the recipe calls for limited quantities of green onions. I am perfectly fine. Not even have I turned a shade of green :-P
Another example that I can use for the seattle-ite is you know when you cut a fresh Washington state onion and it produces that white milk upon the first slice? It's the juices from the onion which is very juicy cause its fresh. You don't always see this with other onions because they are probably not that fresh even though they are perfectly edible and flavorful. Hope this helps!
I have no idea what is actually inside the gel but I believe it to be plant derived. FYI The gel is on the inside of the plant NOT growing on the outside. I have been eating it forever because it is packed with green onion flavor! It's rare that green onions in the store have this gel because they are often more on the dehydrated side in my opinion or perhaps they are grown not to be so jelly because consumers might find it weird. I look at the gel as a delicacy and tend to use the gooier parts for cooking rather than the drier shaft if the recipe calls for limited quantities of green onions. I am perfectly fine. Not even have I turned a shade of green :-P
Another example that I can use for the seattle-ite is you know when you cut a fresh Washington state onion and it produces that white milk upon the first slice? It's the juices from the onion which is very juicy cause its fresh. You don't always see this with other onions because they are probably not that fresh even though they are perfectly edible and flavorful. Hope this helps!
answered Oct 21 '17 at 20:33
user62344user62344
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
When you've cut off the tops you can see down the tubes, if slime is visibly present then isolate and discard or rinse concern away, continue cleaning/prepping as before. Then you can move on too.
add a comment |
When you've cut off the tops you can see down the tubes, if slime is visibly present then isolate and discard or rinse concern away, continue cleaning/prepping as before. Then you can move on too.
add a comment |
When you've cut off the tops you can see down the tubes, if slime is visibly present then isolate and discard or rinse concern away, continue cleaning/prepping as before. Then you can move on too.
When you've cut off the tops you can see down the tubes, if slime is visibly present then isolate and discard or rinse concern away, continue cleaning/prepping as before. Then you can move on too.
answered Jul 2 '18 at 6:09
Never had issueNever had issue
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yeah, I just discovered the clear gel substance in the organic scallions green shafts for preparing salad. For years we have eaten scallions, never saw gelatin inside the vegetable. I ate some of it after smelling the stuff. Appears to be a plant gelatin and the flavor is fresh with a very light scallion flavor. Still alive and kicking'. I believe this stuff is as nutritious as the rest of the plant.- Audrey Siani
New contributor
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add a comment |
Yeah, I just discovered the clear gel substance in the organic scallions green shafts for preparing salad. For years we have eaten scallions, never saw gelatin inside the vegetable. I ate some of it after smelling the stuff. Appears to be a plant gelatin and the flavor is fresh with a very light scallion flavor. Still alive and kicking'. I believe this stuff is as nutritious as the rest of the plant.- Audrey Siani
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
Yeah, I just discovered the clear gel substance in the organic scallions green shafts for preparing salad. For years we have eaten scallions, never saw gelatin inside the vegetable. I ate some of it after smelling the stuff. Appears to be a plant gelatin and the flavor is fresh with a very light scallion flavor. Still alive and kicking'. I believe this stuff is as nutritious as the rest of the plant.- Audrey Siani
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Yeah, I just discovered the clear gel substance in the organic scallions green shafts for preparing salad. For years we have eaten scallions, never saw gelatin inside the vegetable. I ate some of it after smelling the stuff. Appears to be a plant gelatin and the flavor is fresh with a very light scallion flavor. Still alive and kicking'. I believe this stuff is as nutritious as the rest of the plant.- Audrey Siani
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered 33 mins ago
Audrey SianiAudrey Siani
1
1
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Audrey Siani is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
add a comment |
Lots of plants have gelatinous fibre.I'd check on this,but if it is,it's good for you.It grips to old debris in your intestine as it passes and cleans it out.
add a comment |
Lots of plants have gelatinous fibre.I'd check on this,but if it is,it's good for you.It grips to old debris in your intestine as it passes and cleans it out.
add a comment |
Lots of plants have gelatinous fibre.I'd check on this,but if it is,it's good for you.It grips to old debris in your intestine as it passes and cleans it out.
Lots of plants have gelatinous fibre.I'd check on this,but if it is,it's good for you.It grips to old debris in your intestine as it passes and cleans it out.
answered Oct 19 '17 at 20:12
paul marrpaul marr
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
The only time I've seen this slime is from the green onions I've grown myself, so unless the big companies are breaking into my garden and poisoning my food I think it's fair to say it's natural.
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
add a comment |
The only time I've seen this slime is from the green onions I've grown myself, so unless the big companies are breaking into my garden and poisoning my food I think it's fair to say it's natural.
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
add a comment |
The only time I've seen this slime is from the green onions I've grown myself, so unless the big companies are breaking into my garden and poisoning my food I think it's fair to say it's natural.
The only time I've seen this slime is from the green onions I've grown myself, so unless the big companies are breaking into my garden and poisoning my food I think it's fair to say it's natural.
answered Mar 26 '18 at 5:51
Erica JacksonErica Jackson
1
1
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
add a comment |
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
2
2
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
"natural" and "safe to eat" are not mutually exclusive, so this doesn't answer the question.
– Luciano
Mar 26 '18 at 8:29
add a comment |
I have bin a chef for 35 years & have never seen slime like this on any of the thousands of green onion i have prepared until today .& anyone that tells me this is normal is lying,slime has bin & always will be a sign that the food is not eatable .
In my opinion this is another product of food engineering (AKA: G.M.O) & that is something that no one in the world should be consuming or ingesting & should be avoided at all cost
we should eating vegetables that are naturally grown in organic gardens & not this poison the big companies call food
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
add a comment |
I have bin a chef for 35 years & have never seen slime like this on any of the thousands of green onion i have prepared until today .& anyone that tells me this is normal is lying,slime has bin & always will be a sign that the food is not eatable .
In my opinion this is another product of food engineering (AKA: G.M.O) & that is something that no one in the world should be consuming or ingesting & should be avoided at all cost
we should eating vegetables that are naturally grown in organic gardens & not this poison the big companies call food
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
add a comment |
I have bin a chef for 35 years & have never seen slime like this on any of the thousands of green onion i have prepared until today .& anyone that tells me this is normal is lying,slime has bin & always will be a sign that the food is not eatable .
In my opinion this is another product of food engineering (AKA: G.M.O) & that is something that no one in the world should be consuming or ingesting & should be avoided at all cost
we should eating vegetables that are naturally grown in organic gardens & not this poison the big companies call food
I have bin a chef for 35 years & have never seen slime like this on any of the thousands of green onion i have prepared until today .& anyone that tells me this is normal is lying,slime has bin & always will be a sign that the food is not eatable .
In my opinion this is another product of food engineering (AKA: G.M.O) & that is something that no one in the world should be consuming or ingesting & should be avoided at all cost
we should eating vegetables that are naturally grown in organic gardens & not this poison the big companies call food
answered Aug 23 '15 at 22:07
Dan AugerDan Auger
1
1
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
add a comment |
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
1
1
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
This was grown by my mom in her garden, and is completely organic :)
– Emmett
Aug 25 '15 at 0:41
2
2
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
The rant on GMO and "big companies" doesn't answer the question, does it? I suggest you take the tour and visit our help center to get a better understanding of how this site works - accusing others of lying isn't done here. We politely disagree. And I can assure you, plenty of users have seen this slime in their organic, home-grown onions. Me included.
– Stephie♦
Aug 25 '15 at 9:49
add a comment |
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@BlessedGeek: Thanks for the reassurance. I'm right in the OP's part of the world, we eat green onions more often than yellow, white, red and sweet combined, and have never seen this slime in such brightly colored ones. Maybe it's the lighting, but when I've encountered slime in green onions, it's added a grayish, duller shade.
– MargeGunderson
Nov 22 '12 at 2:53
The cells have lysed, and the cellulose covering is damaged. That leaves tasty, yummy good food out in the open where any bug or fungus that comes along can feast on it. IOW, it's a little dangerous to eat the stuff.
– Wayfaring Stranger
Feb 16 '17 at 15:28