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Homemade Onion Powder – 101 Cookbooks


Making homemade onion powder is a labor of love. It’s for anyone who can’t stand to throw away the vibrant, unruly tops of spring onions you’ll find at many farmers’ markets this time of year. Instead of tossing those leaves, consider turning them into a powder, it will shift your perception of what onion powder can be. You don’t need a dehydrator, just a bit of patience to chase any dirt or grit hiding in tubular-shaped onion tops.

Prepping  the onion greens is a bit of a chore, but the resulting powder is so much more flavorful and nuanced compared to store-bought versions. 
ingredients for making onion powder on a counter with a mortar and pestle

How To Make Homemade Onion Powder

This recipe doesn’t require a dehydrator, although an oven with a convection setting works well. Here are the basic steps.
a bunch of spring onions with green tops intact
I typically start with onions that look something like the ones pictured above.  Lots of greens that I don’t want to throw away – so much flavor in there!
onion tops for making onion powder
Preparation: Trim the green parts away from the rest of the onion. I like the floppiest parts for this recipe and technique, nothing with too much structure. I use those sturdier parts for other things like salads, or in soups, etc.
onion greens cleaned and drying on a kitchen towel
Clean: The tube shape of the onion tops is good at hiding dirt and grit. You want to split each of them all the way up and give everything a good rinse. You can see above, post-rinse, drying on clean kitchen towels to absorb any residual water. You want everything to go into the oven as dry as possible.
onion tops cleaned and arranged in a single layer on a sheet pan
Bake: Above you can see the onion tops arranged on a baking sheet just prior to baking. Attempt to minimize overlapping. You can see (below) the transformation that happens over the baking process. You want to bake until everything is brittle and crushable.
onion tops on a sheetpan after baking
Crush into powder:  You can crush the onions into a powder a number of ways: use your fingers, a mortar and pestle, or a blender. I typically use a mortar and pestle, it delivers a fine grind and the cleanup is easier than using a blender.
dehydrated baked onion before being crushed into a powder
You can see how much the onion collapses into the powder below. My advice is to always bake as many onion tops as your oven or sheet pans can handle while you’re at it.
onion powder after being crushed in a mortar and pestle

How to Use Homemade Onion Powder

The ideas here are literally endless. Swap your homemade version in for any recipe that calls for onion powder. It’s a great finishing touch as well. Some other favorite ways to use it. There are so many!

  • Combine onion powder along with lots of chopped fresh herbs in a compound butter. Then slather on the popovers we talked about a few weeks ago.
  • As a finishing touch on these poke bowls.
  • Sprinkled on simple hard-boiled eggs as part of a feel-good lunch.
  • I like to make a version of these oven fries where I skip the paprika, and then sprinkle the fries with a LOT of homemade onion powder as soon as they come out of the oven. So good along with the hot garlic.
  • Do an onion-forward twist on this furikake. Do a more rustic, more flaky crush of your powder for this.
  • Use it to season homemade labneh.
  • Level up your homemade bouillon powder, this recipe uses 3 tablespoons of onion powder.
  • This onion powder is magic on a baked potato after a dollop of sour cream or salted yogurt.
  • If you love a wedge salad, use it to level up your ranch dressing
  • Sprinkled on my fave vegan chili.

I could keep going, but you get the idea. Make it, use it!
homemade onion powder in a glass jar

How To Store Homemade Onion Powder

You can store onion powder in an airtight container for a month or so. I keep mine on the counter so it is top of mind. This way I use it quickly.

Tips and Tricks

If you want a less rustic, more fine powder, after initially grinding into a powder, sift through a sieve. You can dust the tops of dishes the same way you would do with sifted powdered sugar.

More Homemade Spice Blends

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