Onion Red

← Herb Library / Onion Red
Amaryllidaceae

Onion Red

Allium cepa
✓ Generally Safe Safe in Pregnancy
Native to: Central Asia, Iran
Also known as: Common Onion, Red Onion, Bulb Onion
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

Bulb

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Cardiovascular disease prevention, respiratory infections (raw onion syrup for cough — clinical evidence), type 2 diabetes, H. pylori, immune support. Highest quercetin source per serving.


Herbal Actions

Antioxidant (quercetin), anti-inflammatory, antiplatelet, antidiabetic, antimicrobial, mucolytic (cough syrup), cardioprotective, prebiotic (fructooligosaccharides)

🔬 Active Constituents

Quercetin (high — especially red onion), allicin (minor), organosulfides (dipropyl disulfide), flavonoids, prostaglandin A1, chromium, folic acid, vitamin C

⚗️ Preparation Methods

🍯 Syrup🏺 Tincture☕ Herbal Tea💊 Capsule

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal TeaFresh raw onion juice: 1 tbsp 3x daily for cough. Decoction: 1 onion in 500ml, simmer 20 min.
TinctureFresh extract: 5–10 ml (1:3, 25% ethanol), 3x daily. Or eat half a raw onion daily.
NotesRaw onion most potent — cooking destroys allicin. Red onion highest quercetin. Onion syrup (slice onion, cover with honey, sit overnight): traditional cough remedy with clinical backing. Quercetin absorption enhanced by cooking (freed from cell walls).

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ✓ Generally Safe
Pregnancy Safe in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions Possible — consult doctor

Contraindications: Anticoagulant effect — caution with blood thinners. IBS/FODMAP sensitivity (fructooligosaccharides). Otherwise very safe.

Side Effects: GI bloating (FODMAP content). Bad breath. Rare allergic reactions. Blood thinning. Very well tolerated as food.

← Back to Herb Library
Scroll to Top