Edible Maryland Native plants: Allium cernuum – Nodding Onion
Edible Maryland Native Plants
Allium cernuum – Nodding Onion
Allium cernuum – nodding wild onion, is an edible native plant which occurs primarily in rocky soils on glades, bluff edges, open woods and slopes in the Ozark region of the State. Plants typically grow 12-18” tall. Features clumps of flat, narrow, grass-like leaves and tiny bell-shaped, pink to lilac pink (occasionally white) flowers which appear in loose, nodding clusters (umbels) atop erect, leafless scapes rising slightly above the foliage. Wild nodding onion is distinguished from most other native alliums by the fact that its scapes crook sharply downward at the top just below the flower so that the flower umbel nods. Blooms in summer.
All parts of this plant have an onion smell when cut or bruised and are a delightful foraged edible. Grows easily in average, dry to medium, well-drained soil. Best in full sun but appreciates some light afternoon shade in hot summer climates. Best in sandy loams, but tolerates clay. Plants will naturalize by self-seeding and bulb offsets in optimum growing conditions. Deadhead flowers before seed sets to help control any unwanted spread. Foliage persists past flowering into late summer before dying back.