Onions, onions, onions. What's the deal with all the slicing, 
dicing, chopping, mincing, and sobbing? Let's look at all the many ways 
to cut an onion!
The great onion! It seems like one of these 
little guys is constantly at the base of, like, every dish. There's so 
much flavour! But why all the slicing, dicing, chopping, mincing, and 
crying? Let's take a look at anything onion-related.
Also, 
there's a hot tip alert. Please bear in mind that an onion already has 
some pre-cut slices for you, so we'll take advantage of that! Some ways 
may have instructed you to slice horizontally, but slicing horizontally 
through a slippery vegetable with a very sharp knife creeping under your
 fingers and heading TOWARDS your body...feels a little out of control. 
Also, those cutbacks are already in place!
Onion Cutting Techniques
This
 is perhaps the most popular way to cut an onion, whether you want a 
rough chop, an even dice, or a delicate mince. Fortunately, they all 
begin similarly. Prepare your tear ducts, we're about to begin!
Divide in half. Turn the onion on one of its flat ends and chop it down the centre.
Trim
 the tail. Trim one end of the onion and leave the other as a handle. 
(You could slice both ends, but doing so keeps the onion half intact.)
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Take off the skins. Remove the onion's outermost layer if the skin does not come off readily.
Cut
 the onion into slices. Place one large, flat cut-side down onion half 
on your cutting board. Make even vertical slices against the grain, thin
 or thick depending on the amount of the chop you want, without slicing 
all the way through your "handle" end so the pieces stay together.
Chop
 and turn! Gently squeeze the onion while holding the handle end to 
assist secure your vertical slices and make rather equally spaced slices
 through your original cuts. Those cubes will begin to tumble onto your 
board, giving you a beautiful harsh chop! Then do the same with the 
other half.
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