How to Caramelize Onions
What are Caramelized Onions?
Caramelized onions are slowly cooked onions that transform into sweet, jammy, deeply golden strands through patient low-heat cooking. Raw onions are sharp and pungent. Caramelized onions are sweet, complex, and rich. The slow cooking breaks down the natural sugars and turns them into deep caramel flavor.
This is not sautéed onions. Caramelized onions take time – 30-45 minutes of slow, steady cooking. You can’t rush them. But the result is worth it.
Why Learn This Technique?
Caramelized onions add depth to everything. They’re essential for French Onion Soup, incredible on burgers and sandwiches, perfect stirred into pasta or risotto, and elevate any sauce or gravy. Once you know how to make them properly, you’ll use them constantly.
The technique is simple but requires patience. Low heat, occasional stirring, and time. No shortcuts.
How to Caramelize Onions
Materials
- 3 large yellow onions (about 2 lbs)
- 2 tbsp butter or olive oil (or combination)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tbsp water or wine for deglazing
- Optional: pinch of sugar (only if onions aren't sweet enough)
Instructions
- Prep the Onions: Peel onions and cut off root and stem ends. Cut onions in half from root to stem. Lay flat side down and slice into 1/4-inch thick half-moons. Consistent thickness ensures even cooking.
- Heat the Pan: Place large heavy-bottomed skillet over medium heat. Add butter or oil. Let butter melt completely or oil shimmer.
- Add Onions and Salt: Add all sliced onions to pan. Add salt. Stir to coat onions with fat. Onions will seem like a lot – they'll cook down to about 1/4 of their original volume.
- Start Cooking: Cook over medium heat for first 10 minutes, stirring every 2-3 minutes. Onions will soften and become translucent. They'll release moisture and start to reduce in volume.
- Reduce Heat: After 10 minutes, reduce heat to medium-low. This is critical – too high and onions will burn instead of caramelize. You want gentle, steady cooking.
- The Long Cook: Continue cooking 30-35 more minutes, stirring every 5 minutes. Onions will slowly turn from translucent to golden to deep brown. As they cook, they'll stick slightly to pan – this is good. The brown bits (fond) on pan bottom add flavor.
- Deglaze as Needed: When brown bits build up on pan bottom, add 1-2 tablespoons water or wine. Scrape up brown bits with wooden spoon and stir into onions. Let liquid evaporate and continue cooking. You may do this 2-3 times during cooking.
- Check for Doneness: Onions are done when deep golden brown, soft, jammy, and sweet. They should be darker than you think – pale tan onions aren't caramelized. Taste one – should be sweet with no raw onion bite.
- Cool and Store: Remove from heat. Let cool to room temperature. Store in airtight container in refrigerator up to 1 week. Or freeze in portions up to 3 months.

