Tropea, Vibo Valentia province, Calabria. The Tropea coastline's sandy, well-drained soil and specific microclimate produce the sugar accumulation that makes this onion unique. IGP status granted in 2020.
The Tropea red onion (IGP) is one of the most celebrated vegetables in Calabria — a large, flat, intensely sweet red onion grown along the Tyrrhenian coast near Tropea with a sugar content higher than most onions and a very mild sulphur compound profile. Raw, it can be eaten like an apple. In the kitchen, it is used raw in salads (just sliced, dressed with oil and salt), caramelised into a marmalade (marmellata di cipolle), grilled whole, roasted with tuna and olives, or incorporated into pasta sauces. The specific technique for caramelising Tropea onions creates one of the best condiments in Calabrian cooking.
Caramelised Tropea onion tastes almost of brown sugar, with a mild, sweet-savoury character and a deep red-purple colour. Raw, it has a crunch and sweetness with only a ghost of onion sharpness. There is no aggressive sulphur bite — it is the gentlest of all Italian alliums and the most versatile as both a raw and cooked ingredient.
The low sulphur content means Tropea onions can be cooked at lower temperatures without the sharpness that regular onions produce when partially cooked. For the marmalade: slice thin, cook in olive oil over low heat for 40-60 minutes with salt, a splash of red wine vinegar, and sugar — the onion collapses into a glossy, sweet-sour jam with an intense purple-red colour. For grilling: leave whole, unwrap the outer skin, cut in half lengthwise, brush with oil, and grill cut-side down over charcoal until completely caramelised on the surface. The natural sugars produce an extraordinary caramel.
Cipolla rossa di Tropea marmalade is a versatile condiment: serve with grilled meats, aged cheese (Pecorino Crotonese is the Calabrian pairing), or stir into pasta with tuna and capers for a quick sauce. The raw onion, sliced into rounds and dressed only with olive oil and flaky salt, demonstrates why the Tropea onion is worth seeking out.
Substituting regular red onion — standard red onions are sharper and less sweet; the dish requires the specific Tropea variety or the closest available sweet red onion. Rushing the caramelisation — the onion's sugar must caramelise fully, which requires at least 40 minutes over low heat. Not using vinegar in the marmalade — the acid balances the sweetness.
Slow Food Editore, Calabria in Cucina; Giorgio Locatelli, Made in Italy