When I worked in a pizza shop I left them soaking in cold water until I was ready to chop them and left the ones I wasn’t chopping at that moment in water. Worked great.
The match trick works pretty well: hold a wooden match between your teeth (business end sticking out). I used to know why it helps, but I’ve forgotten. I don’t think this is Dumbo’s feather—it really does seem to reduce the amount of irritation to the eyes. I always lean back a bit, too, and try not to be directly over the onion while chopping.
I went to visit my friend once and she opened the door wearing ski goggles and holding a big knife. Turns out she was making French onion soup when I arrived.
Wear contact lenses. For many years, I could cut onions without a single tear. I got Lasik surgery and cried liked a baby the first time I cut an onion.
@ru2bz46 Me too, I used to wear contacts and had no problem cutting onions, I didn’t know what the big fuss was about until I tried cutting them without my contacts in.
The underwater thing helps. So does making sure you’re using a really sharp knife. If you’re knife is a bit dull it’ll just squeeze out more juices and gases. If you’re knife is really sharp you’re disrupting less of the cell walls and releasing less gases.
This is weird but has worked:
I keep my mouth open while I cut the onions. I swear I heard somewhere that the gas from the onions will go to the first I guess “moist” area. Well if you open your mouth, your mouth will get the tear causing gas first. Now writing it out it seems ridiculous, but hey it works!
When I first became a chef I asked around and got two responses that worked for me: 1. Hold a piece of ice between your tongue and the roof of your mouth (the downside is the ice usually melts before I’m done chopping). 2. Put a small piece of onion on the top of your head (yeah, I know how weird it sounds)—I wear a bandana to cover my hair at work and just tuck a small piece inside the bandana. These two really work for me.
I saw on myth busters once that chilling an onion before you cut it slows down the crying process a little bit. I am a chef, the only thing that i think really works is to work fast, dont stand there all day breathing them in.