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Seven new varieties of Vidalias added this year

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Posted 6:52AM on Monday 23rd December 2002 ( 22 years ago )
ALBANY - Chilly temperatures and plant diseases have delayed the planting of Georgia&#39;s sweet Vidalia onion crop, but there&#39;s also some good news about the ballyhooed bulbs. <br> <br> Growers had the option of choosing from seven new varieties during the current planting season, which runs from November through December. <br> <br> It takes a special onion to meet the sweet Vidalia standards. <br> <br> The new ones survived years of testing. They were grown experimentally, subjected to chemical analysis, poked and measured and they had to pass the ultimate test a panel of scientifically trained taste testers. <br> <br> University of Georgia scientists and crop specialists test about 30 onions a year at the 25-acre Vidalia Onion and Vegetable Research Center, which straddles the Tattnall and Toombs County line in the heart of onion country. <br> <br>

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