Herb Gardening
Herb gardening is becoming more and more popular every
day, and for a good reason. Herbs have
practical value, serve a purpose, and with herb gardening you can actually use
your plants. When most people think of
herb gardening they automatically think of cooking, but herbs are also grown
for their pleasant aroma and their beauty.
One important part of herb gardening is drying the
herbs for use during the winter months, especially if you plan on cooking with
them. First the tops of leafy herbs have
to be cut, washed, and hung up for the water to evaporate. Then, tie stems together and hang up in a
paper bag to dry. After two to three
weeks they must be removed; crumble the leaves, dry them out in the oven, and
store in a glass jar.
One of the most common herbs gown in herb gardening is
basil. “Dark Opal” and regular green
basil are beautiful additions to any garden and often used as decoration. Dark Opal has light pink flowers and dark red
leaves. Basil isn’t just used for its looks;
it is used for extra flavor in tomato juices and pastes.
Chives are very petite looking and resemble a blade of
grass. They are much stronger than they
look, however, and will grow well through a drought and a drought. Their toughness and sturdiness makes Chives a
perfect plant for herb gardening, especially if the gardener doesn’t want
plants that require a lot of hassle.
Chives are good used in salads, egg dishes, and many different sauces.
Mint is also very simple to grow and is good to use in
mint jelly, mint juleps, lemonade, and any other kind of fruity drink. Mint is also good in herb gardening for its
unique minty smell. Two herbs that
appear in nearly everyone’s herb garden are thyme and sage. Both of these herb gardening favorites are
used for flavoring soups, chicken, turkey, pork, and other sausages. Sage is also grown sometimes for its
beautiful blue spiked flowers.
Lavender is probably the best smelling herb in all of
herb gardening and is often used in candles, as a perfume scent, and to improve
the smell in linen chests. The light
purple flowers smell absolutely lovely.
Other types of herbs often grown in herb gardening
include borage (used in salads), chervil (used in egg dishes), sweet marjoram
(flavors lamb, fish, salad, and soup), sesame (flavors crackers, cookies, and
bread), and dill (flavors meats and used in pickles). Herb gardening allows gardeners to use herbs
from their own garden for cooking, looks, and smell. Herb gardening will produce much fresher
herbs with more flavor than store-bought herbs, and are a lot cheaper.
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