How To Utilize Your Garden Herbs
Thyme
Herbs are dubbed one of the easiest plants to grow in a garden or container. Here's how to grow and prepare 12 delicious herbs to add flavor to any dish.
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Basil
Basil
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Basil
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Chives
Chives
Chives are wonderfully versatile; grow them outdoors in pots or beds, or indoors as a handy flavor station near a windowsill. They do well in sun or partial sun, and their pink or lavender flowers attract butterflies.
Test Garden Tip: After plants flower, trim them back to encourage new growth.
- Learn more about growing chives.
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Chives
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How to Preserve Your Herbs
Time to harvest your outdoor herb garden? These four preservation methods will keep herbs flavorful for months.
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Dill
Dill
This pretty yellow herb is easy to grow in dry, sunny areas, and it attracts butterflies. Like other herbs, deer and rabbits tend to leave it alone. Unless you harvest all the flowers before they mature, you'll find that dill self seeds to reappear every year.
Test Garden Tip: To be sure you have a constant supply on hand, sow seeds every four weeks during the growing season.
- Learn more about growing dill.
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Dill
Braised Lamb with Dill Sauce
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Tarragon
Tarragon
Tasty tarragon will grow about 2 feet tall, and its eye-catching foliage looks great in a garden bed border. It is easy to grow and you can divide this perennial every three to four years to get more plants for free.
Test Garden Tip: Cut back flowering stems for maximum growth.
- Learn more about growing tarragon.
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Tarragon
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The tiny leaves of this shrubby plant bring an aniselike flavor to egg, fish, chicken and other meat dishes. Tarragon is also a key ingredient to the delicious French Bearnaise sauce.
Here are three great ways to use tarragon:
- Tarragon Vinegar
- Tarragon Custard
- Citrus Tea with Tarragon
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Lavender
Lavender
Lavender's soothing aroma and serene blooms combine to make for one powerfully calming herb. It thrives in heat and sun but doesn't like excessive humidity or waterlogged soil. Trim plants after flowering to foster further blooming.
Test Garden Tip: With lavender, the darker the flower, the stronger the aroma and the flavor.
- Learn more about growing lavender.
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Lavender
Lavender Shortbread Bites
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Lemon Balm
Lemon balm
Low-maintenance lemon balm performs well in a bed or container and does best in full or partial sun. It is a fantastic insect repellent -- except with bees, who love its citrus scent.
Test Garden Tip: Lemon balm is happiest in well-drained soil.
- Learn more about growing lemon balm.
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Lemon Balm
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Marjoram
Marjoram Origanum majorana
Marjoram's trailing stems are lovely in a hanging basket or spread delicately across a raised bed. In winter, it's best to bring this herb indoors; in hot summer climates a little shade in the afternoon is recommended.
Test Garden Tip: For the bushiest plant, harvest marjoram frequently during the growing season.
- Learn more about growing marjoram.
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Marjoram
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Mint
Mint
Mint is the alpha herb: strong, resilient, quick, and easy to grow in just about any space. As a result, it's also vigorously dominant, so consider planting it in pots to curtail unruly growth. For an instant whiff of cool, try gently rubbing the leaves between your fingers. Mint's refreshing aroma is strongest when leaves are cut or bruised.
Test Garden Tip: Watch for escapees into the garden if you grow it in a pot; vigorous mint roots wherever a stem touches the soil.
- Learn more about growing mint.
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Mint
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Oregano
Oregano
Also known as wild marjoram, oregano is a bit more robust and hardy than its nonwild counterpart. This herb grows well even in poor soil, and you can put it in a bed or in a window container as part of an in-house living spice rack.
Test Garden Tip: Pinch flowers from the stems to promote healthier growing.
- Learn more about growing oregano.
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Oregano
Oregano Chicken and Vegetables
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Rosemary
Rosemary
This evergreen shrub, a symbol of remembrance and friendship, prefers a hot, dry growing environment. In warm winter climates, rosemary can grow outside year-round, but in the North bring it inside during the cold months.
Test Garden Tip: Surround rosemary plants with gravel mulch to ensure soil does not become too wet.
- Learn more about growing rosemary.
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Rosemary
Grape and Rosemary Focaccia
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Sage
Sage
Sage is a wonderful deer-repelling plant that sprouts lovely blooms. It can sometimes be slow to start from seed, so consider sowing indoors and then transplanting outside.
Test Garden Tip: If you let sage bloom, cut back only to beneath where buds formed. If you cut back to the woody stem, the plants may not come back.
- Learn more about growing sage.
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Sage
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Thyme
Thyme
This Greek herb loves heat and sun and is a magnet for honeybees. The flavors of thyme are strongest when it grows in well-drained soil, so consider planting it in a raised bed or mulching with gravel.
Test Garden Tip: After plants bloom, shear off about a third of the stem.
- Learn more about growing thyme.
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Thyme
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How To Utilize Your Garden Herbs
Source: https://www.bhg.com/gardening/vegetable/herbs/grow-and-use-fresh-herbs/
Posted by: emerickthavisa.blogspot.com

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