Home and Garden Advice
Search:
spacer
spacer
spacer

spacer


Appliances
Awnings and Conservatories
Baby Nursery
Basements
Bathrooms
Building a Home
Buying a Home
Cabinets
Carpet and Flooring
Ceiling Fans
Christmas Decorating
Clocks
Closet Organizers
Composting
Concrete
Curtains
Decks Patios and Gazebos
Decorating
DIY Home Improvement Links
Do It Yourself
Doors Windows and Shutters
Drywall and Plaster
Electrical
Fences and Fencing
Fireplaces and Chimney
Fountains and Waterfalls
Furniture
Gardening
Getting Organized
Greenhouses
Hardwood Flooring
Hiring a Contractor
Home & Building Inspections
Home Cooling
Home Heating and Cooling
Home Improvement and Maintenance
Home Insurance
Home Safety
Home Security
Home Theatre
Home Values
Hot Tubs and Saunas
Insulation
In The Backyard
Interior Decorating
Kitchens
Landscaping
Lawn Care
Log Homes
Money Saving Tips
Mortgages Loans & Financing
Outdoor Projects
Painting
Pest Control
Plumbing
Ponds and Water Features
Power Tools
Real Estate
Roofing
Roofers and Roofing Repair
Selling a Home
Sheds and Outbuildings
Siding
Solar Power
Spas
Surround Sound
Swimming Pools
Tools
Utilities
Water Conservation
Water Leaks and Mold
Window Blinds
Woodworking

Newest Articles
Most Popular Articles
spacer
spacer
Previous PageHomepage

Culinary Herb Gardening



There is nothing more pleasing than walking right outside your kitchen door and finding all the spices you'll need for a tasty and fresh dinner. How about picking a bit of rosemary for those lamp chops, or cutting a bit of that fresh dill for that flounder you're baking, or pulling some fresh oregano leaves to add to that spaghetti sauce or snipping some fresh basal for a tomato, mozzarella cheese and basal salad. The availability of fresh herbs can add a real kick to your ordinary dishes and turn them into something special. Fresh herbs are also likely to help you boost your imagination in the kitchen.

One of the best things about an herb garden is that you don't need to be a gourmet cook to enjoy it, and it can be grown without a huge amount of space. Some people only grow three or four different types of herbs. If you are an apartment or condo dweller you can plant your herbs in a window box or in strawberry pots. You should know that herbs generally don't survive the winter outside left in plastic window boxes and pots. Their roots will freeze. If you have enough light inside you may be able to winter them inside, but they are


so inexpensive it's easier to start a box again in the spring.

Most herbs are very easy to grow and do well with little care. They also become fuller and produce more the more you use them. Most herbs are perennial plants, meaning that when they are planted in the ground they will come back year after year. As your plants mature and get older you may need to start thinning them out.

Another fun thing to do with your herbs is to dry them to use during the winter. You can carefully cut bunches of herbs, trying not to disturb their leaves, and hang them inside to dry. The herbs are best cut mid day, when it has been very dry outside. Once they are dry they can be stored in zip lock bags in a dry and dark area. You will not want to crumble the leaves until you use them.

When you cook with herbs you will find that if you use fresh herbs you'll need to use more than you would of dried herbs. This is because dried herbs tend to have a stronger flavor.
About the Author

This article provided courtesy of http://www.gardening-answers.com

Related Articles

Acid Loving Plants
Growing Acid Loving Plants Growing azaleas, rhododendrons, blueberries, holly, pieris, heather, and other plants that love acidic and organisc soils. One of my fond memories of being 12 was catching my first shad. Each spring the shad...

Real Estate: Financial Considerations $$$
Raw land as opposed to improved property is much more difficult to finance through traditional lenders. The main reasons are that it generates very little income, development costs can be expensive, there are no buildings or improvements that...

Caring For And Planting A Balled In Burlap Christmas Tree
Tis the season when lots of people drag a real tree into their house and decorate it. Some people buy live trees that are balled in burlap instead of a cut tree. A live tree is a great idea, but many people make serious mistakes when it comes to...

 

spacer
Home and Garden Advice
spacer
Website © Copyright 2006 Home and Garden Advice.com | Contact
spacer