Spring Herbs in a Culinary Herb Garden

May 7th, 2010

Spring came early here in southern Ontario, and I’ve been harvesting herbs from my kitchen herb garden since the first week of April when the chives were less than two inches tall.  I can never wait.

Over the past month, I’ve made numerous omelets with chives, garlic chives, and overwintered parsley.  I’ve snipped fresh tarragon from my culinary herb garden for salad dressings, and sprinkled chopped fresh oregano over pizza.  I’ve added young delicate fennel fronds, salad burnet sprigs, and sorrel leaves to my salads.

And, all this is possible because I have a small herb garden in my backyard.

If you live in an area where the winters are cold and snowy, spring is one of the most exciting times when you grow a culinary herb garden.

The first garden herbs of spring offer up such a relief from the winter drudgery.  The green growth is a sight for sore eyes, and the delicate new herb leaves are sweet and tender.  This is the perfect time to add variety and flavor to salads, salad dressings, and to sprinkle fresh herbs onto prepared dishes.

When planning your herb garden, make sure you include herbs that survive the winter to provide the garden’s first taste of spring.

Spring herb garden salads add a vibrant burst of taste to your meals.  Pick whatever mix of herbs you have growing in your garden, and toss them together to create an herb salad.  It’s wonderful with a simple vinaigrette or light fruity dressing.

Toss in some fresh or dried fruit for added interest.  Crumbled goat cheese also complements young herbs.  Each week, the herb salad changes based on the latest herbs that pop up from their winter sleep.  If you find the flavor too strong, mix the herbs with lettuce or spinach leaves.

While you’re out pulling those pesky dandelions, toss the dandelion leaves into your salad too.  Just make sure the area has not been treated with herbicide or pesticide chemicals.

Today, I noticed cilantro volunteers have popped up throughout a garden bed meant for annuals.  Next week, I’ll be enjoying young cilantro greens in my salad or guacamole before the annuals go in.

What are you doing with your spring herbs?

Enjoy your spring herb garden,
Barb, Herb Garden Gal

Copyright © 210 www.HerbGardenGal.com.  All rights reserved.

Starting Your Culinary Herb Garden From Seed

March 24th, 2010

There may be times when you want to start herbs for your kitchen herb garden from seed.

Sometimes, it’s the only way to grow the herb variety you really want.  Either because the herb is offered by a seed company in seed form only.  Or it’s a prized variety grown by a relative or friend.

Growing herbs from seed is also economical if you grow more than a couple of plants of a particular herb. For the cost of a nursery plant, you can purchase a packet of seeds and grow dozens of plants for your culinary herb garden.

Even if you add the cost of potting mix for starting seeds indoors, you end up ahead.  You can save money on starter pots by using small plastic containers such as yogurt containers, and punching holes in the bottom of them for drainage.

Herbs that are easy to start from seed:  basil, chervil, chives, cilantro/coriander, dill, fennel, parsley, salad burnet.

Starting herbs from seed is relatively easy.  You can either,
1.  Direct sow your herb seeds into your garden, or
2.  Sow your herb seeds in small starter pots, then transplant young plants to your garden.

1.  Direct sowing your herb seeds.

Plant your herb seeds directly where they will be growing in your culinary herb garden, whether it be a one-herb pot, large pot with multiple herbs, or a garden bed.

Advantages of planting your herb seeds directly where they will grow are:

  • It’s less work than transplanting your herb plants down the road
  • You can achieve a natural effect in your culinary herb garden by scattering the herb seeds throughout your herb garden — dill, leafy fennel and cilantro are particularly adept herbs for scattering throughout a garden.
  • Herbs can be easily incorporated in any culinary vegetable garden.  My dad was an avid gardener, and he always grew dill weed amongst the cucumber plants.
  • The young roots are not disturbed, so the herb plants that grow should continue to grow and thrive — no transplant shock.

2.  Sow your herb seeds in starter pots.

Advantages of planting your herb seeds in starter pots, then transplanting them :

  • You can get a head start on the growing season.  First tomatoes on the block?  How about the first basil on the block to go with those tomatoes!
  • Herbs that take long to sprout and grow into sizeable plants can be started indoors and transplanted to your culinary herb garden when the weather warms up.
  • You can plant the young herbs where you want them.  Tuck a few herbs in-between other plants in a kitchen garden, or arrange them neatly in a more formal garden setting.
  • If you are creating a potted arrangement, young herb plants provide instant visual appeal.

There’s nothing like the faith of putting a small seed in the ground, and the satisfaction of raising that small seed into a healthy, thriving plant!  Enjoy the journey, and let me know how it goes!

Warm wishes,  
Barb – Herb Garden Gal

Copyright © 2010 www.HerbGardenGal.com  All rights reserved.

How To Choose Healthy Herb Plants At The Garden Center

March 5th, 2010

You’ve decided on the herbs you want to grown in your herb garden.  Now, it’s time to go shopping.

Here’s what to look for to ensure you buy the healthiest herb plants at your local garden center.

1.  Choose lush and perky herb plants — be sure to stay away from wilted herb plants.  Wilted herb plants are stressed and may not grow well when you bring them home.

2.  Choose herb plants with healthy green foliage, and few to no brown leaves.  Herb plants with yellowing leaves, large numbers of brown leaves, or leaves with dry brown edges should be avoided.

3.  Choose the shorter bushy herbs, rather than the tall lanky herbs.  The tall herbs may have grown lanky reaching for sunlight, and are not as strong as their stocky cousins.

4.  Avoid overgrown herb plants — the ones with lots of floppy foliage spilling over the edges of the pot.  These plants are tempting, because they often appear lush and healthy.  Problem is, they’ve overgrown the pot and the plants may have difficulty adapting to their new environment when you transplant them to your garden.

Be especially cautious of full grown dill, cilantro, and basil herb plants, as they may be close to sending up flower spikes, which will drastically shorten your enjoyment time of the herb.

5.  Avoid pot-bound herb plants.  Check the bottom of the pot.  If there is a mass of roots growing out the bottom of the pot, or wrapped around the bottom of the pot, the herb plant has overgrown the pot, and has a slimmer chance of growing well when you get it home.

6.  Avoid herb plants with signs of disease, or insect damage.  Tell-tale signs are:  mottled dying foilage, holes in the leaves, black areas or spots on the foliage or stems, moldy looking leaves, sticky leaves or stems, leaves that are curling and turning yellow.  Check both the top of the plant, and the undersides of the leaves for damage, and insects.

Be especially careful if you are purchasing the herb plant to be grown indoors.  Any pest brought into your home will multiply quickly and also spread to your other indoor plants.

Enjoy your herb garden shopping trip!

Warm wishes from the Herb Garden Gal,
Barb

PS – Leave a quick comment and share your herb shopping adventures.

Copyright © 2010 www.HerbGardenGal.com  All rights reserved.

Four Quick-Start Steps To Enjoying Your First Herb Garden

February 26th, 2010

There is nothing more satisfying than stepping outside and snipping fresh herbs from your garden, to use in your favorite dish or toss into a salad.

Follow these four quick-start steps and you will be enjoying fresh herbs from your garden in no time at all.

1.  Plant 3 or 4 herbs to start with. Yes, start small!  It’s easy to get overwhelmed and give up if you plant too many herbs and you find you can’t take care of them.

2.  Plant the herbs you use most often. What fresh herbs do you buy when you grocery shop?  Better to snip fresh herbs from your garden, than settle for wilted herbs that turn slimy in the refrigerator after a couple of days.

3.  Plant young herbs purchased from your garden center, or a reputable mail order herb supplier. They are much easier to start with, and you will have herbs for snipping much sooner.  When shopping for herb plants, buy healthy looking plants that are bushy and look comfortable in the pot they’re in.

4.  Plant your herbs soon after you get them home. An herb garden can be planted quickly and easily in a tiny plot of dirt or a few pots — 12 inch wide pots work well.

When I started my first herb garden, I grew Italian flat-leaf parsley, chives, and cilantro.  The parsley grew nicely, the chive plants produced awesome chives for years, and the cilantro bolted to seed before I got much use of it.

I’d love to know what you planted in your first herb garden, and how it worked out for you.  Take a moment and leave me a comment.

Warm wishes,
Barb

Hello world!

December 3rd, 2009

Hello World!  Herb Garden Gal Here!

I love herbs.  Growing them, smelling their wonderful perfumes, and cooking with them.

Through this blog, I’ll share with you what I’ve learned over the past 20 years, my faux pas, my successes, so you too can enjoy growing herbs for years to come!

And I look forward to hearing your stories, your adventures with growing and cooking with herbs.

Happy growing,
Herb Garden Gal