Oscraps

Herbs - dried or fresh?

Jam-on-toast

Well-Known Member
CHEERY O
One of the things I love the most when cooking is stepping into my garden and plucking fresh basil... sure, I have a battery of dried herbs in the pantry but using fresh herbs just feels different... more sophisticated somehow... so I was wondering... do you guys grow your own herbs? Do you buy them fresh? Or dried?

I grow basil, chives and lemongrass and buy fresh mint and parsley because these two refuse to grow in my garden, but the rest I buy dried because I don't use them often enough and they too are unsuitable for the climate we live in. I also have turmeric and ginger in my garden but those are not practical to harvest for when I need a teaspoon of either, so I buy those too.
 
I usually have a bunch of fresh herbs in pots over the summer and some perennial herbs in my gardens. I grow basil- nothing like fresh basil-- as well as thyme, mint varieties, and sage. Those three are year-round. I also get a new rosemary plant every couple of years. Some years they make it through the winter and sometimes they don't. :/ I had a huge one that lasted several seasons. It was a beauty and I was devastated when it died. Currently, I have a 99.999999% dead rosemary (actually two- one I tried to overwinter indoors) and I keep peering at it, hoping it will get some new growth. It's not looking promising. :(
I dry a lot of the herbs too and usually have bunches hanging over my kitchen island.
 
buy fresh mint and parsley because these two refuse to grow in my garden,
You can't grow mint? That's wild! Not because of you--but I guess your climate is wrong for it? Much of my mint (apple, chocolate, and spearmint) are in beckets because they take over like crazy. I have "loose" mint in the ground under my rhododendron and it spreads everywhere. Every. Where. LOL
 
I have grown basil and rosemary before but I don't cook much anymore, so I just buy the dried ones.
 
You can't grow mint? That's wild! Not because of you--but I guess your climate is wrong for it? Much of my mint (apple, chocolate, and spearmint) are in beckets because they take over like crazy. I have "loose" mint in the ground under my rhododendron and it spreads everywhere. Every. Where. LOL
What's even crazier is that we had a massive bush in the other house... but after we moved it died... same weather, same sun, same city district, just a couple of blocks down the road... I have tried three times over the past 18months... it point blank refuses to grow in my new garden. EVERYTHING grows in Indonesia, most of my gardening in cut-cut-cut and then pull 3/4 of it out because the jungle is unmanageable... but mint is giving me the finger...
 
What's even crazier is that we had a massive bush in the other house... but after we moved it died... same weather, same sun, same city district, just a couple of blocks down the road... I have tried three times over the past 18months... it point blank refuses to grow in my new garden. EVERYTHING grows in Indonesia, most of my gardening in cut-cut-cut and then pull 3/4 of it out because the jungle is unmanageable... but mint is giving me the finger...
That is BONKERS!
 
I have oregano, thyme and mint in the garden. At one point I had tarragon but it threated to take over the yard so I had to dig it out. I usually have a planter on the deck with mixed herbs that don't overwinter here - basil, rosemary and chives.
 
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