In between trips to Michigan, I tend to my 5,000 square foot garden. It's one of my passions, and lately, a huge stress reliever. I returned home last week to a garden bursting with fresh herbs; a nice surprise, to be sure! The herbs have been doing well so far this year. It's been great! It's funny, though, I rarely think to go out to the garden and get fresh herbs for cooking. I'd love to use fresh basil in Italian dishes, if only I could eat Italian food! I'd make myself a tomato, basil, and mozzarella pizza...add fresh basil to chicken pasta...throw basil into spaghetti sauce...but alas, it's not to be right now. I'm focusing on the next best thing, though: drying fresh herbs! Think about how often you use oregano, thyme, sage, parsley, et cetera for your cooking every day. Now, think of how awesome it would be to have a whole jar full whenever you need it, and think of how great it would be to know exactly where those dried herbs came from. If I can do this, YOU can do this! It's so easy. I'll show you just how easy it is! Follow me!
So, here's what you'll need:
Twine
Sharp scissors (these are the special herb-cutting scissors I use, click
here for a link, and no, I don't get any money for the link)
Herbs cut from your garden or patio pots
Ornament hooks or clothes pins
First things first: cut your herbs. Try to do it when there isn't much dew on the plants.
Next, bring them inside. Here I have three kinds of herbs: flat-leaf parsley, oregano, and basil.
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Freshly cut from the garden. |
Work with one type of herb at a time. Check each stem for bugs. Trust me. I found a snail and a green worm in my herbs. Remove said bugs by whatever means pleases you.
Arrange in bundles of about the same length. Rinse with water to remove dirt. Place on a cloth or paper towel in a single layer and pat dry as best you can.
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Oregano--these were really tall, so I cut them in half before washing and bundling them. |
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Pat excess water with towels, as best you can. They won't be completely dry. |
Bundle and tie with a long piece of twine. Be sure to tie tightly, because as the herbs dry, they will shrink. Do not bundle too many sprigs together--it'll take longer to dry out if the bundle is too large. Tie a hanging loop on one end of the twine.
Lather, rinse, repeat (metaphorically speaking), until all herbs have been washed, patted dry, and tied together.
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All tied up and ready to be dried |
Find a good place to hang your herbs. I hang mine in the basement on the same shelves that I use to start my seedlings, near a dehumidifier, but you could hang them in a barn or garage, someplace airy but not too dusty. Hang them with plenty of space for air to circulate around them and allow them to dry.
Leave them be for a month or two. No need to do anything to them. I've seen that there are some people who have success drying herbs in their ovens, but I haven't tried that...yet.
Once they are dry, you'll crush them. We'll cover that in part 2...click
here!
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