Add Zing to your meals with these favourite herbs that you can grow
| Chives add flavour to salads, soups, omelettes and cheese dishes. | |
40 to 60 cm tall; tender annual that can not be planted out until early June; the perfect flavouring for tomatoes and tomato dishes; highly aromatic clove-like scent and peppery taste; young leaves are best; leaves in excess of your immediate needs can be dried or packed in jars and covered with oil. They can also be dry frozen or frozen in ice-cubes.
Bush Basil (annual)
25 cm tall; a small compact plant, good for pot and windowsill culture. This ‘picollo’ Basil is thought best for PESTO, a delectable sauce for ‘al dente’ spaghetti and other pasta.
Chives (perennial)
The chopped hollow stems add flavour to salads, soups, omelet’s and cheese dishes. The attractive flowers are worth growing for their ornamental value.
Garlic Chives
Chinese Chives (Gow Chow) (perennial)
The stems are not hollow. The attractive white flowers bloom in August and September. Garlic Chives are recommended for rock gardens or the front of perennial borders. Culinary uses are the same as regular Chives. Both Chives can be forced indoors if a dormant or resting period is provided. Pot up sections of a garden clump in September and keep in a cold place. Bring indoors in January and place in a sunny window.
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French Tarragon (tender perennial) Grows to 90 cm and needs full sun in light, well-drained soil. Famous as a flavouring for vinegar, French Tarragon is also used in marinades and sauces. With a refreshingly different flavour of mild Anise, it is the essential ingredient in béarnaise sauce.
Sage (tender perennial)
Lovage (annual)
Thyme (perennial)
Lemon Thyme (perennial)
Oregano and Marjoram (tender perennial)
Sweet Marjoram and Greek Oregano (tender perennial)
Florence Fennel (Finochio) (annual)
Sweet Fennel (annual)
Curled Parsley (annual)
Italian Parsley (annual)
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