Beyond baked potatoes and sour cream, chives
pair with egg and cheese dishes, dress up vegetables and fish. A demure
member of the onion family they grow in clumps, multiplying each year.
The purply-pink blossoms make divinely colored vinegar.
Italian parsley
is more pronounced in flavor than the curly variety. Parsley
is a team player, improving the taste of other herbs in any dish. I like
to use it by the handful. Replace it each year, or if you’re lucky
it will re-seed.
Rosemary
has a piney taste that stands up to beef, pork and chicken. Yet it stars
in herbal teas and desserts, like rosemary-shortbread cookies. Rosemary
is a perennial in zone 7 and above, and overwinters indoors in colder
climates. Dainty blue flowers are an added attraction.
Thyme’s
leaves are tiny but mighty in taste. A smoky, resinous flavor that’s
hard to describe. Roast chicken with thyme and lemon is a simple sophisticated
pleasure. At home in rock gardens as much as in herb gardens, thyme
likes well-drained soil, asking little else.
I can’t
explain why my son shuns green beans yet adores pesto. I just grow more
basil. Basil,
the essential summer herb loves hot weather. Enjoy it fresh or freeze
it for a rainy day. Snip the tips to keep it from blooming too soon.
Grow these
herbs
close to your kitchen door. The next time you find a delicious recipe
asking for herbs;
don’t trudge to the grocery store. Just step outside.
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Rhonda Fleming Hayes is a Master Gardener and contributing writer for Nature Hills Nursery. A native Californian, she has been gardening in some form or fashion since she was a child. Rhonda now writes and gardens in Kansas.
Searing heat, bitter winds and the occasional tornado just make her a smarter gardener. Borrowing from the New York, New York song; she claims if you can garden in Kansas, you can garden anywhere!
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