Kitchen Cutting Herb Garden header graphic
 

Live Healthy - - - Live Longer ... Learn How!

"Discover the TRUTH about Cancer and How to Eliminate Sickness and Disease Naturally by Health Expert Dr. Thompson!"

TC Bradley
BuyWithNoCredit.com
The health benefits I've experienced has given me a new lease on life!

Kitchen Cutting Herb Garden Articles & Resources

 

Raised-box herb garden - Brief Article

Kathleen N. Brenzel

Easy-to-build wood planters provide perfect conditions for growing herbs in tight spaces

A sliver of ground with heavy clay soil was the only site left for an herb garden on a hilltop lot in cupertino, california. Yet landscape architect Jim Ripley found a way to shoehorn the garden into the space and overcome the poor soil at the same time. He designed five raised planter boxes and arranged them corner-to-corner in an inverted V formation. Filled with rich soil mix, the boxes provide the perfect drainage that herbs need.

continued below...


Sponsored Links

Herb Cutting Board With Blade -- at Shopping.com
Find, compare and buy Herb Cutting Board With Blade and other Home and Garden products. Read product reviews and compare prices with tax and shipping.

Oberle Botanical - Services: custom produce, herbs and flowers for chefs; kitchen , flower, herb and dye plant ...
We provide expert advice on creating kitchen gardens , cutting gardens , culinary and medicinal gardens , dye plant herb gardens , custom growing for chefs and plant material consulting. ... The Colorado Cutting GardenTM: For Bouquets and Crafts ... nursery or garden club, or by teaching horticultural seminars. Topics include kitchen gardens , herb gardening, container ...

My Mother's Kitchen Garden Grows Up
Mary Ann reminisces about her mother's kitchen garden . ... beets and asparagus all interspersed with her flower, cutting garden . She even experimented with peanuts one ... I grow in my California kitchen herb garden ? Although I have hundreds ...

The Culinary Herb Garden :Planting, Maintaining and Using Culinary ...
... once a year. Hopefully, you will be cutting often for the kitchen . If not, either in fall or early ... you are just starting out, our Kitchen Herb Garden Six Pack is a good way to get your ...

Hart Seed Garden Collections, Quality Vegetable, Flower, Herb Seed ...
... Bright Cutting Garden Italian Classic Dried Cut Flowers Kitchen Herbs Pastel Cutting Garden Chefs Herb Garden Perennial Cutting Bed Special Collections Children's Collections First ...

Kitchen Garden Seeds
... Coriander Cutting Celery Dill Fennel ... light, then move to the herb garden or container in good sunlight ... 2001-2005 John Scheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds, LLC. All rights ...

Kitchen Garden Seeds
... Coriander Cutting Celery Dill Fennel ... This ancient herb has been used for centuries by humans in ... 2001-2005 John Scheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds, LLC. All rights reserved ...

VIVA! Gardens - Herb Frequently Asked Questions
... turning white. It's on the kitchen windowsill, gets light, but ... of the leaf and continue cutting larger and larger crescent ... for any given vegetable or herb , your garden will likely be a great ...

Diabetic-Lifestyle: Recipes and Practical Information for Managing ...
... Gifts for the Diabetic Cook Cut the Fat Cutting Down on Salt The Mediterranean Pantry ... and Rubs Making the Most of Your Herb Garden The Kitchen Herb Garden Ways to Cut the Fat in Your Diet A Primer on ...

 

 

...continued from top
News & Top Stories

Heat index rises to danger zone
When Campbellsville High School's football squad assembled for practice Monday morning, the heat index was 90 degrees, according to Coach Herb Wiseman's meter. About 90 minutes later, the heat index was 107 and the two-hour practice was cut short.

COOKS' CORNER
Cooks and noncooks alike should grab on to the new Orbi SafeCut Can Opener from Good Cook. It's a compact manual can opener that sits atop cans -- both traditional and pop-top -- for easy use. The gadget's SafeCut wheel penetrates the bead of the can to leave both the can and the lid edges smooth.

Art Institute celebrates turn-of-the-century Montmartre
Welcome to the Moulin Rouge.

Heat index rises to danger zone
When Campbellsville High School's football squad assembled for practice Monday morning, the heat index was 90 degrees, according to Coach Herb Wiseman's meter. About 90 minutes later, the heat index was 107 and the two-hour practice was cut short.


The garden's sunny exposure and its proximity to an outdoor kitchen make it an ideal spot for growing culinary herbs, as well as compact summer vegetables and flowers for cutting.

The 4-foot-square boxes, made of redwood 4-by-6s capped with 2-by-6s, stand 20 inches tall, making it easy to harvest crops from them without stooping. Follow the construction details at left to build your boxes, then fill them with herbs drawn from the selection described on pages 90 and 91.

A cook's garden of culinary herbs

Basil. Bushy annuals, 1 to 2 feet tall, come in a variety of flavors. In addition to sweet Italian types, try spicy cinnamon basil, zesty lemon basil (Ocimum basilicum citrodorum), or pungent purple-leafed kinds like 'Dark Opal' and 'Purple Ruffles'. 'African Blue' basil (pictured at right) is a tender perennial. Use fresh leaves in pastas, pesto, salads, and soups.

Chives. Clumping perennial, 1 to 2 feet tall, with grasslike leaves bears edible rose-purple flowers in early summer. Grow onion-flavored chives (Allium schoenoprasum) or garlic chives (A. tuberosum). Use the leaves in salads and sauces, the flowers as garnishes or salad toppings.

French tarragon (Artemisia dracunculus). Upright perennial, 1 to 2 feet tall, has narrow green leaves with spicy anise flavor. Give plants sun and excellent drainage; too much fertilizer produces tender growth with little flavor. To harvest, snip out tips. Use in egg, chicken, and fish dishes, or in bearnaise sauce.

Lavender. Perennial English lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) forms mounds of gray-green foliage topped by flower spikes. Compact varieties such as . 'Munstead' (1 1/2 feet tall) and . 'Hidcote' (1 1/2 to 2 feet) fit best in raised beds. Toss the fragrant leaves on the grill to flavor meats, or steep the flowers for lemonade.

Mint. These hardy perennials, 1 1/2 to 3 feet tall, have invasive roots that can choke out less vigorous herbs, so give them their own box. Set plants 12 to 18 inches apart. In addition to familiar spearmint (Mentha spicata) and peppermint (M piperita), try apple mint (M. suaveolens), pineapple mint (. 'Variegata'), and chocolate mint. Use spearmint for cooking, others to flavor tea.

Nasturtium. Annual flowers in vivid shades of yellow or red. Dwarf kinds (to 15 inches tall) work best in raised beds. Edible blossoms and leaves add a peppery, cresslike flavor to salads.

Oregano. Bushy perennial grows 1 to 2 feet tall. Choose pungent Greek oregano (Origanum vulgare hirtum) or milder Italian oregano (O. majoricum). Use in pastas, pizza toppings, sauces, soups, and stews.

Parsley. A biennial grown as an annual, it forms 6- to 12-inch tufts. Dark green curly-leafed types make a handsome garnish; many cooks prefer the stronger flavor and smoother texture of flat-leafed Italian parsley.

Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis). Prized for its aromatic, evergreen leaves, this Mediterranean native comes in upright and trailing forms. Chefs prefer the resinous foliage of bushy, upright varieties like 'Tuscan Blue' (6 feet or taller), which bears edible bright blue flowers in winter and early spring. Use the leaves to flavor pork, lamb, and poultry. Sage. Bushy perennial reaches 1 to 2 feet tall. For the classic flavor associated with turkey stuffing, try garden sage (Salvia officinalis) or dwarf sage (S. o. minumus). More decorative varieties are golden 'Icterina' and variegated 'Tricolor'. Use in soups, stews, and poultry stuffings.

Sweet marjoram (Origanum majorana). Usually grown as a summer annual, this plant reaches 1 to 2 feet tall. Its tiny leaves are sweet with a milder flavor than Greek oregano. Use to flavor eggs, soups, herb butters, and vinegars. Thyme. Hardy perennial English thyme (Thymus vulgaris) grows about 1 foot tall; its tiny, pungent leaves add mild tang to fish, pork, poultry, and vegetables. Similar-tasting silver thyme (. Argenteus') is more ornamental but less hardy. For zesty citrus flavor (and pretty yellow-green foliage), try lemon thyme (T. citriodorus) or lime thyme.

Planting and growing tips

* Don't waste space on herbs you won't use. Put in three or four plants each of tender-leafed herbs such as basil or parsley that you use frequently. For larger woody plants like rosemary, a single plant can supply enough sprigs for years.

* For added visual appeal, combine plants by color: purple-leafed basil with 'Tricolor' sage, for example.

* With basil, French tarragon, and parsley, remove flower heads regularly so the leaves retain their best flavor. Remove flower buds from chives to encourage new leaves; use the edible blooms in salads.

* If chives, mint, or sage grow leggy, cut back to promote new growth. Replace basil and parsley every year.

Illinois Health Insurance
Impact Nutrition
Indiana Health Insurance
Indigenous Herbs Nova Scotia
Individual Herb Markers
Indoor Herb Garden
Indoor Window Sill Herb Garden
Infant Nutrition
Information On Nutrition
Institute For Integrative Nutrition
Iron Vitamin Supplements
Injectable Vitamin Supplement
John Paul And End Of Life Rules - Hydration And Nutrition
Journal Of Nutrition
Keratin Vitamin Supplement
Kids Health
Kids Nutrition
Kaizen Nutrition
Kids On Nutrition
Kiki And Herb
Kitchen Cutting Herb Garden
Kitchen Herbs
Koi Nutrition
Learn About Herb Gardening
Legal Herb
Health Vitamin home page
© 2005 Copyright www.health-vita-secrets.com