
You can easily grow herbs on
the kitchen windowsill and enjoy the fragrance and flavors
of herbs in your country cooking!
Starting herb seeds
- plant your seeds in potting soil and keep moist until
they sprout. The top of the refrigerator is a nice warm
spot to sprout seedlings. Once they have sprouted, place
on a sunny windowsill and water as needed. Once they are
well established, you can cut back a bit on the water. Herbs
tend to like their soil a little dry.
(tip - you can use many cute
containers for your herbs - a cracked teapot or cup, pretty
jars, an old gravy boat, etc..)
Choosing Savory Herbs for
your windowsill garden:
Dill
- One of the all time most popular herbs. Both seeds and
leaves of dill have have sharp, slightly bitter taste. The
aromatic young branches are used to flavor salads, pickles,
vinegar, sauces, soups, stews, and chicken, lamb and fish
dishes.
Cooking: Use dried or fresh
leaves, known as dill weed, to make dill butter, flavor
broiled fish, soups, salads, meats, poultry, omelets, and
potatoes.
Coriander
- (Also called Cilantro) This easy to grow herb is similar
in appearance to parsley. Young leaves taste like dried
orange peel. Coriander is rich in vitamins A & B, calcium,
riboflavin, and niacin. Used frequently in Latin American
cooking.
Cooking: Use fresh or dried
leaves in salads and soups, serve chopped with avocados.
Great for spicy meat dishes. As seeds ripen, gather them
and use them whole or crushed on pastry, French dressing,
beans, stew, sausage, and fish.
Sweet
Basil - Basil's aromatic leaves have a warm and spicy
flavor. A must have for Italian cooking and Thai Cuisine.
Basil is known to fight toxins and aids the digestion.
Cooking: Use sparingly in tomato
dishes and sauces, green salads, omelets, cucumbers, and
with meat, poultry, fish and Stir Fry dishes.
Parsley
- Everyone knows parsley as a garnish, but it also has a
wonderful flavor. Great for almost everything from sauces
to gourmet fish dishes. It'll make an attractive, deep green,
frilly plant on your windowsill, but if you set some of
the root outside, you'll have it every year.
Cooking: Mix parsley leaves
into salads, soups, stews, casseroles, and omelets. Serve
fresh as garnish with meat, fish and onion dishes.
Chives
- An all-time favorite, this relative of the onion is great
for flavoring any dish that needs a "zing." They
improve almost any dish. The plants also reward you with
lovely purplish flowers, which are also edible!
Cooking: Chop chives and add
to salads, egg and cheese dishes, cream cheese, mashed potatoes,
hamburgers, sandwich spreads, and sauces.