GREEN PATCH
For the Beginner
June/July 1998
By Rita Buchanan
Use those herbs
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Question: My first herb garden is thriving. How do I use all
these herbs I’m harvesting? Can you suggest some ways I can add
more herbs to my cooking that my children won’t object to? (They
complain about green flakes.)
Answer: Sprinkling flakes of herbs into food as you cook is only
one of many ways to use herbs. Here are some other ideas.
For soups, stews, spaghetti sauce, and other simmered foods, try
packaging the herbs so that you can lift them out before serving.
Gather the stems of fresh herbs into a bundle and tie it firmly
with string. Put dried herbs, which crumble easily, in a tea ball
or muslin tea bag, or tie them into a small square of cheesecloth
or nylon panty hose.
Simmer herbs with soup bones and vegetables, or with vegetables
alone, then strain the broth to use in soups, sauces, or
casseroles, or for cooking rice or pasta.
Pour boiling water over herbs, let it stand for a few minutes as
though brewing tea, then strain it and use it for cooking
vegetables or pasta, poaching fish, or as the liquid when making
bread.
Add a pinch of herbs to the water in the bottom of the pan when
you’re steaming vegetables or other food.
When grilling foods, put a few stems (fresh or dried) of
rosemary, thyme, savory, oregano, or marjoram on the coals to
produce fragrant smoke. Tie fresh stems of those herbs and/or
parsley, basil, or tarragon to a chopstick, and use this herb brush
for basting meat and vegetables as you grill them or roast or broil
them in the oven.
Prepare herb-flavored vinegars and oils, following printed
recipes or experimenting with your own combinations of ingredients.
Simply fill a clean glass jar with fresh herbs, cover them with
cider vinegar or wine vinegar or with olive oil or other cooking
oil, put on the lid, set the jar aside for a few weeks, then strain
out the herbs and rebottle the vinegar or oil. Store flavored
vinegars at room temperature but refrigerate flavored oils. (Don’t
include fresh garlic in flavored oils that you expect to keep
longer than a few days, as it can spoil even when refrigerated.)
Sprinkle herb-flavored vinegar on steamed vegetables, add it to
soups and sauces, or use it in marinades. Herb-flavored oil is
also good in marinades, as well as for stir-frying, basting roasted
meats and vegetables, and drizzling over potatoes or pasta. Use it
as the fat in muffin and other bread recipes. Combine an herbed
vinegar with an herbed oil to make a savory salad dressing with no
objectionable flakes. Add salt and pepper to taste.