Cooking Tip: Dried Herbs
When the days are getting wetter, some herbs in your Kitchen Garden might not like it very much. It’s especially the case with rosemary and thyme; both like a dry soil.
So, it’s the ideal thyme to cut the remaining sprigs of rosemary and thyme from your little bushes, leaving a few leaves on the stalks, so they grow again.
Mint is not as wary of rain (or even frost), but it’s nice to have dried mint to make tea with...
Once you have picked your herbs, pat them dry on paper towels, and gather them in little bouquets. Tie well with kitchen twine, and hang upside down in a warm place -the kitchen is perfect for that.
Your herbs will dry in 5 to 10 days.
Then, you can use Dried Herbs to cook, in stews and soup, or to make herbal teas....



















