Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Pleasure And Other Benefits Of Growing Your Own Herbs

By Grahham Greener


Besides imparting flavor to food, herbs cultivated at home on your own will provide many other benefits. You will get everything you need to initiate your own herb garden from the garden center or nursery down the road, and then you'll need just a small spot of garden for planting, or even using pots will get great results. Let us examine more closely the myriad of uses and the benefits of growing your own herbs.

The most evident selling point of growing herbs is their addition to food preparation, providing flavor and color to food. They truly can be added to all sorts of meals and this can include salads and soups.

There are lots of meat dishes where herbs help to boost the overall taste and if using your own, you will know that these are freshly picked from your garden. When you test out various recipes you will add variety and new tastes to your daily meals.

Covering the ages a variety of illnesses and diseases have been successfully treated with herbs, many of which are credited with curative powers. Many natural remedies are available for various health complaints which are easily obtained with a bit of exploration.

Teas and tinctures can be made from either fresh or dried herbs, poultices and creams can also be produced and be applied on to the skin in affected areas. If you find it hard to fall asleep, take camomile to calm and soothe you into a peaceful slumber, while if an upset stomach is your issue then the way to settle it is with peppermint tea.

When your herbs have grown to maturity you can continue to reap benefits by cutting or picking and drying them. Utilize them as you did the fresh variety, in teas and as a culinary flavorant.

The primary benefit of this is the pleasant aromatic aroma of the dried herbs. A handful of dried lavender tied with twine and strung from a kitchen ceiling offers an attractive countryside feel and provides the lovely lavender color and scent.

It doesn't matter if you just have a small garden, herbs are very easily grown at home even with confined space. The way mint flourishes in pots proves that pots tend to be very good for growing herbs in.

If growth is not contained it will swiftly cover other plants with its energetic growth. When grown inside a pot, however, this inclination is well controlled. Of course, herbs, like any other plants grown in receptacles, do require regular watering.

Growing your personal herbs is yet another great way of getting children involved in gardening as it can be cheap and easy to do. This may also get your children interested in cooking by adding the herbs they have grown to dishes and helping them to explore different flavors.

An excellent way to introduce children to cultivating herbs is to help them to sow some cress seeds from a carton and watch them grow on a windowsill. It's easy and quick to grow and can be good fun to cut and delicious to add to their food.

One can find a myriad of good arguments for starting a herb garden, and the earlier you start the sooner you will enjoy the rewards.




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