Harvesting And Preserving Herbs
September is an excellent month to cut and preserve herbs intended for
winter use in seasoning various dishes. They are best when dried fresh and
lose their quality as they age. Herbs can also provide creative, tasteful
alternatives to salt for those on a salt-free diet. Others may be trying
to reduce and salt often causes water retention. So do yourself a flavor -
through the skillful use of herbs and spices, imaginative flavors can be
created and simple foods made into gourmet delights.
Herbs and spices differ only in that herbs tend to be plants grown in
temperate areas while spices grow in tropical regions. Many people prefer
to grow their own herbs, just as their grandmothers did, so they will have
a fresh supply throughout the growing season, thereby assuring top
quality. Professional cooks prefer fresh herbs, if available. But fresh
herbs are less concentrated, and two to three times as much should be used
if a recipe calls for dried herbs.
If growing herbs for drying, the harvesting should be done in the
morning after the dew has evaporated but before the sun is very bright.
The essential oils in herbs will evaporate into the atmosphere during the
day, so it is important to collect them when their flavor is at its peak.
Cut only the amount to be used in one day.
The herbs should be dried in bunches or laid on screens in a warm,
dark, well-ventilated spot. An attic is ideal, although closets or dry
basements will suffice. The temperature should not be over 90 degrees. If
it's too hot, the herbs will cook. The length of time required for drying
will vary according to the thickness of the plant parts.
Herbs should be stored away from direct sunlight to prevent bleaching.
Be sure they're well labeled. Most dried herbs will keep for at least one
year in glass or plastic containers, but eventually they lose most of
their potency and should be discarded.
Herb Sugars And Crystallized Herbs
Madelene Hill preserves the flavors of some of the sweeter herbs in
sugar. The flavors blend and make lovely, subtle combinations to use
instead of regular sugar in any cold food. Rose and lemon-scented
geraniums, lemon verbena, or orange and lemon zest are particularly good
to use in herb sugars.
You can pack fresh herb leaves in granulated white sugar in airtight
containers. Stir every day to prevent clumping. After the sugar stays dry
and loose, remove the leaves before they become crumbly, and use the
finished 'herb sugar' in iced teas or desserts. Note: The aromatic oils
bake off, so they don't work well in baked or cooked dishes.
To make herbs into syrups to add to iced tea or lemonade or bake into
custards or other desserts, Madelene Hill recommends putting a handful of
herb branches in a simmering sugar syrup; remove them when the herbs lose
their color and the syrup is fragrant. The syrup is ready to use right
away.
American colonists, who couldn't run to the store to buy candy when
they had a sweet tooth, made their own sweet treats out of herbs. They
candied young angelica stems and ginger, preserving the herb and bringing
out its flavor with a crystal sugar shell. Although these may not replace
modern candies, they are wonderful to use as dessert garnishes or edible
decorations on cakes and pastries.
Cookbooks of the 1700s recommended this process for candied angelica.
Harvest young angelica stems and boil them until tender. Peel off the
fibrous strings and simmer the stems again until they become very green.
Dry the stems and weigh them; add a pound of double-refined (very finely
textured) sugar to each pound of angelica stems. Let the combination stand
for two days, then boil the blend until it becomes clear. Drain off the
syrup. Spread another pound of refined sugar over the angelica, set the
stems on glass plates, and let them dry in a warm place.
Violets and rose petals are even easier to candy. Brush a little egg
white all over each flower and dip it in superfine or powdered sugar. Let
the sugar dry into a clear coating, and store in an airtight container.
Salting Herbs
You can dry herbs in salt and use the flavored salt to season your
foods. Salt draws moisture from herbs and at the same time absorbs some of
their essential oils. It works best with thin-leaved herbs such as savory,
rosemary, marjoram, dill, tarragon, and thyme, but it can be satisfactory
with most large-leaved herbs such as basil if you use fewer leaves and
more salt. Here is how you dry herbs in salt.
Harvest the herbs you want to use, either a single type or a blend of
complementary herbs. Wash them and dry them well with a thick towel. Then
remove any thick stems or inedible parts. Chop the herbs up finely if you
intend to use the salt and herb blend directly for seasoning. Now take a
container of non-iodized or kosher salt and an airtight container such as
a canning jar or freezer container. Put a 1/4-inch layer of salt in the
bottom. Then sprinkle on a thin layer of herbs. Cover the herbs with
another layer of salt, and continue in this manner until you have used up
all your herbs or reached the top of the container. Cover the top layer of
herbs completely with salt and seal the jar.
In about a week, the herbs will be dry. You can pull out individual
sprigs and crumble them into dishes as they are. Or you can brush off the
extra salt before you use them. If you want to use the herbed salt to
sprinkle on a variety of foods, blend the herbs together with the salt
thoroughly. Then pour into a smaller, airtight container that you can keep
on your kitchen counter or dining room table.
How to Dry Herbs
To dry thin-leaved herbs such as thyme and rosemary, make bundles of 3
to 5 sprigs, tie them together with a twist tie, and hang them in a warm,
airy, dry, and dark location. (Keep them out of the traffic areas.) They
should dry to feel crisp in a couple days.
For large-leaved herbs that you can't get to dry well by hanging, any
dehydrator will work as long as it has a low setting (90°-95°F). You can
put sprigs or individual leaves in the dehydrator. The leaves will dry
faster when stripped off the stem, but sprigs are easier to handle. When
dried, the crispy leaves snap right off when you run your fingers down the
stem. Most herbs will dry overnight in a dehydrator.
When the herbs are dry, put them in the oven at 120°F for a few minutes
to make the herbs as crackly as corn flakes. Strip the leaves off the
woody stems. If you're sure they're completely dry, you can store the
whole leaves, which helps preserve essential oils. But I've had a lot of
problems with mildew on herbs stored this way. So I now process them into
flakes in a blender or food processor. I add a cup or two of leaves and
pulse them in the blender until they become large flakes. Then I seal them
in an airtight jar. I like to add a small packet of white rice, wrapped up
in cloth or paper, to suck up any excess humidity. You can store the jars
in a cool, dark cupboard, but I like to keep the jars in the refrigerator,
which helps preserve quality longer.
To dry roots such as orris root, horseradish, and lovage, slice them
thin and put them in a dehydrator or warm oven to dry until they are hard.
Store in an airtight jar.
To dry seeds, hang the mature plants upside-down over newspaper or
cloth in a warm, dry location. When the seeds fall, they're easy to scoop
up. You also can dry herb seeds in a dehydrator on low heat. But if the
seeds are small, cover the drying trays with cheesecloth so the seeds
won't fall through. When dry, you may need to separate the seeds from the
rest of the plant. Put the dried material on one side of a cookie sheet
that has elevated edges. Crush the plant debris with your hands. Then
elevate the tray slightly so the seeds will slide down, separate from the
chaff. Once they are separated, put the seeds in the freezer for 48 hours
to kill any pests that may be inside. Then seal them in an airtight jar
and store in a cool, dry location.
To dry flowers for potpourri or herb wreaths, place individual flowers
or sprigs in the dehydrator. Grower Marty Sickinger likes to dry flowers
upright in a vase with a little bit of water. Let the water evaporate
slowly, while the plants maintain their open shape. This works especially
well with black-eyed Susans and daffodils, which would dry closed up if
you hung them upside-down. Experiment with different flowers. Some dry
well upside-down, and some dry best spread out on a screen. Develop the
method that works best for you.
One way to gather dill seed is to hang the plant upside-down and wrap a
paper bag around it to collect the seed as it dries and falls off.
Drying the Harvest - Tips From An Expert
Microwave Oven Place one layer of plant materials between two
paper towels, setting timer for 2 or 3 minutes. Give additional 30-second
shots as necessary. Jot down for future reference how much drying time was
needed for each variety.
Conventional Oven Set temperature no higher than 100° and heat
materials on a baking sheet until crisp. (My old oven goes no lower than
150°, so I keep oven door ajar.)
Food DehydratorSet temperature between 95° and 100°.
Gas Oven With Constant-Burn Pilot Light Dispel any moisture in
the oven by leaving the door open while heating at the lowest temperature
setting that will keep the flame burning. After 2 or 3 minutes, turn off
oven, place baking sheet of materials in, close oven door and forget it
until you have to heat the oven for cooking. Then you'd better remember
that they're in there!
Dehydrating OastThe oast (drying oven) that my husband built
into our former broom closet is my favorite place for drying my harvests.
It's 14" high, 14" wide, and 26" deep. Shallow ledges along the sides of
its front will suspend three flower presses (also made by him) with room
for a fourth to rest on the floor of the oast. In a corner at the back, he
anchored a ceramic base for a light bulb. A 60-watt bulb heats the top
front of the oast to an ideal 110°, the lower front to 95°. Hardware cloth
(an aluminum mesh available from hardware stores) is used for 'shelves'
when I dry roses in their whole form. Miniature roses are placed upright
on the mesh; larger types are hung head down, their stems pushed through
the mesh and secured with small binder clips from the stationer's. Atop
the flower presses and/or the hardware cloth shelves, styrofoam trays
(from packaged meats) filled with materials can rest.
Storage Place each type/color of blossoms in a separate glass
jar with a screw top, so you can see what you have of what when it comes
time to mix a recipe. During the first week after drying the materials,
check every few days to be sure they're still crisp. If not, it's back to
Square One, the drying tray!
TipsSpread a white towel on your working surface on which to
dump the day's haul of plants to dry or press. That makes it easy to spot
the creepy crawlers and UFO's that came along for a free ride. You can use
the corner of the towel to help the destroyer types along on their journey
to That Great Bug Heaven In The Sky; but be a sport and free the praying
mantis, ladybug, or any other carnivore that was tending the garden for
you.
BugsOnce in awhile a tiny beetle will escape your attention and
will manage to survive the heat of the drying process. You may not even
notice the little dude in the mixing and aging process. Then when you've
capped the glass container and stand admiring your beautiful creation, up
he jumps! Not to worry. Don't empty the container. Leave the jar capped
and stick it in the freezer for a couple of days. End of problem.
(Although you should check contents for any moisture from the freezer and
re-heat if necessary.)
|