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Drying Fresh Herbs

Posted 17-Jun-2008 at 05:10 PM by saltedm8


Although fresh cooking herbs are available practically throughout the year, there are a few months when they become more available and cheap, the best time in which you may purchase herbs from local growers that you can easily dry or freeze for a year-round supply, even if you grow your own herbs.

Drying herbs gives you the possibility to make preparations and mixes that probably will be of a higher quality than those you can found in grocery stores and supermarkets, with your own taste and are much, much cheaper than commercial brands that are offering mixings of herbs and spice as seasonings.

For retaining the highest flavor and quality of herbs, air drying or room drying is the best, easy, and inexpensive method for preserving herbs. There are electronic devices to dry herbs; moisture evaporates slowly and naturally during air drying, leaving the precious herb oils behind.

Dehydrators are useful when you are planning to dry large quantities of herbs or work with high moisture herbs such as basil. Some people believe that their microwave oven is the best way to dry herbs just because it is already in their kitchens. However, microwaves literally cook the herbs producing very poor quality.

Air dry your herbs using traditional methods that does not require any special implement and is as easy as following a few simple guidelines:

- Always use scissors or a sharp knife or to cut large stems or branches from mature plants.

- Gently shake each branch to remove insects.

- Examine each branch to remove all old, damaged or diseased leaves.

- Rinse each branch carefully in cold water and dry with towels or paper towels, removing all water.

- Keep in mind that wet herbs tend to mold which destroys the whole bunch.

- Now, turn branches upside down removing leaves along the upper stem.

- Consider that lower leaves are not as pungent as the top leaves nearest buds.

- Tie five to six stems together in a small bunch.

- To get the high moisture herbs, use smaller bunches.

- Once done, place the bunch upside down in a large brown paper bag, avoid plastics.

- Then, gather the bag around the stems and tie.

- Cut or tear several holes in the bag for ventilation, making sure there is plenty of room inside the bag so leaves do not touch the sides of the bag.

- One of the most important things to do: write down the name and date on each bag for later identification.

- Hang the bag in a warm, airy room or attic, leaving it undisturbed for about two weeks or even longer. The more time left, the better results.

- Once the leaves are dry, check for any signs of mold growth.

-Toss the entire bunch if moldy and try again. Strip dried leaves from stems discarding stems.

- Crush the leaves if desired, do not forget that whole herbs retain their flavor longer than crushed, ground or rubbed herbs.

- Store your dried herbs in small airtight containers keeping them away from direct light or sunlight exposure.

- Zip containers and label each one by weight, the date, name of the herbs, if you are making your own mixtures.

- Store the herbs in a cool, dry, dark place away from any light source.

Practically all dried herbs can be kept for years, however for best results use them within a year, because herbs tend to diminish in flavor with age and the more aging a larger amount will be needed to achieve the desired flavor in cooking.

The only herb that will grow stronger in flavor during storage is sage. If you want to make rubbed sage, place dried leaves in a sieve or wire strainer over a plate and rub against the side. Sage is a very strong herb that rubbed creates smaller pieces for more even distribution in recipes.

To release all their full flavor, crush leaves or use a mortar and pestle to grind them, just shortly before adding to the recipe. Dried herbs should be added to soups and stews during the last half-hour of cooking, except if the recipe directions say something else.

Total Comments 12

Comments

Old
michaelmac's Avatar
I enjoy cooking using a variety of herbs like using thyme when cooking chicken breast in Ghee. Delicious
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Posted 18-Jun-2008 at 09:06 PM by michaelmac michaelmac is offline
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shammrok's Avatar
Thanks for the tips, I grow many herbs myself and have often dried them in the past.
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Posted 22-Jun-2008 at 03:43 AM by shammrok shammrok is offline
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saltedm8's Avatar
to be honest i wrote this a couple of years ago and put it on jamies blogs, i am glad its still useful
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Posted 22-Jun-2008 at 06:22 PM by saltedm8 saltedm8 is offline
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CookieMonster's Avatar
Really interesting,hopefully i will have an abundance of herbs this year so your tips will come in very handy.At the moment i have loads of chillies drying in the kitchen,due to a bumper crop last year,all i need is a parma ham and a few salami hanging,maybe change my name to angelo and it would be like a proper Italian kitchen
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Posted 24-Jun-2008 at 01:50 PM by CookieMonster CookieMonster is offline
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saltedm8's Avatar
lol, don't forget the dirty apron
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Posted 26-Jun-2008 at 06:58 PM by saltedm8 saltedm8 is offline
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michaelmac's Avatar
The 'dolmio' look is great
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Posted 27-Jun-2008 at 12:47 AM by michaelmac michaelmac is offline
Old
Does this work for peppers? Specifically Habaneros
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Posted 30-Jun-2008 at 11:56 PM by citricguy citricguy is offline
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saltedm8's Avatar
use a dehydrator, as Habaneros are the hardest to dry, make sure they are placed in a well ventelated area, - they will stink a little lol
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Posted 11-Jul-2008 at 01:57 AM by saltedm8 saltedm8 is offline
Updated 11-Jul-2008 at 02:33 AM by saltedm8
Old
Thanks Salty for all those tips. Very informative. I have loads and loads of fresh sage to dry.
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Posted 31-Jul-2008 at 07:56 PM by Sabs Sabs is offline
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saltedm8's Avatar
glad you found it useful
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Posted 07-Aug-2008 at 05:04 PM by saltedm8 saltedm8 is offline
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O_Chef's Avatar
Just a quickie going slightly off topic of drying herbs.... but a trick to infusing them:
Anything herbaceous contains alot of tannins, and these can spoil the flavour of many foodstuffs, in particular in chocolate.
Extracting the flavour through a cold infusion leaves behind the nasty tannins. The best way is to vacuum pack the herb in the desired liquid (for chocs into the cream you wish to make the ganache with) though if you dont have a vacuum packer a sealed container left in the fridge 24 hours will do well.
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Posted 11-Aug-2008 at 12:23 PM by O_Chef O_Chef is offline
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shammrok's Avatar
Any tips for drying coriander seeds, my last lot went mouldy.
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Posted 16-Aug-2008 at 04:57 AM by shammrok shammrok is offline
 
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