Suddenly, we’re all wondering how to get more
Whether you’re a green-fingered expert or a gardening novice, herbs are an easy and useful thing to have to hand to make home-cooked dishes even more delicious. They’re also compact, so you can experiment just as easily on a small balcony as in a large outside space.
With that in mind, and with the help of Waitrose Garden, we’ve listed six of the most common, versatile and easy to care for herbs. Here’s your IDEAL kitchen garden: how to grow your own herbs at home.
CHIVES
A delicious evergreen herb that will come back year after year. The slim, elegant dark green leaves can be snipped with scissors (or chopped with a very sharp knife to avoid bruising) and used as an addition to salads, soups and stews. The pale mauve pom-pom like flowers, which are also edible and look wonderful when sprinkled over a summer salad, are produced in early summer.
Position: full sun
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: March to May
Harvest: July to September
ROCKET
Rocket stays true to its name, shooting out of the ground in no time. Indeed, you’ll be picking your first delicious peppery leaves within a matter of weeks. You can keep picking the large, lobed leaves as a cut-and-come-again crop over a long period; they look (and taste) gorgeous picked young, adding a spicy edge to mixed leaf salads. The flowers are edible too and look great as a garnish.
Position: full sun or partial shade
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: April to August
Harvest: May to October
DILL
A particularly fine-flavoured variety of dill that’s well known for its generous leaf production, Dukat dill is selected to produce more foliage before running to seed than most.
Dill has many uses, and provides a delicious flavouring to pickles or with vegetables, salads and fish dishes, and the pretty, feathery foliage looks at home anywhere in the garden, making a lovely foil to your flowers. If it’s allowed to flower, then these can be eaten too. They have a similar flavour to the leaves.
Position: full sun
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: April to May
Harvest: June to September
ROSEMARY
A shrubby evergreen, rosemary’s highly aromatic leaves are traditionally used for
Position: full sun
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: Sept to Oct or March to May
Harvest: May to July
BASIL
A vigorous plant with large, scented, bright green blistered leaves, this particular Ocimum basilicum ‘Napoletano’ variety is only found in Naples and is highly prized for its
Position: full sun, sheltered and warm or a sunny windowsill
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: Sow indoors – February to April (for earlier crops). Sow outside – March to July (when the air temperature is above 10C).
Harvest – June to October
CORIANDER ‘CONFETTI’
An unusual and extremely attractive ‘feathery’ herb with a slightly sweeter but distinctive coriander flavour and aroma than the original, this guy can be grown indoors all year round.
Position: full sun
Soil: fertile, moist but well drained
Sow: all year round
Harvest: all year round