It is not too late to plant a tea garden.
Think about an herb tea garden! Wouldn’t it be nice to have a little herb area in the sun near the kitchen door where you could snip fragrant pieces of fresh green herbs for tea? This garden would be pretty, fragrant useful and alive about nine months of the year. You can even do this garden in a series of large pots for a deck or patio and bring them in near a sliding glass door for winter. It is fun to grow your own herbs to use for tea and you can dry extra at the end of the season to use during the wintry weather. Choose a place and plan what herbs you will plant. A garden like this is timeless with a history that goes back to the ancient people. Colonial and Victorian housewives in our area also had useful and pretty tea gardens.
I love to pick a few fresh pieces of whichever herb I want to use and place the sprigs in a teapot. Some folks like to bruise the leaves so the aromatic oils will more readily be released into the boiling water. With most of the following tea plants, you can just pick off a few leaves whenever you want to make tea. As you pick, you will find that a healthy, well cared for plant will constantly grow more new leaves. Having a few of each kind is a good idea, as it will allow the plant to grow in between pickings.
Some herbs are known for their health value and are grown to use for upset stomachs, the onset of a cold or to help one sleep. I know that a tangy pot of lemon balm tea with a slice of lemon on a cold day will really help ward off a cold. Ice this during the summer for a refreshing drink. Our large patch of lemon balm covers an area under two old holly trees. We pick and pick and pick from spring to late fall and also dry bunches for winter tea.
In fall herbs can be picked to dry. Just tie up 6 –10 inch stems and hang in a dry spot indoors. When they are crisp and dry, place them in brown paper lunch bags and write name and date on bag. Store in a cabinet where it is dry so they will not mold. Then just add a sprig or two of the dry to your pot of tea. It is hard to tell one how much to use. This is matter of personal taste and varies. You will soon develop your own tastes and formula for herb tea.
The following list will discuss a few of the favorite herb teas:
Chamomile Anise hyssop Lemon verbena Bee Balm (Monarda) Orange mint Other mints Lemon Balm Rose Hips Lavender Fennel |
There are hundreds more herbs to grow for tea. Take some time to study them this fall. Free plant talk on harvesting and using herbs on Saturday September 27 at 1:00 p.m. at Triple Oaks Nursery.
I will also teach a seven-week herb class on harvesting and using herbs through Gloucester County College. This class is held here at the nursery in Franklinville and begins on Wednesday night October 15.
Visit www.tripleoaks.com. Click on “calendar” or call the college.