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Bees and Herbs

Posted Apr 19 2009 11:11pm

Bees in the garden are a good thing. Bees pollinate about 75 percent of all of the food crops in the world.

 

Many culinary herbs will attract bees to your garden. Grow herbs and you will get double-duty attracting pollinators and bringing flavorings to the kitchen. Many herbs can be harvested cut-and-come-again, leaves, flowers, and seeds. That means you can enjoy many of these herbs all season without replanting.

 

Herbs can be planted in an herb bed or spread out to the corners of your vegetable beds to make sure bees stop along the way to visit your vegetable crops as they move from one herb to another.

 

Here are several herbs that attract bees to the garden and also can be used in the kitchen.

 

Herb

Part used

Use

Anise

Seeds, leaves

Licorice-like flavor for baked good, soups.

Bee Balm

Leaves, fresh and dried

Shred leaves and petals for green salads. Use flowers in sandwiches.

Borage

Leaves

Shred leaves for cucumber flavor in salads or sour cream.

Fenugreek

Leaves, fresh and dried; seeds

Use leaves as a vegetable, cooked with potatoes, spinach, or rice.

Lemon balm

Leaves, fresh and dried

Tea; lemon-mint flavor also used in cooking fish and poultry.

Mints

Leaves, fresh and dried; flowers for salads and garnishes

Favoring for carrots, eggplant, peas, potatoes, tomatoes, and zucchini. Use in marinade, jelly, and sauce.

Oregano and Marjoram

Leaves, flower knots

Use in Italian cooking, for pasta sauces, pizza, roasted vegetables. Greek dishes: souvlaki, baked fish, Greek salad. Mexican dishes: beans dishes, salsas.

Sage

Leaves, fresh or dried; flowers as garnish

Flavoring for meats and poultry. Good with apples, dried beans, cheese, onions, tomatoes.

Sweet Basil

Leaves fresh

Companion to tomatoes in salad, sauce, soup. Also with fish and seafood and roast veal and lamb.

Thymes

Leaves and sprigs; flowers for garnishes

Withstands long, slow cooking--stews, casseroles, soups; enhances other herbs.

Winter Savory

Leaves and sprigs; flowers for garnishes and salads.

Flavoring in long-cooked meat and vegetables dishes and stuffings, often with green and fava beans.

More herb growing tips at the Herb Archive, click here.

Easy grow herbs: THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE.


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