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Everyone Needs A Spaghetti Garden
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One
of the delightful pleasures of life are herbs. Besides adding beauty to
your garden they make foods taste better and provide a pleasant scent
to the air we breathe. In George Washington days everyone had a herb
garden that they used for culinary, teas and medicinal purposes. That
practice is slowly coming back.
A spaghetti garden is one of the most popular kitchen gardens. Anyone
that has a sunny patch of ground or a window-box can grow these herbs
of parsley, garlic, basil, bay laurel and oregano. A small garden space
can easily yield all the herbs that you’ll need for delicious
Italian meals. They are even easy to grow in a sunny window for your
year-round use.
Let us take a closer look at the spaghetti garden herbs:
+Oregano is a perennial ground cover plant. Oregano is a prolific
grower that can send out shoots that grow to six feet in a single
season. If pruned and bunched, oregano can grow into a small border
plant. It would rather have light, thin soil and lots of sun, so keep
it on the south side of your garden. When the plants reach 4-5 inches
harvesting can start. Pinch off the top 1/3 of the plant, just above a
leaf intersection. The young leaves are actually stronger dried than
fresh and are the most flavorful part of the plant. To dry, lay the
leaves on newspaper or a drying screen in the sun until the leaves
crumble easily. It will retain its flavor for months.
+Bay leaves add a favorable hint of spice to stews, soups and spaghetti
sauce. The bay laurel is a small tree that grows about a foot per year,
this makes it suitable for growing in a container. If you live in a
mild climate zone leave the container outside, but if temperatures go
below 25 degrees keep the tree in a pot and bring it indoors during the
winter.
+Basil seeds itself so easily that you may never have to buy another
plant after the first year. There are many different kinds of basil,
but all grow rapidly and require frequent pinching back to prevent them
from growing tall and leggy. When the plants have reached about 6-8
inches tall, you can begin harvesting. Pinch off the top 1/3 of the
plant, just above a leaf intersection. Pinch off any flower buds before
they go to seed. Six to eight plants will provide enough basil for the
entire neighborhood.
+Garlic is probably the easiest plant to grow. Break apart a clove of
garlic, and plant the cloves about four inches apart, two to four
inches deep in a light soil. Lightly water and watch them grow. You may
harvest when tips of the leaves turn brown but do not let them flower.
Just dig up the bulbs, and use them. To keep a fresh supply take one or
two cloves from each bulb and replant them.
+Parsley is probably the most used herb in the world. You will find
both flat (Italian) and curly types. They complement the flavor of
everything from sauces to hearty stews. It is used as a garnish on
plates, or cut up and added to soups, dressings and salads. Parsley
adds vitamins and color, and quietly brings
out the flavor of other ingredients in the dish. Parsley is a biennial,
flowering in its second season. It prefers a little shade on a hot
sunny day, and should be kept watered to avoid wilting and drying.
Pinch back older stems to the base, allowing new leaves and branches to
grow.
Grow your own tomatoes and you are well on your way to becoming a Italian chef.
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