Cut And Dried

One of the things the garden forcefully teaches is the vivd difference in flavor between things we grow ourselves and even those things we pay the full yuppie markup for at the local health/organic emporium. For years I bought the herbes de Provence blend at the local Health Mart™ and used it, often liberally, in many dishes. The blend of thyme, rosemary, oregano (and/or marjoram) and lavender (and sometimes fennel, and more) is pretty much Mediterranean in a jar when it comes to giving your meats and sauces that certain fragrant, resinous quality that’s instantly recognizable. Add a few fat pinches to a pan of tomato purée, and it’s pizza sauce. Like that. 

But as with so many other things, the real satisfaction of understanding an ingredient only comes with chasing it as far up the supply chain as it is possible to go, which in this case means growing and drying it yourself. Since it is the season for preservation, I took it upon myself to pick a bunch of all four plants a while back so I could duplicate this most-favorite of the dried herb mixtures. I can honestly say that there’s no comparison between this and the store-bought; it’s so much more vivid and complex, imparting vastly more information to a dish than the drab, stale version grown far away. This isn’t surprising, but if you need a perfect illustration of the difference between homemade and outsourced, this is as good a place to start as any.

The beauty of this blend is that all of the herbs involved share that resinous quality so there’s significant and seamless overlap between them when combined. They amplify each other into a powerful signifier of place, even if they’re grown many thousands of miles away from that place.

It’s not complicated; all I did was pick, sort, and wash them, and then leave them out to dry. I did give the drying a boost by using my alternative to the dehydrator that I do not own: a cookie sheet over the water bath while it was busy cooking that lamb “loin” from the previous post. If the bath is around 130˚, it’s a safe bet that the surface of the sheet is near 110˚, which is dehydrator temp. A BTU saved is a BTU earned.

I have no idea what the “proper” proportion is, so I just used the amount of each that I harvested, going easy on the lavender because it’s quite strong and I was shooting for a balanced result. Obviously one could swap or add in any number of other herbs, depending on what is available. It’s remarkable, for example, how minty fresh oregano smells. And mint, every bit as unruly and aggressive as oregano in its growing habits, is always asking for a haircut. Although I have a bowl of fennel seeds drying as well, I left them out and will store them separately.

I adore lavender. When I lived in Provence, there was a little store near my house that sold it in every form known to humanity, and I would always pause and breathe deeply when I walked in front of their open door. I have a row of lavender plants growing along the garden fence next to the gate, and every time I walk by I fondle them lasciviously and then smell my fingers like a pervert.

Here are the various plants drying on top of the water bath:

I kept them separate because they dry at different rates. Rosemary takes the longest. Be sure your herbs or seeds are fully dry before you put them in cute little jars, or they’ll get moldy and your twee domesticity will collapse in ruins around you, leaving you bereft and empty inside.

Everything else crumbles up nicely into bits when dry, but the thyme leaves need some rubbing to come free of their stems. I do it over a colander that lets the little leaves through easily but catches the bigger bits.

And then—and this is the tricky bit— you mix them all together in a jar. So far, in its very short life of less than a week, I have used this mixture on lamb and in ratatouille, pasta sauce, bean soup, and salad dressing. THERE’S NOTHING IT CAN’T DO.

The end.

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15 Comments

  1. October 16, 2012

    I was thinking about checking in on how the immersion circulator was holding up, but I can see it’s just fine. That photo could have come from my kitchen.

    • Peter
      October 18, 2012

      I love its secondary function as a dehydrator.

  2. October 16, 2012

    I love chasing things up the supply chain, too. But, it’s more in theory than in practice. Love to see someone who actually DOES something with the knowledge. That seasoning must be fabulous!

  3. John
    October 16, 2012

    Brilliant use of the colander. I’ve wondered for a long time how to avoid thyme stems – now I feel like an idiot for not figuring it out myself. — I was set to make homemade fine herbs and then Bambi and kin came in and wiped out all the parsley. Fortunately, I have the makings for herbs de Provence too, so thanks for the idea.

  4. John
    October 16, 2012

    By the way, if you have lots and lots of lavender, you can tie it into bunches and dry them for lighting fires. They’re nearly explosive in how fast they catch fire and smell great while lighting the wood.

    • Peter
      October 18, 2012

      I wish I had enough to do that. Next year I might, since I planted six more.

  5. October 16, 2012

    Hooray for home-dried herbs! Earlier this year, I harvested a whole lot of mint, hung it to dry on the stem, and picked off the leaves for a massive supply of super-flavorful mint tea. I love the idea of making your own homegrown herb blends too!

    • Peter
      October 18, 2012

      Next up is fines herbes, as soon as the chervil is big enough.

  6. October 17, 2012

    A recipe / ratio would be appreciated, great blog

    • Peter
      October 18, 2012

      I would say equal weights of the first three and about 1/3 to 1/2 as much lavender, depending on your taste. It’s a flexible ratio, and you might well want to include fennel in your blend, in which case I would make it equal to the lavender.

  7. October 17, 2012

    Once my new rosemary plant becomes established, I’m going to do this, too. I love Herbes de Provence and use it a lot. It can only be better if I make it myself. Thanks for the idea!

    • opiejeanne
      October 22, 2012

      Me too. All of the rest of my plants are established now, just not the rosemary. I am growing it in a pot on the patio, so it doesn’t take over the entire garden.

      • Peter
        October 22, 2012

        You’re lucky to live somewhere where that’s a danger. I have to dig it up and bring it in before winter.

  8. October 17, 2012

    great post peter! I could not agree with you more about drying your own herbs. nothing compares to the quality from your own garden. and lavender is my absolute favorite. I have – or I shoud say had, a long row of it running along the old stone wall in front of my house. planted 24 little baby plants 5 years ago and they flourished. sadly this past spring’s early warmth and subsequent cold in the berkshires killed off half the length of them, and the other half while not completely dead is barely hanging on. I am bummed about it. such is the life of a gardener, I guess. but, I digress, great post!

  9. Peter
    October 18, 2012

    You could try mulching them hard in the fall; we’re right at the Northern limit of their range, so a little extra protection against the cold will help.

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