Seedcorn, we just steep the mint alone. DH's favorite is the peppermint/spearmint (I can not tell which it is!)Do you add dried mint to black tea? Or just steep the mint in water and drink? Never done it.
Nice harvest. How do you dry yours? We put ours in paper bag in the fridge for a few weeks until nice and dry then remove most of the stems. That way it stays nice and green.Being big tea drinkers, we grow chocolate mint, peppermint and mojito mint. This photo is what we took from those and dried.
what’s not shown and a new favorite of ours is Anise Hyssop! This year that bed is being expanded.
Carol, I still remember you sending me a paper bag of dried mint. I had never tasted mint tea so fresh as the one made with your leaves. It was incredible and nothing at all like store bought mint tea.Nice harvest. How do you dry yours? We put ours in paper bag in the fridge for a few weeks until nice and dry then remove most of the stems. That way it stays nice and green.
What a great idea!Nice harvest. How do you dry yours? We put ours in paper bag in the fridge for a few weeks until nice and dry then remove most of the stems. That way it stays nice and green.
Dobyou harvest the flowers of the anise hyssop for the tea? I'm growing it for the first time this year. Any tricks for growing it from seed?I'm having some ginger tea from the store for an after-breakfast cuppa. Breakfast was with Oolong. Yesterday, I had lime leaf tea.
All that is from the store although we did have a couple of potted ginger plants in the greenhouse again, through the 2020 summer. (Shoulda had a couple more.) I suppose I should just buy chamomile blossoms to go with my spearmint in the back yard. That's the way I like mint tea. (Growing chamomile for its flowers was a serious waste of effort for this gardener. I'd need a thousand square feet to come up with a pound!)
Anise Hyssop? That's a favorite! Not by itself but with Lemon Verbena ... Yeah, I felt like a real connoisseur once I came up with that combination. I had it so easy! Oh, the potted verbena required cutting back and protecting in the greenhouse through the winter but it always comes back nice. The anise hyssop would volunteer - for years!
Then, the tractor guy must have aimed his rototiller more carefully. One year, the only plant that showed up was in the neighbor's raspberry and grape jungle. I didn't see it until it bloomed.
Last year, I planted some seeds in the backyard garden. Too much shade, although I have had anise hyssop in the shade before. There were a good number of plants that time. With just a couple of plants showing up, I didn't have enough of the herb. This Year! I gotta do better!
Steve