If you have enough natural light in your kitchen, you can grow an herb garden. Growing a variety of herbs you use on a semi-regular basis can be both easy and incredibly satisfying. All you need to grow an indoor herb garden in your kitchen is good light.
In years past, I attempted growing rosemary in my kitchen, but being a city dweller, I rarely ever lived in a place that received enough daylight to keep it alive. Our new house in the city has two skylights in the kitchen. The previous owners remodeled and put the refrigerator under one of the skylights, which we at first thought created a rather odd space above, but it’s actually been quite beneficial for growing herbs (with a pothos and a cactus). It’s a perfect platform for growing since it’s just the right distance from the skylight.
But what if you don’t have a skylight? If you have a bright window, you can always put a flower box on the inside or outside of the window and grow your herbs there. Friends of ours have a kitchen with windows that open out into a light well (another anomaly of urban living) and they, too, are successfully able to grow basil and mint from the amount of sunlight peering overhead.
When selecting herbs for your own garden, keep in mind that they don’t all require the same light and water conditions. Do a little research prior to going to the garden center so you have a better idea of what will do well in your kitchen conditions. Also take note of the lifespan of each herb. Is it an annual? A biennial? A perennial? Plants such as parsley are biennials. They’ll look great for two seasons, but as soon as you see it has produced a long spike then its days are limited. Many people don’t realize that parsley is a biennial and then feel like they did something wrong when it dies. Don’t worry! You didn’t do anything wrong.
We’re growing chives, rosemary, parsley, and mint. I wasn’t sure that a woody rosemary plant would be able to grow well under the same conditions of the herbaceous herbs, but it’s doing well. Soon after we brought home the mint, I saw that there were little red spots under the leaf. Yes, mint rust. I figured it was only a matter of time before it was a gonner. Well, a month later and there are no signs of rust and the plant is looking as healthy as ever. I’ll continue to keep an eye on it, of course.
With a sunny enough spot, anyone can grow a great and useful herb garden in his or her kitchen. When reading a recipe and you see it calls for one of the fresh herbs you are growing, nothing is more satisfying than knowing you have it and you grew it yourself!
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May 6, 2012 at 10:50 am
Laila and I at Sow and So are big mint fans too – in fact i have just aquired two apple mint plants that i am planning to allow to run riot in one corner of the garden… I love a tiny bit of mint finely shredded in a salad – delicious!
May 6, 2012 at 7:47 pm
Mint on salad…that sounds tasty and refreshing. I need to try that! Thanks!!!
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May 10, 2012 at 11:56 am
I salute you for a very healthy, thriving herb garden – indoors, no less! I have the luxury of living on 1.5 acres but I keep my herbs in pots on our sunny deck. I could tuck them in my vegetable garden, but I don’t for a couple reasons: one, they’re convenient when I’m cooking – I can nip out and grab what I need. And two, this contains the enthusiastic “spreaders” like cilantro (reseeds EVERYwhere) and mint (grows a foot while you’re staring at it) can’t get into everything else. My rosemary shrub is tucked in a border on the other side of the house where it grows happily year-round. One of the benefits to living just far enough south that it can overwinter. Great post – thanks for sharing!
May 10, 2012 at 4:15 pm
Your yard sounds great! 1.5 acres! I wish I had that much room. But as long as I’m a city dweller, I’ll have to make due with what I have: a 960 sq. ft. backyard with a couple of citrus trees and a plethora of weeds. (I just moved in – those weeds will be toast as soon as I have the time to get back there!)
Thank you for bringing up the issue of rapid spreading of cilantro and mint. That is an extremely important consideration to take into account when planting herbs in the ground. (Although, I wouldn’t mind a yard full of either of those right now instead of all the weeds!)
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September 11, 2012 at 2:06 am
Reblogged this on Potted Plant Society.
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