Try these activities out for yourselves!
Drying lavender
- Pick the Lavender heads when they are closed and the top
florets have just burst. This gives you the strongest perfume
because it contains the highest concentration of oils.
- Spread the complete flower head on a tray to dry either
in an airing cupboard or under the bed. Turn the
flowers often to make sure that all parts of properly dry.
- You can use either the complete flower heads, or strip the
separate flower heads from the stems.
Use them in pot-pourris or small bags made from cotton
material. See Activity sheets 5 and 6.
Other herbs may be dried a similar way.
- Bunches of herbs can be picked on a dry day, preferably in the
morning, after the dew has gone, but before the sun gets too
hot. Tie them together at their stems and hung upside down to
dry.
- Find an airy, dust-free place out of the sun. An airing
cupboard is ideal. This is important as the sun will bleach the
colour, smell and flavour from the herbs. Leave until they are
brittle enough to break easily between your fingers - about one
week.
Or
you can spread them on a tray or shelf between sheets of
newspaper or muslin. Remember to turn them daily to allow the
air to dry them properly.
Or
if the air is dry and out of direct sunlight, leave them where
you hung them to let their perfumes scent a room.
Herbs used in cooking
Leaves of herbs for cooking can be arranged separately on a
drying rack and turned regularly.
Drying roots
Roots of some herbs can also be dried.
- Liquorice, horseradish and marshmallow, need to have
their skin peeled first.
But
leave the skin on the root of others such as angelica and
dandelion.
- Cut the roots into 1cm slices and dry in the same way as the
flowers. It takes roots longer to dry (often several weeks).
Or
To dry them more quickly, place in a warm oven until the slices
are light and brittle.
- Pack them in an airtight tin or a dark glass jar. (pictures)
Freezing herbs
Place some mixed herb leaves inside a small plastic bag, seal and
put in the freezer compartment of a refrigerator.
Or, place leaves of borage flowers in water in ice cube
trays and freeze them.
Although frozen herbs lose some of their flavour, they are ready
to use when required.
Other activities
Now that you can dry herbs, you can make dried herbs all year
round.
Look at other Activity sheets to find uses for dried herbs.
Find out
- How people dried herbs in the past
- How dried herbs
are used now
- How many different dried herbs are sold in your
local supermarket
- Where herbs come from
- What other uses for
herbs are
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Various herbs drying on rack
Mixed bunch of herbs prepared for hanging to dry

You can store dried herbs in an air-tight
jar. Be sure to label the jar so you don't forget forget what
is in there.

Mixed herbs that had been put in a small plastic
bag before being put in the freezer. They are now crumbly and ready
to use.

Dried fennel in a paper bag.
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