March Cookery Newsletter

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5 Reasons to Celebrate Fresh Herbs by Nikki Duffy, author of

THE RIVER COTTAGE HERB HANDBOOK

Herbs can give you almost instant gratification – even if you grow your own. Try the ‘micro-leaf’ approach.

This simply involves sowing herb seeds then harvesting as soon as the first young ‘true’ leaves start to form – often in two weeks or even less. The baby leaves have an amazing, intense flavour and look beautiful on a salad, pizza or soup. Fastgrowing, aromatic herbs such as basil, chervil and coriander are ideal. Sow your seeds fairly thickly on to seed compost in a seed tray or length of guttering, cover with another thin layer of compost, then leave in a reasonably warm place. Keep the compost just moist, not wet: misting with a spray bottle is a good idea.

Herbs make your food beautiful. You’ve probably sprinkled chopped parsley or snipped chives over dishes before –

and both these old favourites look wonderful as well as tasting delicious. But there are many more herbs that will enhance your food visually. Try borage flowers (really easy to grow), sprinkled on fruity puddings or frozen into ice cubes for drinks. Marigold petals are lovely strewn over cakes. Chervil has the most elegant, lacy little leaves that look gorgeous floating on a soup, or, if you want to add colour to a salad, try some dramatic purple basil, scarlet nasturtiums, purple perilla (an Asian herb with a cumin-like flavour) or the tiny flowerlets pinched from a white chive in bloom. All of these taste as good as they look.

Herbs anchor you in culinary tradition. They are so often the flavour that ‘makes’ a classic dish: the bay in the béchamel sauce, the tarragon in the béarnaise, the basil in the pesto, the sage in the stuffing, the mint in the tabbouleh... They are building-block ingredients for cuisines the world over, allowing you to achieve authentic results.

Conversely, herbs also invite endless innovation – and rarely make you suffer for it. You can try anything you like with fresh herbs. At worst, your dish will

taste of too much dill or not enough thyme: herbs rarely ruin anything. At best, you’ll discover some amazing combinations: perhaps lemon verbena and raspberries, lavender and lamb, or bergamot and parmesan.

Growing your own herbs gives you access to ingredients you could never buy in the shops. Lovage, angelica, sweet cicely, hyssop, winter savory and Thai

basil are just a few of the incredible, fragrant, delicious herbs you can grow easily at home. Many herbs can be grown in pots and some even thrive indoors.

OUT NOW Click here to browse an extract

THE RIVER COTTAGE HERB HANDBOOK by Nikki Duffy With an introduction by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall Hardback £14.99


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