There’s nothing that makes me feel more clever than using homegrown herbs. They grow lawlessly, and you can use them just the same. I don’t count, I don’t measure, I pinch hand fulls with my heart and by their nature, they grow fuller from giving. Anyone would benefit from modeling themselves after herbs.
This year I have my first successful grown-from-seed basil, strong in stems and in scent. I would be happy to have buckets of pesto by September. I was once a restaurant server at CJ Maggie’s restaurant in town, famous for fried zucchini strips but also known for the variety of menu choices. On the pasta list was the “Green Meanie” a bowl of linguine smothered in thick alfredo sauce mixed with pesto and topped with grilled chicken. I’ll try not to get ahead of myself over writing about pesto, July is the month to indulge the reader, and I’ll be sure to over do it then.
The chives are shining this week, all of their purple blossoms are open like perfect little pom poms atop each long, green stem. They are always “juicy” when fresh cut and I think I probably underuse them, sadly. So this year I’m making chive blossom vinegar, soaking the little purples poms in a jar of white vinegar to be left alone for several weeks. This will yield a very flavorful sprinkler to use on just about anything. Splashing it over chicken, cooked any way, is reason enough to add this to my pantry.
Lemon Balm is so much like mint, in that it spreads like little wild fires all over the yard if you let it, and trust that I do.

The leaves when crushed between your fingers, smell of a bright and tart lemon scent, earthy and herby. There are lots of uses for lemon balm, somedays I venture out to steal a handful at a time just to simmer in a pot of water on the stovetop. Sometimes I add cinnamon sticks, lavender buds, orange rinds, or a chopped apple to fill the house with the smell of abundance, but lemon balm alone is enough joy itself for the senses.
There’s more; an old creeping English thyme plant is thriving too, alongside a sage bush, and a little rosemary stem. The first sprouts are the best of the year, and pretty soon I’ll be trimming, giving, drying, chopping and steeping luscious piles of green. Thyme works well in potatoes, diced and roasted with olive oil and garlic powder; sage is good with any meats, laid over a chicken breast while it cooks, stuffed into a turkey, or chopped into sausage for added flavor. You can also toss a hand full of sage into the backyard firepit and wish good fortune to all of the neighbors lucky enough to smell the smoke.
With a setting sun I will close here; just as the rotations of what we orbit and what orbits us, I make my own rounds about the house and garden. I will encourage you to stay curious, and to use your imagination. Acts of domesticity no longer beckon for rigidity but can be works of art, specific to your own domain and the ideas of your heart.
Of course and as always, reach out to me because I do love to chat!
justicesarah67@yahoo.com

