Pages

Friday, May 28, 2010

Kitchen Garden How To: The Best Way to Store Fresh Parsley (and Other Herbs like Basil)

Parsley Bouquet in Rooster Glass 1
In a Kitchen Counter Bouquet!

Realization of the Day:
I often take parsley for granted, but if there isn't any growing in the garden I really miss it. It's just so versatile—and tasty. I love it in this Confetti Egg Salad Recipe I recently wrote about on Farmgirl Fare.

Like so many things, the very best place to store your parsley is out in the garden, still attached to the plant. But it won't stay out there indefinitely, maintaining its ready-to-pick state until you're actually ready to pick it. (Why do I always forget this basic rule of growing things?)


This curly parsley is from a plant that overwintered in the greenhouse. I usually grow Italian flat leaf parsley from seed (my favorite variety is Prezzemolo Gigante D'Italia, which I order from Pinetree Garden Seeds; 600 seeds for $1.15), but a friend who was experiencing a parsley explosion in his garden last spring offered me a couple of curled parsley plants, and I never say no to free herbs.

Parsley is a biennial, which means it requires two years to complete its lifecycle. The first year the leaves grow, and the second year the plant blooms, produces seeds, and then dies. Many gardeners grow edible biennials such as beets, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, celery, lettuce, and Swiss chard as annuals. (I grow Swiss chard—which I'm crazy about and which is so easy to grow from seed—as both an annual and a biennial, overwintering several plants each year in the greenhouse under protective blankets and old sheets.)

Once the temperatures started warming up, my scraggly little greenhouse parsley plant took off, but then it began to bolt. I snipped off the main center stem, plunked it into a 'vase' of water, and set it on the kitchen counter. Three weeks later it looked almost as good as the day I picked it. I changed the water once.

Last year I wrote about the best ways to store fresh basil (this post also talks about my new found love for purple basil), and I mentioned that one of our lamb customers keeps a big bunch of basil in a pitcher of water on her kitchen counter during the summer. I said I needed to try this, and several of you let me know that you store your basil this way, too.

I made some basil 'bouquets,' last summer and it worked great, so I figured I'd try it this year with parsley, too. I usually store parsley in the refrigerator (often for several weeks), washed and wrapped in a plastic bag with a paper towel, but having it out on the counter is so much more fun—and visible. I'm one of those 'out of sight, out of mind' people, so a big green reminder in the middle of the kitchen is exactly what I need.

A lot of sources advise you to store your fresh herbs in a glass of water in the refrigerator, but I don't find it necessary. Herbs thrive outside in the sun and heat, and if the water is keeping them from wilting, there's really no reason to chill them. Besides, I know I'd probably reach into the fridge and knock the glass over an hour after putting it in there.

Parsley Bouquet in Rooster Glass 2

As for this cute rooster glass, I spied it during a recent trip to World Market (I love that store) and couldn't resist bringing home a couple of them. At the rate we tend to break glasses around here, though (I'm down to my last little World Market sheep glass), I'm thinking I probably should have bought four.

Do you grow parsley? Store vases of fresh herbs on the counter? Have a thing for animal glassware? Do tell!

Other herb posts:
6/6/06: What To Do with Lemon Thyme (see the comments section)
6/20/09: Harvesting the First Green and Purple Basil of the Season—and the Best Ways to Store Your Fresh Basil (includes links at the bottom to more basil growing posts)

Farmgirl Fare recipes using fresh herbs:
Herbed Yogurt Cheese (and all about chives)
My Favorite Basil Pesto (with fresh tomatoes & relatively lowfat)
Garlic Lover's White Bean Soup (fat free, vegan, and delicious!)

Beyond Easy Beer Bread (the herb combinations are endless!)
Carrot Herb Rolls (and a beautiful bargain bread book)


© Copyright 2010 FarmgirlFare.com, the curled up foodie farm blog where I love that part in The Fabulous Baker Boys where Michelle Pfeiffer compares the song 'Feelings' to parsley, even though it wasn't really very fair to parsley.

14 comments:

  1. Parsley grows itself in my wet, west coast of Canada garden!! It is a menace, but I can't resist letting it live almost anywhere it likes... although I have learnt to pull out the oregano which also takes over everywhere. Luckily I eat both of them, a lot! I can pick it fresh year round pretty much, just outside my back door.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My parsley just comes up now all by itself in my first raised bed. I have to weed it out when it is taking a space I need for another plant. But, I love it. When it is between the going to seed stage and the little ones are too small to use, I really miss it. Mine is the curly leaf, very hardy and bright green. I have to start the Italian type or buy a plant and it never comes back. Wonder why?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm growing a lot of basil this year so I can make one of my favorite soups (tomato basil). Who'd have thunk about keeping it fresh in a bouquet!?! So cool!

    ReplyDelete
  4. No to all of the above. And I might be the only person in the world who doesn't like parsley. We grow it anyway, though, because the MiL loves it.

    And I break a LOT of glasses in our nice hard porcelain sink. Or on our inconveniently low faucets in the sink while I'm washing dishes. We have some pretty thick, almost indestructible glasses made in France that can withstand our sink, but wine glasses, beer glasses, and anything else made of thin glass? Forget it. I live in fear of breaking some of Aunt Elizabeth's crystal glassware (who was actually like a great-great aunt, so we're talking OLD, irreplaceable stuff).

    ReplyDelete
  5. All of the above!

    I store any cut herbs in an old label-free jar on the kitchen counter and replace the water whenever I remember or they start to look icky at the bottoms.

    I got one of those in-fridge herb keeper things, but I always forget it's in there and then I find gooey herbs a year later. GROSS.

    After having to dig and amend and test soil around my last parsley plant, I've taken to planting all my biennial and perennial herbs in the landscaping where they can live out their lives undisturbed by my trowel or invading tomatoes.

    And ever since growing parsley in the garden, I can't NOT have it. It goes in everything. Also perennial herb musts: thyme (lemon and regular), oregano, rosemary, lemongrass and lavender.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love your blog. I just stopped to get a link to your great chard post from 2007 to put it as a link on my next post (on, you guessed it, chard). I had to check out what you've been up to lately, and chuckled when I saw your current post's topic.

    I wrote a post on parsley on my new blog about 2 weeks ago - great minds think alike! I'd love for you to check it out. http://thegardenershabitat.wordpress.com/2010/05/14/in-praise-of-parsley/

    Happy Gardening!

    ReplyDelete
  7. My parsley went to seed, and exploded all over my garden. I've been pulling them out like weeds...

    ReplyDelete
  8. I allotted one bed to my parsley because they are like weeds when they burst out.

    ReplyDelete
  9. i love parsley too ! i do all the usual things with it but i also freeze a lot to make parsley tea with. one bunch of parsley and two qts of water.....bring to a boil and let steep. 2 oz in the morning and 2 oz at dinner.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I love your blog! And thanks for visiting mine! I know I'll be visiting often. I've always grown herbs and tomatoes and such in containers but this year (after removing a ton of trees in the yard) I have space and sun for a true veggie garden. So excited for lots of fresh veggies this summer!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Although I store basil in a vase (in the fall), I never thought to do that with parsley. This year I bought nursery started parsley. I know I know. It was painful! Why buy an herb you can start from seed? I just found that their nursery starts are so early that it comes in just in time to line up with my other cooking. I don't use parsley much in the height of the summer. I didn't know it was a bienniel..I'll have to try that out. I freeze parsley that I can't use. It's nice to have during the winter for soups and sauces.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hello, Farm Girl! Don't you have a TV series coming up? Anyway, I was watching a fave cooking show -- "French Food @ Home" -- and noticing that she took parsley from a little pot on the counter (Giada does this, too); and, having just bought a bunch of organic parsley yesterday, I'm going to try the same! The only ? I have, is, does one have to store the entire plant (roots and all)? I guess we'll see! Thanks for the info, and I think I'll do a quick post on my own site -- http://www.glutenfreesafari.com/

    Thanks again, Karen

    ReplyDelete
  13. Hi Karen,
    Nope, no TV series for me - you're probably thinking of The Pioneer Woman.

    As for your parsley question - you don't need to keep the roots attached to the plant (or even dig up the whole plant). Just stick the snipped stems in the water like cut flowers. :)

    ReplyDelete

March 2013 update: My apologies for the inconvenience - I know word verification is a pain - but I've had to turn it on to help stop the ridiculous number of anonymous spam comments I've been getting every day. Thanks for your understanding.

Welcome to InMyKitchenGarden.com! Thanks so much for taking the time to write. While I'm not always able to reply to every comment, I receive and enjoy reading them all.

Your feedback is greatly appreciated, and I especially love to hear about what's going on in your own garden. I know, too, that other readers also delight in reading about your garden successes, failures, helpful tips, and lessons learned. Feel free to leave comments on older posts!

I try my best to answer all questions, but sometimes it takes me a few days to get to them. And sometimes, I'm sorry to say, they fall through the cracks, and for that I sincerely apologize.

I look forward to hearing from you and hope you enjoy your visits to my kitchen garden!