Pools, parity and fresh herbs
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KAREN WIGHT
I miss my garden. Secretly, I was hoping that the children would not
remember my promise: when the baby turned 6 years old, we could have
a pool. Unfortunately, Annie and Breck not only remembered, but they
were planning the pool’s groundbreaking at Mary Rose’s 6th birthday
party.
And so five years ago, it came to pass -- I lost my flower-cutting
bed, fresh herbs and vegetable garden, all in the name of progress
and keeping promises. For me, the call of chlorine only brings more
towels to wash and extra life-guarding duty. For the rest of the
family, it’s a built-in fun zone, an impromptu party and an instant
cure for tired minds and bodies. I’m outnumbered four to one.
Accommodating the pool meant relinquishing my favorite part of the
yard -- the secret garden behind the garage where I could let the
flowers go to seed, let the herbs grow randomly and let the squash
runners take over every square inch of ground. It was messy, but it
was functional. I’m missing the familiar nooks and crannies for my
garden to wander aimlessly and the hidden spots where I could store
rusty tomato cages, and where the leggy cilantro bushes could take on
gargantuan proportions.
But the thing I miss most are the fresh herbs. I miss snipping a
handful of chives and snatching a lemon off the tree. I miss the
fragrance of parsley waiting patiently for its moment of glory. I
miss throwing basil from bush to blender and whipping up an instant
sauce and I miss the colorful sage leaves that I tucked under the
chicken skin that made the entire house smell like Thanksgiving.
During a rebellious moment last month, I decided to recapture a
few square feet for my reincarnated herb garden. Bricks came out,
sprinkler lines installed and although the space is small, it’s
functional and it’s mine.
Since my space is (very) limited, I’ve decided to pare my herb
selection down to five favorites: chives, basil, flat-leaf parsley,
cilantro and sage. I love rosemary as well, but it grows in abundance
throughout the rest of the yard, so five additional herbal jewels
made it to the top of the must-have list: Basil is called l’herbe
royale and it earns this distinction by adding a pleasant flavor to
almost all savory dishes. Unless you grow the purple variety, basil
has beautiful, broad green leaves that are the key ingredient for
pesto. Basil is the main ingredient for marinara sauce, is great
stirred into eggs and livens up any salad. And, as with most herbs,
the more you cut it, the happier it is. Use basil prolifically.
Chives are members of the allium family. They have a mild onion
flavor. The tubular spears are terrific chopped into sauces,
potatoes, soups and vegetables. Chive stems make a great edible
string to tie bundles of asparagus together for a fancy Easter
dinner. Chives grow in clumps and make a great border for an herb
garden. Chive flowers look like giant, purple dandelion balls and are
very mod.
Cilantro is a staple in Mexican and Pacific Rim cooking. Any pico
de gallo worth its weight has fresh cilantro in it. The plants are
fast growers, but varieties like “Slow-Bolt” help keep the lanky herb
in check. Chopped cilantro is great as a condiment with curries,
salsas and stir-fries.
Parsley is valuable as an agent for blending flavors together. You
can put parsley in anything you cook. Well, maybe not dessert, but it
is extremely high in vitamin A, so use it liberally. My favorite
culinary variety is “Giant Italian,” a flat-leaf parsley. If you’ve
never had the French fries at Haute Cakes with chopped parsley and
garlic, you are missing a treat.
“The young sow wild oats, the old grow sage” -- a nice double
entendre for the most-used seasoning in America. You can’t have a
Thanksgiving dinner without liberal amounts of sage. It’s used in
stuffing, poultry, gravies, breads, butters and cheese dishes. The
fourth Thursday in November would be decimated without it.
I have rosemary growing everywhere in my landscape plan: front and
back; tall and prostrate; pruned and cascading. Rosemary makes
exquisite poultry dishes simple. Get a roasting chicken, wash it, put
a handful of rosemary, garlic and sliced lemon inside the cavity and
bake it at 325 degrees until the juices run clear. It’s gourmet
dining that is almost effortless.
If your herb garden runneth over, try this simple hors d’oeuvre:
Mince any combination of your favorite herbs like basil, chives and
parsley; roll a 6-ounce log of goat cheese in the herb mixture;
drizzle a little olive oil over the top and you have a piquant
appetizer that looks as good as it tastes.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Thursdays.
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