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They're
sowed any time in April or May onwards, so you have a plant which
is ready in six or seven weeks time, and then useable for just two
to three weeks, and then they're finished.
The way to get
them available throughout the season is to sow them successively
-every three weeks sow some more.
Basil is different
in that it has a longer lifetime that can keep going right through
the season.
Dill is associated
very much with fish, used extensively in Scandinavian and Dutch
cuisine with herrings and salmon.
The stalks can
be used to infuse the stocks or when you're grilling the fish, and
the feathery parts of the herb are chopped up and put in the sauce
at the last minute. Again, they will discolour if you cook them
too much. If you keep them nice and green and use them sparingly,
it's a wonderful accompaniment to poached or grilled fish.
Coriander is
probably the most widely used herb today. It's featured in Asian
and European cuisine, and is commonplace in many English dishes.
You can make
Asian pestos with it or it can be used in stir-fries, and sauces
and South-American salsas, and it's got that lovely aromatic flavour
when you cook with it and when you chop it.
Cardoon
Cardoon is a
large blue plant which can be described as a thistle which looks
as it's trying to emulate a triffid! It's an unusual plant, and
there is a recipe for it in the repertoire. It's difficult to cook
-you have to cook with a mixture of lemon juice and flour with water
or stock, that stops the discolouration.
It does look
extraordinary as you can see from the image above - a perennial
plant, which is interesting if nothing else from an architectural
point of view.
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