Making a cup of mint
tea from the patch outside the back door reminded me of the lemon
verbena I also like to make tea from, it sits among a few plants in
pots which I like the look of together and by coincidence are all
edible.
The garlic chives and varieties of thymes for when I want
something to taste of Italy and the scented Pelargonium leaves and
the lovely lavender for flavouring cakes.
For no better reason
than idle curiosity, and discounting the vegetables which are grown
only for eating, I've added up all the plants in my garden that earn
a place for other reasons but are also edible. Bay, rosemary and sage
are great ornamental shrubs in a dry raised bed through which runs
purple fennel for height and very useful near the kitchen no matter
what meat's for Sunday lunch.
There are fruits all
around the garden, apples, Japanese wineberry, rhubarb, raspberries,
wild and cultivated strawberries and in the hedges up sprout hazels,
plums, blackberries and elder, from which I make cordial and
elderberry flu remedy. I've no idea if it works but it tastes
wonderful.
There are less
obvious wildlings too, wild garlic packs a punch when the leaves are
young and nettles are actually ok if you cook them when very new and
in with other things; apparently they're packed full of vitamins.
If I include all the
things my chickens peck at in order to make their eggs for me and all
the nectar rich flowers the bees forage on to turn into honey then
the list is staggering.
It's a huge plus to
be able to enjoy the taste of my garden as well as its beauty and the
close contact with wildlife it gives me.
Freshness and
flavour are guaranteed, totally pesticide free and unlike the number
of miles much of our food has travelled to get to our kitchens the
few steps needed to pick from the garden are insignificant.
So as I sip my mint
tea and wonder if I should freeze some leaves or dry then for using
over winter, I realise that the fruits are all finished, the leaves
will soon be gone and only the hazel nuts are still to come. It will
be slim pickings over winter, thank goodness for Waitrose!