growing and storing a year of parsley
F LAT-LEAF, OR ITALIAN, PARSLEY IS MACHO COMPARED TO CURLY-LEAF, particularly the selection called (grrrr!) ‘Gigante.’ I like my parsley big and strong, and I get just that by growing my own, and stashing it away for year-round use with two easy freezer tactics. No $1.99-a-bunch stuff for me except in recipes when only fresh will do, and no dried parsley for me, ever: insipid!
Curly-leaf parsley is great for edging borders, and for planting as a “ruff” around the feet of bigger plants in pots, where it will be beautiful all season, even after substantial frost. But if you want to cook, go ‘Gigante,’ or ‘Giant of Italy.’ Flat-leaf parsley has more parsley flavor, to my taste.
All parsley is extremely high in nutrients, particularly Vitamin C, folates and Potassium, as well as beta carotene. In fact, a quarter-cup of raw chopped parsley has about as much C as a quarter-cup of orange juice and double the folates (more that one and a half times those, even, of raw spinach). I include raw leaflets in salads, greatly boosting the nutritional value of every bowlful.
Parsley, a biennial, is easy to grow from seed, despite being ultra-slow and taking two weeks to a month to germinate. Don’t give up on it. I start a 6-pack in the house in early spring, tucking the just-moist cellpack into a slightly ajar plastic bag in a warm spot, then moving to the sunniest windowsill once I see signs of life.
The baby plants, which will look like not so much, quickly put down tap roots and settle in outdoors, shaping up by summer into bushy things. Unlike many vegetable- and herb-garden residents, parsley will manage in part shade, so the north side of your tomatoes (which basil might resent) is fine, for instance, and it does well even spilling out of beds, planted near the edge.
Parsley will technically survive most winters here, but what a mess it will be. To continue to harvest fresh leaves as long as possible into the cold months, tuck one plant in extra-snuggly at frost, perhaps with an upside-down bushel basket over it, and with dry oak leaves or another insulating material stuffed inside that. The plant will usually send up its flower stalk to set seed the next spring; dig it out and compost it, and start the process over. In a stressful summer (hot and dry), the plant may get the urge to “bolt” by midsummer, not even making it into the coming year.
It’s hard to get to my vegetable garden in the worst winters, so I freeze my year’s supply: some as “pesto” cubes, others in “logs” of leaflets pressure-rolled tightly inside freezer bags (above). The log technique (so easy, and probably the only cooking Good Thing I contributed to “Martha Stewart Living,” though my record with gardening ideas was better!) is illustrated below in the slideshow below; many herbs freeze well this way, such as chives, and when you need some, you just slice a disc from one end of the log.
Parsley pesto (shown frozen as cubes, above), great as an ingredient in soup or stew or defrosted and spooned on top of a bowl of minestrone with a drizzle of olive oil and some cheese, is the same theory as with my basil pesto. When I say “recipe,” I mean “guidelines,” not “roadmap.”
Your pesto style may simply be a thick slurry of parsley blended (or food-processor-ed) in a tiny bit of water, or prepared similarly in olive oil, or you can go all the way and add raw garlic or nuts (pine or walnuts, perhaps?) or parmesan-type cheese, before freezing as cubes that are then knocked out into double freezer bags, with the air expressed. (A very different pesto, involving peanuts, is one of the other entries into today’s Fest–and a recipe I plan to try.)
A similar process, with water or oil or more, can also be used to store many herbs like sage, chives or garlic scapes, or rosemary, I recalled, reading this entry at the Gluten-Free Girl blog; use your imagination, and stash what’s in your garden for later. If made with the extras like cheese and garlic, herb pesto cubes are a real treat on crackers on a frigid day, or tossed into pasta: a mouthful of summer, just when you’re most in need.
how to make parsley ‘logs’
FOLLOW ALONG to get the idea of my parsley-preserving process. I know, it looks like some Cheech and Chong stash of weed, but what would I know about that?
- I put up most of my year’s parsley two ways: frozen as parsley pesto cubes, (a dollop from one on top of a steaming bowl of soup=heaven) and…
- …frozen as what I call “parsley logs,” tightly packed rolls of parsley foliage that you can slice a wedge off anytime.
- Whether to freeze or dry, it starts at garden harvest time.
- I grow flat-leaf Italian parsley, leaving the curly stuff for use as edging of garden beds and even in pots with annuals.
- I harvest the oldest (thickest) stems, because in midsummer new ones are still being produced inside (thinner, shorter shoots that I’ll enjoy later).
- Wash the harvested parsley in a colander…
- …then pick off the leaflets (leaving the stems behind) and put the foliage in a salad spinner to dry thoroughly. Wet foliage doesn’t freeze nicely.
- Put a lot of clean, dry leaflets in a freezer bag, and then…
- …start compressing the mass into a log shape at the bottom…
- …and gradually squeeze out the air as you go. The log should be firm; you can really pack a lot in.
- Secure with elastic bands or bull clips and freeze.
- Packing densely means each slice of the frozen roll will yield a lot. Rewrap tightly and return to freezer.
I freeze just the stems by putting them in a zip lock bag. It is easy to grab a hand full when making chicken stock.
Besides all the good nutrients, parsley has oxalic acid which is on the list of foods to avoid if one gets those kind of kidney stones.
Love it! Margaret rolls herbs! ;-)
Oh, not those type of herbs.
Fantastic tip to freeze the leaves rolled up.
LOVE THIS! And yea, I can see why it might remind someone of, um, the other herb. Yowza.
When my days are long and my garden is wild I turn straight to booze. (wow, I didn’t beat around the bush on that one did I…) I decided to review some of my favorite uses for herbs and cocktails and I’m looking forward to finding tons more through other summer fest contributors. My goal is to be wasted by 1:15pm. Yay!
https://mattbites.com/2009/07/28/yo-party-people-summer-fest-is-in-the-house/
Wow, Margaret this is great! Had no idea parsley could be frozen in this manner. Thank you, thank you!
Here is a favorite herb recipe that I made this year if you are looking for a dessert, from David Lebovitz. Yum!
https://fromgarden2table.com/2009/07/14/104-degrees-ice-cream/ and for yet another pesto https://fromgarden2table.com/2009/07/08/presto-pesto/
Love mattbites’s contribution. Cocktails. Brilliant.
Margaret, it’s the parsley that launched a thousand Cheech & Chong jokes! That aside, what a fabulous method. Can’t wait to see what else you’ve cooked up for the Summer Fest.
Thank you for thinking ahead and reminding us of how to enjoy Summer’s bounty in the winter! Your thriving and beautiful parsley is so deserving of enjoyment during the cold season, we can already see a big bowl of warm pasta comfort in our future.
Your fabulous step by step guide and informative tips are simply awesome, just perfect to help us all plan ahead to fall/winter.
Our contribution is a platefull of Herb & Vegetable Rice Paper spring rolls: https://tinyurl.com/nujsfz
Thank you for Summer Fest 2009!
hugs,
diane and todd
Our parsley did well over the winter, kept growing and we had fresh parsley even with snow on the ground. We didn’t think it would weather that well here in Northern Virginia, but it did. Had to replant after the bushes flowered, but hopefully the new parsley will be big and bushy soon so we can make tabouleh.
https://www.andreasrecipes.com/2008/07/21/tabouleh-aka-tabbouleh-tabouli/
Thanks for doing the Summer Fest again this year!
Wow, what a great kick-off to Summer Fest 2009! Parsley is certainly the workhorse of herbs, and
Can’t do a full post right now (something about my regular job needing some attention) but I would like to contribute something! I wrote a quick post about how to “chiffonade” basil recently.
https://penandfork.wordpress.com/2009/06/06/chiffonade/
Welcome, Tammy. You know, I am so grateful to hear this is helpful, as I was worried it was too simple/silly, but most of the really useful things *are* simple, no? I love household tips; can’t get enough of those little “aha’s,” and this has been one for me since I learned it in an old canning and preserving book or somewhere. See you soon again.
https://edgehillherbfarmer.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!B892B2F03E01EEC8!1148.entry
I put up a recipe on my blog for a tomato pie. Tomorrow I am putting up “breakfast of the year!” Intriguing? Good! Gosh, I love this Summer Fest and love being a part of it! THANK YOU. Now, if iIcan only figure out how to do it correctly…I am a blog fiasco.
Welcome, Karen. Fiascos (and tomato pies!) always welcome in Margaret’s House of Chaos. Don’t ever feel shy. :) I am all about WordPress (as I have often said here before) and that makes my blogging less of a fiasco than it would otherwise be, at least. See you soon again, and thanks for the great recipe.
What a great idea! As my contribution for the first week of Summer Fest 2009, I would like share my recipe for Aïoli with fresh garden herbs that I just recently posted on my blog – http://www.thecooksatelier.com.
The weather in the Bay Area is a bit cooler, and we’re lucky enough to have fresh herbs most of the year. I have basil and oregano growing right now, and just finished up the cilantro and parsley.
I put fresh parsley in almost everything. It really is a cornerstone of Italian cooking. I just posted a fresh ravioli recipe, where I stuffed the pasta with fresh vegetables, goat cheese and parsley. mmm, so good!
https://locallemons.com/local_lemons/2009/07/garden-vegetable-ravioli-in-tomato-brodo.html
Welcome, Marjorie. The aioli looks delicious. So glad you came to the event and shared it with us. What a great crop of recipes we are already accumulating. See you next time!
Welcome, Allison. I have an issue with ravioli…as in I can’t stop eating them if I start, particularly if they’re as tender as those look on your site. Thank you, and don’t be a stranger.
My favorite herb is now parsley. It looks beautiful in the garden with its dark green leaves. A salad without a healthy dose of flat-leaves just isn’t a salad. Love the tips on freezing. Parsley in the market just doesn’t taste the same.
Welcome, Nicole. Glad to know there’s another parsley-in-the-salad gardener out there. Strong flavor, but so good for you and I love the taste. See you soon again, I hope.
Thanks for the wonderful tips! I’m always looking for great ways to store herbs. I’d never heard of the log idea – except perhaps for cookie dough. This sounds so much better than dried.
Have you ever grown garlic chives, also known as Chinese chives? They’re quite decorative with their pretty white flowers (don’t ever let them go to seed). The flavor is sort of sweet and hot. I put them in chicken salad last week and my husband loved it.
Margaret – What a fun idea to share “garden fresh” info among blogger friends. Love it!
I did an entire post about another powerhouse in the kitchen…MINT! I think it is very under appreciated in the kitchen and yet, it has so many culinary possibilities (both sweet and savory).
https://www.gardenfreshliving.com/2009/07/cooking-with-marvelous-mint.html
The recipes I included in my post are: Simple Minted Corn-on-the-cob, Spearmint Limeade (a nice change from lemonade), Summer Punch with mint.
Thanks for letting all of us participate in this!
Welcome, Theresa, and yes: mint. I know my friends at White on Rice blog and that boozhound Matt at MattBites are all about the mint. Thank you so much for these recipes with your powerhouse herb. See you soon!
@Deirdre: I have garlic chives, yes, but (funny) have never eaten them. Great idea! Thank you.
Thanks Margaret.
I almost forgot…One of my favorite herbal recipes is Lavender Biscotti! The lavender has nice floral flavor and of course everyone loves biscotti!
Here is a link to my recipe…great with tea!
https://www.gardenfreshliving.com/2008/10/lavender-biscot.html
All of the recipes sound delicious! I like to use fresh herbs to make my Lemon Herb Salt for Roasted Potatoes, https://www.thenaptimechef.com/2009/02/napping-with-spud.html
And to add to my Baked Tomato & Zucchini Gratin: https://www.thenaptimechef.com/2009/07/napping-with-edible-vineyard-sunday.html
Not to mention homemade pesto – so simple and delicious! https://www.thenaptimechef.com/2009/06/napping-with-perfect-pesto.html
I can’t wait to make the lavender biscotti!!
Welcome, Kelsey. All I can say is, there’s a lot of good-sounding food here (and yes, those biscotti got me going, too). Gratins have to be one of the best inventions ever, so thanks for adding one to the mix. See you soon again, I hope.
Love this! I’m going to freeze my herbs this year for the first time:)
Pictures certainly ARE worth a thousand words. Never under-estimate the power of a photo!! I loved this slideshow – yes, I’m a fairly experienced cook, and yes, I’m a fairly experienced gardener. But this tip is just awesome!! I love learning new things – thanks!!!
Some of my friends last year made mint infused vodka. I haven’t worked out the details yet (I’ll post it when I do) but you basically put fresh mint in (cheap) vodka and let it sit for a month or so.
They made us the most AMAZING bloody mary’s with the vodka: Fresh tomato juice from their own tomatoes, fresh horseradish, lemons and garnished with home-made dill beans (pickled beans). A different yet oddly familiar and really refreshing.
Kim, I have tried that mint vodka and let me tell you…It works!
My favorite though is steeping lemon slices and lemon verbena in vodka. It is so delicious. And if you use a high quality vodka, it is even good all by itself over ice. I swear! Just run a lemon slice around the glass first and dip the glass rim in sugar. Then pour in the lemon vodka over ice. Don’t drink too much though or you won’t be able to work in the garden in the morning!