Preserving the taste of summer – how to freeze fresh herbs

 

I’ve written before about how the hearty herbs in my garden hold up over the winter.

But there are tender herbs like basil and tarragon that are done at the first frost. Fresh basil is expensive and I have absolutely zero luck at trying to grow them inside in pots. While shopping over the weekend, I noticed something in the freezer case. There were frozen pureed herbs sold in tiny cubes for three bucks a package. I knew I could do better than that.

 
So I grabbed bunches of fresh, basil, tarragon and chives and pulled out the food processor.

I pulled the leaves off the tarragon and basil. The chives I snipped up with scissors.
 

To make the cubes, I put the tarragon leaves in the food processor.

Then gave it a few good pulses until the leaves were chopped. Then I put the chopped herbs into ice cube trays.

I covered the herbs with water. I used bottled water to avoid any chlorine-type taste from tap water.

Put the tray in the freezer. I used the same process with the basil. For the chives, I skipped the food processor.  After a few hours, you’ll have solid cubes of herbs.

Pop out the cubes and store them in labeled freezer bags.

You can drop a cube into a soup, stew or sauce to give it a pop of fresh herb flavor all winter long.

 

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.