Drying herbs?

Dace

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I have three nice basil plants and I really need to whack 'em back. I would like to try some but need some advice.

I have an electric dehydrator (hiding in the mess of a garage somewhere) but I would prefer to not plug it in. Can I just find a nice quiet spot to hang my basil and let it dry on it's own? Also any ideas on how long that would take?
 

2dream

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I am not sure on the basil but my rosemary, thyme and lavender I just tie some string around the end I cut off and hang up in my kitchen close to my stove. (Ususaly from a cabinet knob. It can take a couple of days or a week. Depending on the humidity in the house and a lot of the time the rosemay and thyme get used before they dry completely.
 

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Sufficient Life
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I usualy use the dehydrator which takes a couple of hours with most herbs.
However, most herbs dry really easily. Basil would be one of the fleshier ones but if you have a warm place like the oven with a pilot light or something, it should dry in a couple of days.
Things like rosemary and taragon can simply be hung up in bunches to dry but I have never done that with basil. I think there might be a lot of breakage doing that so I think that laying it on widow screening or cheesecloth or something similar in a way the air can circulate under it- You'll probably have to turn the leaves every so often to get even drying. But is should dry just in a normally warm room in a couple of days.
Easy to do.
 

patandchickens

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Honestly I've had poor results drying basil (specifically, as opposed to most other herbs). It does not retain its, um, basility :p very well. You might really consider freezing instead.

Most herbs (like the ones that dry well enough to be worth drying) I've had good luck with just hanging in a quiet airy spot indoors, inside a lingerie laundry bag or something like that if you have a dusty cat-hair-y house like mine. Or just a few hrs in a warm oven does the trick too.

Good luck and hvae fun,

Pat
 

keljonma

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You could use the shelves from the electric dehydrator. Put down some foil wrapped cardboard underneath and place in a sunny window....


I tried drying basil tied as a bunch. I hung it in a brown paper bag in a closet. It took about 1 1/2 months for it to completely dry. I like the basil dried in the dehydrator better because it seems to retain more of its flavor.
 

Woodland Woman

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I have dehydrators but I like to dry my herbs on a rack my husband made for me. It has a wood frame with legs and 1/4" hardware cloth to put the herbs on.
 

Farmfresh

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Stop messing about and get that dehydrator OUT OF STORAGE.

We are on a self sufficiency forum!

I use my dehydrator constantly!

I dry all my herbs. (Basil is easy and fast) I dry leftover celery stalks - chopped in the food processor first - great for cooking. Onions (outside or in a breezy place please). Mushrooms on sale. Fruit. I go on ........

A well used dehydrator can really save money.
 

Wildsky

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Farmfresh said:
I use my dehydrator constantly!

I dry all my herbs. (Basil is easy and fast) I dry leftover celery stalks - chopped in the food processor first - great for cooking. Onions (outside or in a breezy place please). Mushrooms on sale. Fruit. I go on ........

A well used dehydrator can really save money.
I use mine alot as well - it just stays on the kitchen counter - mostly I make jerky - cause I can eat the LOT in a week all by myself (from a 2-3 pound london broil) I'm SUCH a pig!
 

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Sufficient Life
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I do agree that most of the herbs I have dried in the dehydrator have better color, taste and texture that air dried with the exception of rosemary which seems good either way.
I recently went on a large scale thyme drying marathon- caused my house to reek of thyme for days- yes I mean reek- it was only on the third day the smell had dropped down to the pleasant cooking smell level rather than the eye-watering, nose running level. Next time I think I will do air drying for that too.
 
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