I wanted to use the basil in cooking, but I just got back from vacation and it has tons of flowers on it. Are the leaves still good to use in cooking or will they taste bitter or are they bad now?
I wanted to use the dill to make pickles, but the dill has started to flower and my cucumbers are just starting. Can I still use the dill leaves in my pickle jars or will it not taste right?
Any advice is much appreciated!
You can still use the leaves, but basil may become more bitter after they flower. Flowering also means the basil will be nearing the end of its' life cycle. On the bright side, the flowers are edible too. The flowers also atttract beneficial insects. Hover flies, parasitic wasps, and honey bees visit them for nectar.
Thanks!imafan26 wrote:You can still use the leaves, but basil may become more bitter after they flower. Flowering also means the basil will be nearing the end of its' life cycle. On the bright side, the flowers are edible too. The flowers also atttract beneficial insects. Hover flies, parasitic wasps, and honey bees visit them for nectar.
How about the dill?
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
My experience, from growing basil in a climate with hot summers for many years, is that when basil bolts -- that is, puts out flower buds, you can pick those buds off for several weeks (and they come fast!) without any effect on the flavor of the leaves. I've never let a plant go into full bloom, but I have missed picking off an occasional bud, and having that bud bloom. No noticeable effect.
At that point, I figure it's getting to be pesto time, and I eventually pull the plants.
But I just ran into an expert gardener who swears that once basil starts bolting, you just hack of the top third (and make it into pesto, I guess), leaving the bottom two third of the plants in the ground. The plants will continue leafing and growing without flowering for another month or two, he says. So their life cycle isn't done when they first bolt. I intend to try that next year.
At that point, I figure it's getting to be pesto time, and I eventually pull the plants.
But I just ran into an expert gardener who swears that once basil starts bolting, you just hack of the top third (and make it into pesto, I guess), leaving the bottom two third of the plants in the ground. The plants will continue leafing and growing without flowering for another month or two, he says. So their life cycle isn't done when they first bolt. I intend to try that next year.