For daily wit & wisdom, sign up for the Almanac newsletter.
No content available.
The two best ways to preserve extra herbs are drying and freezing. There’s no need to waste any herbs, whether you bought those small (and pricy) store containers or need to cut your garden herbs before fall frost. Here’s how to dry and freeze your herbs to preserve that garden-fresh flavor all year long.
What Is an Herb?
Herbs have been both our medicine and our food for millennia! Think of an “herb” as any aromatic plant used for food, seasoning, or medical treatment. Favorite herbs include Greek oregano, basil, rosemary, thyme, dill, parsley, and the various mints, as well as the medicinals: yarrow (leaves and flowers), elderberry flowers, plantain, comfrey, heal-all, and others.
The volatile oils and medicinal phytocompounds are most highly concentrated in leafy herbs as the flower buds swell but haven’t yet opened. If you’re growing herbs, always harvest on a sunny morning after the dew has dried but before the full force of the midday sun. This should be after the flower buds appear but before they open.
If you don’t grow or collect your own, you may find fresh herbs in quantity at many farmers’ markets or specialty food stores. Sometimes is just fine to buy a few ounces of the organic herb and make the product you have been waiting to make.
Which Herbs to Freeze Versus Dry
Some herbs respond best to freezing, others to drying, and some can be frozen or dried! Please look at our chart of types of herbs and details on their preferred preservation methods below.
Herb
Freezing?
Drying?
Basil
Yes
Yes
Chives
Yes
No
Cilantro
Yes
No
Dill
Yes
Yes
Fennel
No
Yes
Lemon balm
Yes
No
Lemon verbena
Yes
No
Marjoram
Yes
No
Mint
Yes
Yes
Oregano
Yes
Yes
Parsley
Yes
Yes
Rosemary
Yes
Yes
Sage
Yes
Yes
Savory
Yes
Yes
Scented geranium
No
Yes
Tarragon
Yes
Yes
Thyme
Yes
Yes
How to Dry Herbs
There are many ways to dry herbs—in a basket, hang herbs, or use a dehydrator. Indeed, some herbs can be air-dried easily, such as oregano, sage, and thyme. But unless you live in a very arid climate, herbs such as basil and parsley, which have thick, succulent leaves, are better dried in a dehydrator. You may decide how far you want to go with the process. Patty Sanders, a certified herbalist, explains further:
Hanging in bunches: The old-fashioned method of tying small bunches of herbs with string and hanging them to dry in a dark, well-ventilated place still works well for most leafy herbs and flowers. Rinse the herbs well under cool running water, lay them to wilt and dry in the sun, then tie them up. Remove leaves from their stems and store them in an airtight jar when they are dry.
Strip and dry in a hot place: To dry a large harvest of tea and medicinal herbs, I’ve had success with stripping individual leaves or flower clusters from their stems, spreading them one layer deep on a thin cotton sheet, and tacking the four corners to boards in the steeply pointed ceiling in my attic. It’s hot, dry, and dark up there in summer, and the herbs dry quickly. When they crumble easily, I sweep them into a clean pillow case or heavy paper bag and crush them, then store in glass jars in a dry, dark place.
Dehydrate: A few years ago I bought an eight-tray electric food dehydrator to try drying tomatoes, zucchini, and garden fruits. I’ve found it especially useful for drying aromatic culinary and tea herbs: oregano, sage, basil, and mint. Because it removes moisture at such a low temperature (about 95°) with continuous airflow across the drying racks, it preserves the rich flavors of these culinary herbs better than oven or air-drying. When the herbs crumble easily, I sweep them into a large paper bag, crumble them with my hands, and funnel them into glass containers. I like small-mouthed mason jars for storage because they accept the lids from grated parmesan-cheese containers that let me shake herbs right from the jar. Make sure you store the herbs in an airtight container.
How to Freeze Herbs
Freezing is the best way to maintain the essential oils and spritely flavors of delicate herbs such as dill, fennel, thyme, basil, and chives (although you can freeze any herb). You have several options for freezing fresh herbs.
There’s no need to blanch herbs for freezing. Just wash all herbs in cool, running water and pat dry before freezing.
Freeze in layers: The most common way to freeze herbs is to lay sprigs of rinsed herbs one layer deep in a freezer bag and freeze them flat. This method allows you to reach into a bag, remove the needed amount of herbs, and crumble them quickly into a salad dressing, soup, or other dish.
Pack in ice cubes: Chop the well-rinsed herbs (create a mixture if you like), pack them tightly into ice-cube trays, add enough water to cover, and freeze. You can remove the herb cubes from the trays and store them in a freezer bag or rigid container.
Make herbsicles: Without chopping, pack a handful of fresh leafy herbs in a small plastic snack bag That’s labeled with the herb(s) inside. Roll tightly, seal, then secure with a couple of rubber bands to hold the cylindrical shape. Pack three or four of these frozen logs into a zippered freezer bag. When you want to use one, remove the log from the bag, slice off what you need from one end, and quickly return the log to the freezer.
Freeze in olive oil: This method makes a perfect way to prepare herbs and herb mixtures for salad dressings, soups, and other prepared dishes. Just blend the desired herbs with enough oil to make a pourable mixture, pour into ice cube trays and freeze. If you love basil (or any other herb) pesto, puree your big bunches of de-stemmed basil with olive oil and freeze them in ice cube trays. Run the trays under hot water to remove the cubes, pop them into freezer containers or wrap them individually in plastic wrap, and store them in the freezer. Use herb and oil cubes directly from the freezer or thaw in the refrigerator and use immediately. NOTE: Do not leave out at room temperature because of the high risk for botulism.
Of course, the ice-cube method is a perfect way to preserve your pesto, too. A couple of basil-and-garlic pesto cubes will improve the flavor of nearly any winter soup.
Herbal Vinegar
Herbal vinegars are inexpensive and easy to make. And fresh culinary herbs make the best vinegars. My favorite to preserve in vinegar are: basil, oregano, rosemary, dill, garlic, thyme, and sage. Learn more about how to make herbal vinegars (“pickling”) as well as herbal tinctures and herbal creams/salves*.
Margaret Boyles is a longtime contributor to The Old Farmer’s Almanac. She wrote for UNH Cooperative Extension, managed NH Outside, and contributes to various media covering environmental and human health issues. Read More from Margaret Boyles
I save my leftover herbs by chopping them then laying them flattened in a zip lock to freeze. Then I can break a chunk off as needed. For ginger I peel it. pulse it in food processor, then lay it in flat layer to freeze. It's wonderful to break off a piece ginger add turmeric and cinnamon for a nice cup of tea.
When is the best time to freeze dill? I have the Bouquet variety. I would rather use the leaves not necessarily the seed heads. (Is there a too soon time?)
When I get more herbs like parsley, basil, dill I wash well and dry with a paper towel. Put a paper towel on a cookie sheet. Turn on the oven to 220 degrees and turn off and put cookie sheet in. The parsley is still green but dry so I crackle it and put it in a baggie or put in little jars. Hardly ever have to buy during the winter. And I know it is safe with no pesticides.
so it says oil cubes and pesto cubes as a suggestion, saying they work well for soups and salads, but then it says not to use oil for internal use? Am i missing a detail?
i usually dry mine but i haven't liked how the oven does it, it blows them around and sometimes they come out shiny and don't break up or some spots just won't dry, and it's pretty difficult with thyme as the tiny leaves just get lost. so i'm curious about different ideas.