Growing your own aromatic herbs is probably the simplest and most rewarding way to start gardening. A sunny windowsill, a balcony, or a small corner of the garden is all you need to have fresh herbs at your fingertips year-round. No more wilted packets from the supermarket: with a few simple steps, you'll have fragrant basil, crispy parsley, refreshing mint, and many other flavors to elevate your cooking. This guide introduces the 10 essential aromatic herbs and everything you need to know to grow them successfully.

Why Grow Your Own Aromatic Herbs?

Before diving in, let's remember the many advantages of growing your own herbs:

Herb garden

The 10 Essential Aromatic Herbs

1. Basil (Ocimum basilicum)

The king of Mediterranean herbs. Its enchanting fragrance is inseparable from Italian cuisine, summer salads, and the famous pesto.

Did You Know?

There are many basil varieties beyond the classic Sweet Basil: purple basil (decorative and flavorful), Thai basil (anise notes), lemon basil (perfect for fish), cinnamon basil, and even Greek basil (a compact small ball, ideal for pots).

2. Parsley (Petroselinum crispum)

One of the most widely used herbs in cooking, indispensable in countless recipes. There are two types: flat-leaf parsley (more fragrant, preferred in cooking) and curly parsley (more decorative, milder flavor).

3. Chives (Allium schoenoprasum)

With its delicate onion flavor, chives are perfect in omelets, salads, cream cheese, and sauces. Its pretty purple flowers are both edible and decorative.

4. Mint (Mentha)

Refreshing and vigorous, mint flavors tea, cocktails (the mojito!), fruit salads, and many Middle Eastern dishes. Caution: it's an invasive plant that quickly colonizes all available space.

Warning: Invasive Mint!

Always grow mint in a pot or separate container, even if it's planted in the garden. Bury a large plastic pot (with holes in the bottom) in the ground and plant the mint inside it. Without this precaution, its underground runners will colonize your entire vegetable garden in a single season.

5. Thyme (Thymus vulgaris)

A pillar of the bouquet garni and Provencal cuisine, thyme is also a recognized medicinal plant (antiseptic, digestive). It's one of the easiest herbs to grow.

6. Rosemary (Salvia rosmarinus)

A Mediterranean shrub with a powerful, resinous fragrance, rosemary magnificently accompanies grilled meats, roasted potatoes, lamb, and summer vegetables.

7. Cilantro (Coriandrum sativum)

An essential herb in Asian, Mexican, Indian, and North African cuisine. Its flavor is polarizing: some love it, others hate it (a genetic predisposition may be the cause). If you enjoy it, it's easy to grow.

8. Oregano (Origanum vulgare)

Wild cousin of marjoram, oregano is the herb of pizza and Mediterranean dishes. Its aroma intensifies when dried, making it one of the rare herbs that are better dried than fresh.

9. Sage (Salvia officinalis)

A powerful herb with a slightly camphorous fragrance, sage is used with white meats, poultry, butter pasta, and in many Italian preparations. It's also a medicinal plant renowned since antiquity.

10. Dill (Anethum graveolens)

With its fresh, anise-like fragrance, dill is the ideal companion for salmon, cucumbers, marinades, and Scandinavian cuisine. Its feathery leaves are also very decorative.

Aromatic herbs in pots

Growing Indoors vs Outdoors

Growing Herbs Indoors

Most aromatic herbs can be grown indoors, provided you follow certain essential rules:

Best herbs for indoors: chives, parsley, basil, mint, cilantro. These herbs tolerate lower light levels than Mediterranean varieties.

More challenging indoors: thyme, rosemary, sage, oregano. These Mediterranean plants need lots of light and dry air. They can survive indoors but will be less productive than outdoors.

Growing Herbs Outdoors

In the ground or in pots on a balcony, herbs give their best performance outdoors.

In the ground: group plants with similar needs. Create a "Mediterranean zone" for thyme, rosemary, sage, and oregano (dry, poor soil, full sun) and a "cool zone" for parsley, chives, and mint (rich, moist soil, partial shade acceptable).

In pots on a balcony: this is an excellent option. Use pots at least 8 to 12 inches (20-30 cm) in diameter. Long planters allow you to combine several plants with similar needs. Remember that watering must be more frequent than in the ground, as pots dry out quickly.

The Herb Spiral: A Brilliant Idea

The herb spiral is a construction in the shape of an ascending spiral, made of stones or bricks, which naturally creates different growing zones: dry and sunny at the top (thyme, rosemary, sage), cool and shaded at the bottom (parsley, chives, mint). It's beautiful, practical, and space-efficient. A diameter of 5 feet (1.5 m) at the base is enough to accommodate about ten herbs.

Harvesting at the Right Time

Knowing when and how to harvest makes all the difference in terms of flavor.

General Harvesting Rules

Preserving Your Aromatic Herbs

In peak season, production often exceeds daily needs. Here are the best methods to preserve your herbs and enjoy them year-round.

Drying

The oldest and simplest method, particularly suited for thyme, oregano, rosemary, sage, and savory.

  1. Harvest in dry weather, in the morning.
  2. Form small bunches and hang them upside down in a dry, warm, ventilated place, away from direct light.
  3. Drying takes 1 to 3 weeks depending on the herb and conditions.
  4. Herbs are dry when they crumble between your fingers.
  5. Crumble the leaves and store in airtight glass jars, away from light.

Note: basil, parsley, and chives lose much of their flavor when dried. Freezing is preferable for these herbs.

Freezing

Excellent method for preserving the freshness of basil, parsley, chives, cilantro, and dill.

In Oil or Vinegar

Submerge branches of rosemary, thyme, or tarragon in a bottle of olive oil or wine vinegar. Let infuse for 2 to 4 weeks away from light. You'll get fragrant condiments that will enhance your salads and marinades.

Herb Salt

Mix coarse salt with chopped fresh herbs (one-third herbs to two-thirds salt). Spread on a tray and let dry. You'll get a flavored salt that keeps for several months and enhances all your dishes. Try rosemary, thyme, or sage salt: delicious on grilled meats.

"The herb garden is the first garden humanity ever cultivated. It is also the smallest, simplest, and most useful of all gardens."

Common Problems and How to Avoid Them

Yellowing Leaves

Most common cause: overwatering. Waterlogged roots can no longer feed the plant. Reduce watering and ensure good drainage. Secondary cause: lack of light, especially indoors.

The Plant Bolts Too Quickly

Mainly affects basil, cilantro, and dill. Heat and water stress accelerate flowering. Water regularly, mulch the soil, choose a partially shaded spot in summer, and systematically pinch off flowers as soon as they appear.

Aphids

Aphids love tender herbs. Spray a solution of insecticidal soap (1 tablespoon per quart/liter of water). Encourage ladybugs and hoverflies in your garden. A strong jet of water on the colonies can also be enough to dislodge them.

Powdery Mildew (White Powder)

This fungus develops when the air is humid and stagnant. Space your plants well, water in the morning at the base (never on the leaves), and ventilate if plants are indoors. Treat with a mixture of baking soda (1 teaspoon per quart/liter of water with a little insecticidal soap).

Successful Herb Combinations

If you're short on space, here are combinations that work well in pots or planters:

Avoid combining plants with opposite needs: rosemary (dry) and mint (moist) in the same pot will result in one or the other suffering.

You now have all the keys to start your own herb garden. Begin modestly with 3 or 4 herbs that you regularly use in cooking, and expand your collection over time. You'll never cook the same way again once you've tasted freshly picked herbs from your own garden.