Mint
Apple mint
I love mint. I know some gardeners regard it as a garden thug, but I’m not a proper gardener and am pathetically grateful for anything, no, not anything, but many things that deign to grow in our ground.
I don’t think we’ve ever had couch grass – actually, at some points in the year we don’t have any grass. Reseeding is not merely annual, it is ongoing. The plant that pops up everywhere just to irritate me is a sedge.
SpearmintAnyway, mint grows beautifully in our garden. Apart from apple mint, we have spearmint, black peppermint, grapefruit, pineapple and eau de cologne.
Pineapple mint, just emerging.I hope the grapefruit mint will put in an appearance, too.
Eau de cologne mint
I wondered how eau de cologne mint could be used. It’s quite strongly scented. I found that it can be used in pot pourri, mint teas, herb vinegar, fruit salads and jellies. The leaves make an excellent addition to a relaxing bath and crushed leaves rubbed over arms and legs are a good insect repellent.
It is also reputed to be the best mint for making mint julep, for which there are many recipes online but I grow it simply because I like it.
I shan’t be adding it to salad or new potatoes, though!
I love adding herbs and oils to the bath, but I had never thought of fresh mint. And it would be easy - there is always a pot or two of mint on the back patio. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteSome suggest putting the leaves in a muslin bag or similar and tying it to the hot tap or floating it in the water.
DeleteI love mint too but am reluctant to grow any as most edibles don't seem to survive the bugs here. I buy spearmint and peppermint tea and enjoy that throughout the year with a little honey. I am glad you noticed the caterpillar before you cut him up.
ReplyDeleteLive and let live!
ReplyDeleteBoth Nobby and Gail are thinking lamb and mint sauce!
ReplyDeleteSunday lunch?
ReplyDeleteF is going to try out more varieties of mint now - we didn't even know there was such a thing as eau de cologne mint.
ReplyDeleteSome fare better than others- or maybe it's just us! The grapefruit mint smells wonderful.
DeleteI love mint too although I keep mine in pots. I have just three - the usual common or garden kind, apple mint and chocolate mint. xx
ReplyDeleteDo you like the chocolate mint? I'm always rather discouraged by plants that smell of chocolate - silly, really x
ReplyDeleteWhat a huge range of mints you've got in your garden Janice. I'd never heard of eau de cologne mint and I'm intrigued. Also wonder if the mint moth's got a taste for it :-) xxx
ReplyDeleteThe mint moths don't seem to care where or what they eat . . . x
ReplyDeleteI had no idea there were different kinds of mint, so thank you for the new knowledge. I have mint (now I don't know what kind!) and lucky that I do because it's basically the only thing that has survived the deer in my yard!
ReplyDeleteSo deer don't like mint? I don't think sheep do, either - perhaps they have foreknowledge of what it might be used for ;-)
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