From: Barry_Carlson@mindlink.bc.ca (Barry Carlson) Subject: Lavender Date: Tue, 22 Jun 1993 00:32:22 GMT In response to Paul G Kosidowski:pkosidow@csd4.csd.uwm.edu who writes: > Does anyone have any tried and tru techniques for drying lavender > and separating the buds. I just clipped a far amount of stalks off > my plants just as they were starting to bud, and I was hoping to use > them in potpourri or something else....Will they just shake off > after they're dried. Also, anyone have any favorite things to do or > make with lavender? I put the lavender, stalks and all, on big trays to dry. You can also bundle them up and hang them to dry if that is more convenient. I also make a few bouquets for the house and treat them just like cut flowers except that I don't give them any water. The flowers will separate easily from the stalks once they are thoroughly dried so don't bother trying to separate them until then. As for making things, as you mentioned Lavender is a great ingredient for potpourri. I usually make lavender sachets...just a plain cotton baggie tied at the top and stuffed full of lavender. Even without a fixative, lavender will stay fragrant for about a year. These sachets are great for popping in any drawers where you have clothing -- smells good and also acts as a bug repellant. Lavender, in small quantities, can be added to herbal tea blends and it goes particularly well with the mints. As a culinary item lavender has gone out of fashion, but Queen Elizabeth I was very fond of Lavender Conserve. You can also make Lavender Jelly, Lavender Syrup for desserts and Lavender Sugar for sprinkling on cakes and cookies. A rather nice old English custom was to serve small sweets on lavender stalks much the same way we might serve a bite-size savory nibble on a toothpick. LAVENDER CAGES: These "cages" are made when the lavender is freshly cut and the stalks are still flexible. Cut about 25 stalks of lavender to the same length and as long as possible. Rub off any leaves so that each stalk is bare other then for the lavender flowers at the top. Bundle the lavender flowers together and tie them tightly just under the flower heads. Then hold the flower bunch upside down and carefully bend down each stalk so that the lavender flowers are enclosed in a "cage" made by the stalks. Tie the stems together tightly at the bottom of the cage and trim them so they are even. Make a loop in the string so that you can hang up your cage until the lavender is completely dry. Although simple cotton string is perfectly serviceable, there is nothing like a piece of slim satin ribbon to make lavender cages as beautiful as they are fragrant. Try using the cage "bars" as weft threads and weaving the satin ribbon through them. CONSERVE OF THE FLOWERS OF LAVENDER: The following recipe is from "The Queen's Closet Opened" by W.M., the Cook to Queen Henrietta Maria, 1655. "Take the flowers being new so many as you please, and beat them with three times their weight of White Sugar, after the same manner as Rosemary flowers; they will keep one year." Enjoy! -Moira Carlson