EBOOK CULINARY HERBS PRIVATE LABEL RIGHTS
August 20, 2009 – 11:42 am | by
All these are familiar friends; but what are those plants near the kitchen? They are “mother’s sweet herbs.” We have never seen them on the table. They never played leading roles such as those of the cabbage and the potato. They are merely members of “the cast” which performed the small but important parts in the production of the pleasing tout ensemble—soup, stew, sauce, or salad—the remembrance of which, like that of a well-staged and well-acted drama, lingers in the memory long after the actors are forgotten
The rare aroma of sweet marjoram reminds so many city people of their mother’s and their grandmother’s country gardens, that countless muslin bags of the dried leaves sent to town ostensibly for stuffing poultry never reach the kitchen at all, but are accorded more honored places in the living room. They are placed in the sunlight of a bay window where Old Sol may coax forth their prisoned odors and perfume the air with memories of childhood summers on the farm.
“To prepare a dinner of herbs in its best estate you should have a bed of seasonings such as our grandmothers had in their gardens, rows of sage, of spicy mint, sweet marjoram, summer savory, fragrant thyme, tarragon, chives and parsley. To these we may add, if we take herbs in the Scriptural sense, nasturtium, and that toothsome esculent, the onion, as well as lettuce. If you wish a dinner of herbs and have not the fresh, the dried will serve, but parsley and mint you can get at most times in the markets, or in country gardens, where they often grow wild.
Readers Who Viewed This Post Also Viewed
Tags: a dinner of herbs, aroma of sweet marjoram, country gardens, culinary herbs, ebook, fragrant thyme, master resale rights, master resell rights, mother sweet herbs, nasturtium, Private Label Rights, rows of sage, spicy mint, summer savory, tarragon, the cabbage, the potato, the scriptural sense

1 Trackback(s)