In THIS POST from back in March,we showed you
how we dried our dill that we grew in the garden. It was our first successful venture in
growing dill and it was a success.
Tricia has used both the fresh and dried dill to make some homemade
pickles that fill the shelves in our pantry as well as the fridge. She also used some of the fresh dill to cook
with some carrots.
In
order to make sure that we have plenty of dill for next year, I wanted to be
absolutely certain that I saved enough seeds.
With the amount of seeds that the dill produces, I didn’t think that was
going to be a problem. Dill blooms in a
big cascade of little yellow flowers all over the tops of the plant that
contrast against the green plant.
Fresh dill in bloom |
Here
is a close-up shot:
Each
one of those flowers makes an individual seed.
You can see in this photo how the flowering ends and then you can see
the swollen part that becomes the seed.
I
simply let them dry in the garden on the plant until the plant dies and turns
brown. I check the seed heads each day
as I don’t want the seeds to get over-ripe and then shatter on the ground. Here’s what it looks like when the seeds are
completely dry and ready for picking.
All dried out |
The
dill seeds kind of hang, waiting to be gathered for next years’ crop.
Dill seed dried and ready to be removed from the stalk |
I
simply take my fingers and gently rub the seeds and they fall off into a
container or into my hand. The seeds
give off such a nice fragrance! They
actually smell a little like licorice.
Some might think that is not a nice scent, but I do.
A handful of dill seed |
Just
to make sure that the seeds are totally dry, I collect them in a dish and set
them on the window sill to dry a little more off the stem.
Further drying on the window sill |
We
won’t know how good the germination will be until next year, but I always like
to save seeds and build my seed inventory.
A bird in the hand beats two in the bush OR Dill Seed in the hand beats
thousands on the bush!
Add caption |
Other
than the photos you see above, I’ve saved lots more dill seed. So much so that I’ve been wondering what I can
do with all this? Well, other than using
dill for making pickles, I learned that you can do the following:
v
Sprinkle dill seeds on top of boiled new potatoes,
v
Use them as a topping for homemade bread similar to what you
would do with poppy seeds,
v
Mix dill seeds with butter,
v
Sprinkle them on top of fish dishes,
v
Use dill seeds as a salad topper,
v
Add dill seeds to cooked cabbage,
v
Add them to potato salad or coleslaw.
Finally,
I learned that dill seeds can be used as an aid to relieve indigestion if you chew
on them. According to what I read HERE, the conqueror Charlemagne
had dill available at his banquet tables so that his guests who over-did it
while feasting could benefit from dill’s stomach-healing properties.
We
have plenty of dried dill and dill seeds.
That’s a good dill deal, in my book.
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