Editor's Blog8 mins ago
Basil
4 Answers
I bought a pot of basil from the supermarket, and used most of it in a pasta dish.
I continued to water the plant, and leaves grew back, somewhat small, pale and translucent. It now has flowered, with small white blossom!
What is happening, and can I still eat the leaves?
I continued to water the plant, and leaves grew back, somewhat small, pale and translucent. It now has flowered, with small white blossom!
What is happening, and can I still eat the leaves?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, you can still eat the leaves. The plant's later growth is small and pale because basil plants need a lot of sun to make vigorous dark leaves. The plant has flowered, as most plants eventually will. Once it is flowering, it is past its prime for leaves -- it puts its energy into the flowers instead -- but that doesn't make them inedible, just less wonderful.
You can still eat the leaves even though the plant has been weakened because it has flowered. The tip with Basil is to keep regenerating it by picking 2 or 3 stems couple of stems about three inches long and sticking them in water until they develop their own roots. Takes about a week. Then plant these little cuttings in a fresh pot of compost and repeat the process. Basil needs lots of water and if you keep the plant for a long time, top up its nourishment with a dose of Baby Bio once a week. Using this method you need never buy another pot of supermarket Basil.
And once you have followed Wendy's suggestion, and have a load of basil, make your own Pesto and always have the taste available.
36 basil leaves (min 6 per person)
3 cloves garlic
150g pine nuts
100g fresh parmesan
200ml olive oil
salt and black pepper
I usually make a half quantity which just fits into a small Kenwood blender -and it freezes beautifully. You can spread it on bread instead of butter and top with sliced tomato and mozarella or even mix two tea spoons of the pesto with a dessertspoon or two of vinaigrette and you have a splendid pesto dressing for a tomato salad.
Happy basil growing!
36 basil leaves (min 6 per person)
3 cloves garlic
150g pine nuts
100g fresh parmesan
200ml olive oil
salt and black pepper
I usually make a half quantity which just fits into a small Kenwood blender -and it freezes beautifully. You can spread it on bread instead of butter and top with sliced tomato and mozarella or even mix two tea spoons of the pesto with a dessertspoon or two of vinaigrette and you have a splendid pesto dressing for a tomato salad.
Happy basil growing!
If you got this plant from the supermarket, it's worth re-potting it. you'll find you actually have lots of little seedling basil plants all squished into one pot to make it look like a bit fat healthy one when you buy it. If you split the seedling up a bit into a few new pots, they'll go back to being bigger leafed, and last for ages, especially if you just pick out the top two or three leaves for a while - the plants will bush out nicely. Basil likes plenty of water, but don't let it sit in a puddle of water and it prefers to be watered in the morning, otherwise the drop in temperature over night, combined with damp soil, can affect growth - just remember it comes from warmer countries, so treat accordingly.