Herb Garden Plants – Mint
Appearance: Numerous mint species are grown almost everywhere. Wild or cultivated forms all bear various local names. Their tendency to hybridise plus the fact that parochial names and appearance vary according to climate and location leads to some confusion in identification or collation of species information. Scientific analysis of essential oils has largely cleared up the identification and inter-relationship of these popular herbs, but local names both abound and persist. At one stage I grew a dozen different species of various appearance until sanity prevailed.
Spearmint or garden mint enjoys wide usage – it’s narrow pointed leaves, reach 30-90 cms (1-3 ft tall). If left to flower in midsummer, purple spikes appear well above the leaves. Apple mint has large, round, soft leaves and pink spikes growing up to 1 m (3 ft) high. The cream and green variegated form with leaves bordered and overlaid with cream is usually called pineapple mint; a good decorative garden plant retaining its attractive foliage throughout the summer. Ginger mint or scotch mint is another attractively leaved plant, particularly in the variegated form with golden variegation of the pointed leaves and its crisp even appearance and height makes a great herb border.
Usage: Most mints can be used for culinary purposes – one of the biggest – Bowles’s
mint – has a reputation as a gourmet’s mint. It is a vigorous grower, easily attaining 1.5 m (5 ft), it’s broad leaves are covered with light coloured down. Peppermint is widely used in culinary and medical applications; there are two varieties (Black and white) which grow to about 1 m (3% ft), the former with black/purple stems – both produce a sharp crisp oil. In the kitchen peppermint can be used to flavour fruit cups, sweets and puddings. tea is made from fresh or dried leaves.
A range of fragrance is provided by the same oil; the small chemical variations between one species and another are affected by season, soil and weather. Mint may be variously described as peppery, lemon flavoured or ginger flavoured.
History: Spearmint, the classic ingredient in Mint Juleps, was recorded as growing in Plymouth, Mass. in the early 1600′s by Elder William Brewster. It appears in Josselyn’s seed list but is absent from the Winthrop seed order placed in 1631. It was available locally and did not need to be imported.
Cultivation: All mints are vigorous growers given the right growing conditions. Most can be picked year round except in areas experiencing heavy frost or snow.
Mint is propagated by planting pieces of the rooted stem — about 5 cms (2 ins) deep in moist loamy soil, at almost any time during the growing season. Apple mint, sometimes called dryland mint in America, will tolerate less moist soil but all mints like sunlight. The plants need to be confined to their allotted space by enclosing their growing space with bricks, tiles or thick plastic strips.
Container growing requires regular watering unless the containers are sunk into the ground. All mints can be grown indoors but have a tendency to becoming leggy when grown like this. The exception is apple mint which can be a very attractive container plant.
A mint bed should be remade and relocated every three or four years to prevent mint rust disease.
Crowns of mint plants can be boxed or potted up in winter and taken to a warm greenhouse to force strong fresh shoots within three to four weeks.
Related Blogs
- Spearmint Leaves and Anise Bears: Flavors Removed From Their Natural Habitat | – CandyFavorites.com
- What’s Cooking: Mint-Chocolate Chip Ice Cream « Just Off The Red Streetcar Line
- 5 face Packs (Sandal face Pack, Multani Mud face Pack, Pudina (Spearmint) face Pack, Cucumber face Pack, Curd face Pack) for summer and preparation
- Top Medical Colleges: there is more to offer than Grey’s Anatomy Medicine | Medical School Admissions
- Tutu Tailor | LiberTango Dance Clothing
- Spearmint Pecan Layered Over Pecan | Ingredients For Style
- Does anyone have a herb garden growing? maybe an Aerogarden? What do you use all the herbs…? | Herb and Herbal Matters
- garden mint and lemon balm refresher | going home to roost
- Herbs to Promote Health and Wellness
- MySQL Bulk Update Collation and Character Set for Entire Database | Edmonds Commerce Blog


