Drying and keeping garden herbs through a Canadian winter

A working reference for air-drying herbs from a backyard or balcony garden, choosing the right storage containers, and labeling jars so the harvest stays usable from one growing season to the next.

Bunches of garden herbs hung upside down to air-dry indoors

Three stages of home herb preservation

Each stage is documented as a standalone article with measurements, timing windows and material notes that apply to a temperate Canadian climate.

Herbs laid in a wicker basket to dry
Air-Drying

Air-Drying Garden Herbs

Bundling, hang-drying and screen-drying methods, with humidity and timing notes for indoor Canadian conditions.

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A kitchen shelf holding labeled jars of dried herbs and spices
Storage

Storage Containers

Comparing glass jars, tins and the trade-offs of whole versus crushed leaves for keeping flavour and colour.

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Dried tarragon leaves ready to be jarred and labeled
Labeling

Labeling & Shelf Life

What to write on a label, how long dried leaf herbs stay worthwhile, and simple ways to track each batch.

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From the garden bed to a labeled jar

Drying, storing and labeling are usually treated as separate chores, but the result of each one decides how well the next works. Leaves dried too quickly lose oils; jars filled before the leaves are fully dry trap moisture; an unlabeled jar loses its harvest date within weeks.

The short timeline below shows the order most home preservers follow, from cutting stems to a finished, dated jar on the shelf.

Harvest Dry Check Jar Label
harvest : cut stems mid-morning, after dew has dried dry : bundle 8-10 stems, hang in a dark, airy room check : leaves crumble when fully dry (usually 1-2 weeks) jar : strip leaves, fill clean dry glass jars label : herb name + harvest month + year
01

Climate-aware timing

Indoor humidity rises in sealed Canadian homes during heating season; drying notes account for slower evaporation in cold months.

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Materials you likely own

Methods rely on cotton string, paper bags, mesh screens and recycled glass jars rather than specialised equipment.

03

Public references

Guidance is cross-checked against publicly available material from extension and government food-safety sources.

Questions or a correction

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