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Lemon
Verbena
is unavailable until fall.
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be notified.
Lemon Verbena is among
the most pleasant-smelling plants in the world. Rubbing
or bruising or cooking with the foliage releases a clear,
delicious lemon smell, very similar to that of lemon grass,
and more lemony than most lemons. The flowers are tiny white
things in loose, airy clusters at the ends of branches,
definitely not a showy display. The leaves are 3
to 4 inches long and about ½ inch wide, medium green and
glossy, and deciduous. They usually grow in whorls of three,
but sometimes there are four leaves at a whorl or only
two. The general appearance of the unpruned plant would
probably be called rangy, although with regular trimming,
it can bush out quite nicely, and is a classic subject for
topiary standards.
Lemon Verbena is a plant
I think all warm climate cooks need in their gardens. Its
excellent added to ice tea, tucked under a piece of baking
fish, or dropped into a vegetable soup like a bay leaf.
The plant leafs out kind
of late in the spring late April for us, and can
make you think it has died with the winter cold. In mild
winters it tries to hold on to its leaves, but, here at
least, it is always deciduous eventually. In really cold
years it may freeze back quite a ways, but unless the soil
freezes, it will return with vigor.
Plant it in a place that
gets at least a few hours of unobstructed sunlight. Great
container plant, but remember that containers can freeze
sooner than the soil.
Catalog description
by Gary Matson
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