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Bay Leaf

Grow & Harvest Guide

"The quiet backbone of every pot of soup worth eating."

View All Bay Leaf Recipes

A single dried leaf can turn a pot of water and bones into something that smells like home. Bay leaf is the most underestimated herb in the pantry — pennies a piece, lasts for years, and once you grow your own tree, you'll never buy another jar again.

5
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
41
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — patient grower's herb
Sun
Full sun to part shade (4-8 hours)
Water
Moderate — let top inch dry between watering
Time to Harvest
Year 2+ for regular picking
Zones
8-10 outdoors (container anywhere)
Spacing
One tree is plenty for a household

🪴 Where You Can Grow It

Garden bed Large patio pot (5+ gallon) Half whiskey barrel Raised bed Greenhouse Indoor sunny window (small tree) Sheltered porch or patio

🌱 Best Varieties

Laurus nobilis (Sweet Bay / True Bay Laurel)
The only variety for cooking — this is what you want. Glossy leaves, classic flavor. Can grow 10-30 feet outdoors or kept pruned to 4-6 feet in a pot.
Laurus nobilis 'Aurea' (Golden Bay)
Same flavor as standard bay laurel but with golden-yellow new growth — pretty in pots and still perfectly edible

✅ Good Companions

Rosemary
Thyme
Lavender
Sage
Oregano

⛔ Keep Away From

Mint (too aggressive nearby)
Plants needing heavy water (bay prefers drier roots)

💡 Grandmaw's Tips

🌱 Bay laurel is a tree, not an annual herb. One tree in a big pot will keep your kitchen stocked for decades. Best investment you'll ever make for your spice rack.
🌱 In zones 7 and below, grow in a pot and bring indoors before first hard frost. A sunny garage or mudroom is fine — it goes semi-dormant in winter and doesn't need much light.
🌱 Don't rush the harvest. Young trees need their leaves to grow. Wait until year two, then pick no more than a third of the leaves at a time.
🌱 Harvest in the morning after the dew dries — that's when the oils are strongest. Pick the biggest, darkest leaves from the outside of the tree.
🌱 To dry, just lay leaves flat between paper towels in a warm, dark spot for 2 weeks. They'll curl slightly. Store in a jar and they'll keep their flavor for 2-3 years.
🌱 Watch for scale insects — those little brown bumps on stems. Wipe them off with a cotton swab dipped in rubbing alcohol. Caught early, it's no big deal.
🌱 Don't confuse with California bay (Umbellularia californica) or cherry laurel — those are different plants entirely and much harsher. True bay laurel (Laurus nobilis) is what you want. Read the Latin name on the tag.

Every item below works beautifully with bay leaf.

🥩 Proteins

Chicken thighs Pot roast Ground beef Pork shoulder Ham hock Lamb shank White fish Shrimp Lentils Black beans Navy beans Eggs

🥬 Vegetables

Onion Potato Carrot Celery Tomato Cabbage Turnip Parsnip Sweet potato Butternut squash Green beans Mushrooms

🌿 Herbs

Thyme Parsley Rosemary Oregano Sage Marjoram Dill

🧂 Spices

Black pepper Garlic Paprika Cumin Coriander Allspice Cloves Red pepper flakes Onion powder Mustard seed

🧀 Dairy

Butter Heavy cream Parmesan Gruyère Cream cheese Sour cream Whole milk

🫙 Pantry

Olive oil Chicken broth Beef broth Canned tomatoes Rice Dried beans Pasta Vinegar Red wine White wine Flour Worcestershire sauce Tomato paste

Here's how to keep bay leaf all year long.

🌬️ Air Drying

2-3 years
Best for: Everyday cooking — soups, stews, braises, beans
💡 Lay fresh leaves flat between paper towels in a dark, warm spot. Two weeks and they're done. This is the easiest herb to preserve, and dried bay actually tastes better than fresh in most dishes.

❄️ Freezing (Fresh Leaves)

12 months
Best for: Recipes where you want that brighter, more floral fresh bay flavor
💡 Lay fresh leaves flat on a sheet pan, freeze solid, then transfer to a zip-top bag. Use straight from frozen — no thawing needed. They'll darken but the flavor stays strong.

🫙 Infused Oil

2-4 weeks (refrigerated)
Best for: Drizzling on roasted vegetables, finishing soups, bread dipping
💡 Gently warm 1 cup olive oil with 6-8 dried bay leaves on low heat for 20 minutes. Strain, bottle, and refrigerate. Don't leave fresh herbs in oil at room temperature — botulism is no joke.

🍯 Infused Honey

6-12 months
Best for: Biscuits, tea, cornbread, drizzling on roasted pork
💡 Tuck 3-4 dried leaves into a jar of honey and let sit for 2-3 weeks. The warmth of the bay comes through beautifully. Remove the leaves or leave them — your call.

🧂 Bay Salt

Indefinite
Best for: Finishing salt for steaks, roasted potatoes, popcorn, rim for cocktails
💡 Grind dried bay leaves to a fine powder in a spice grinder and mix 1 tablespoon powder into 1 cup of coarse salt. Let it sit sealed for a week to meld. Makes a beautiful homemade gift.

🍶 Infused Vinegar

6-12 months
Best for: Salad dressings, marinades, pickling brines, deglazing pans
💡 Add 4-5 dried bay leaves to a bottle of white wine vinegar. Let steep 2-4 weeks in a cool, dark place. Strain or leave the leaves in — they look pretty in the bottle.

Seed to Supper to Seed

Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.

🌱
Start with a nursery seedling or root a cutting from a friend's tree — seeds are slow but free
🪴
Pot up in well-draining soil with a deep container — bay likes room for roots
☀️
Give it sun, moderate water, and patience — let the tree establish for the first year
✂️
Begin harvesting in year two — pick the biggest, darkest leaves from the outer branches
🍂
Air-dry leaves flat between paper towels for 2 weeks until they curl slightly
🫙
Store dried leaves in airtight jars — they'll keep their flavor for 2-3 years
🍲
Cook with them all year — soups, stews, beans, braises, broth, rice
🎁
Make infused oils, vinegars, salts, and honey as pantry staples and homemade gifts
🪵
Prune the tree each spring to encourage bushy growth and even more leaves
🌿
Root pruned cuttings in water or damp sand to share new trees with neighbors