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Oregano

Grow & Harvest Guide

"Plant it once, harvest it for a decade."

View All Oregano Recipes

Oregano is the herb that keeps on giving — a perennial that comes back year after year, spreading wider each season. One $3 plant replaces every jar of dried oregano you'll ever need and does double duty keeping pests out of your garden.

5
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
36
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Very easy — almost impossible to kill
Sun
Full sun (6-8 hours)
Water
Low — let soil dry between waterings
Time to Harvest
30-45 days from transplant
Zones
5-10 (perennial), all zones as annual
Spacing
12-15 inches apart

🪴 Where You Can Grow It

Garden bed Raised bed Patio pot Window box Grow bag Hanging basket Between stepping stones Rock garden

🌱 Best Varieties

Greek Oregano
The real deal for cooking — pungent, sharp, classic pizza and pasta flavor
Italian Oregano
Milder and sweeter — a cross between oregano and marjoram, great all-purpose cooking herb
Mexican Oregano
Different plant entirely (Lippia graveolens) — earthy, citrusy, essential for chili, tacos, and salsa
Golden Oregano
Bright yellow-green foliage — milder flavor but beautiful ornamental ground cover that earns its keep

✅ Good Companions

Tomatoes
Peppers
Basil
Beans
Squash
Cabbage
Broccoli

⛔ Keep Away From

Mint (will compete and overtake)
Chives (too close in growing habit)

💡 Grandmaw's Tips

🌱 Oregano actually tastes better when you slightly neglect it. Rich, fertile soil makes big bushy plants with weak flavor. Lean, slightly poor soil concentrates the essential oils.
🌱 Cut stems back by ⅔ right before the plant flowers — that's when the oil content is highest and you'll get the strongest flavor for drying.
🌱 This is a perennial, so don't rip it out in fall. Cut it back to 2-3 inches and it'll come back bigger and better next spring.
🌱 Divide your plant every 3-4 years. The center gets woody and the flavor weakens. Dig it up, toss the woody middle, replant the outer sections.
🌱 For the best dried oregano you'll ever taste, hang bundles upside down in a paper bag in a warm room for 1-2 weeks. Crumble and jar. Store-bought will never compare.
🌱 If you buy one herb plant and only one, make it oregano. It comes back every year, spreads on its own, needs almost no care, and a single plant gives you more dried oregano than you can use.

Every item below works beautifully with oregano.

🥩 Proteins

Ground beef Chicken thighs Italian sausage Pork shoulder Lamb Eggs Canned tuna Lentils Black beans Chickpeas Shrimp

🥬 Vegetables

Tomato Onion Bell pepper Zucchini Eggplant Mushrooms Potato Green beans Spinach Artichoke Olives

🌿 Herbs

Basil Thyme Rosemary Parsley Marjoram Bay leaf Sage

🧂 Spices

Garlic Red pepper flakes Black pepper Cumin Paprika Onion powder Italian seasoning Chili powder Coriander

🧀 Dairy

Parmesan Mozzarella Feta Ricotta Cheddar Cream cheese Sour cream

🫙 Pantry

Olive oil Canned tomatoes Pasta Rice Bread Chicken broth Red wine vinegar Lemon juice Canned beans Tortillas Tomato paste

Here's how to keep oregano all year long.

🌬️ Air Drying (Bundles)

1-3 years
Best for: Seasoning blends, pizza, pasta sauce, chili, rubs
💡 Oregano is one of the few herbs that's actually better dried than fresh — the flavor concentrates. Tie stems in small bundles, hang upside down in a warm dry room for 1-2 weeks, then crumble into jars. That's it.

🌬️ Dehydrating

1-3 years
Best for: Same as air drying but faster if you're in a humid climate
💡 Set your dehydrator to 95-100°F and dry for 2-4 hours. If you live somewhere humid where air drying leads to mold, this is your method.

🧊 Freezing (Oil Cubes)

6-8 months
Best for: Sautés, soups, stews, roasted vegetables
💡 Chop fresh oregano, pack into ice cube trays, cover with olive oil, and freeze. Pop a cube into any pan and you've got instant herb-infused oil ready to cook with.

🫒 Oil Infusion

2-4 weeks (refrigerated)
Best for: Dipping bread, salad dressings, drizzling on pizza
💡 Use dried oregano for oil infusions, not fresh — fresh herbs in oil create a botulism risk at room temperature. Warm olive oil gently with dried oregano, let cool, bottle, and refrigerate.

🫙 Vinegar Infusion

6-12 months
Best for: Marinades, salad dressings, deglazing
💡 Pack a jar with fresh oregano sprigs, cover with red wine vinegar, and store in a dark cupboard for 2 weeks. Strain and use — this is how you make fancy salad dressing for the price of vinegar.

🧂 Salt Blending

1-2 years
Best for: Seasoning meat, finishing salt, rimming glasses, gifts
💡 Blend 1 cup kosher salt with ¼ cup dried oregano and 2 cloves dried garlic in a food processor. Jar it up. You just made gourmet herb salt for less than a dollar.

Seed to Supper to Seed

Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.

🌱
Start seeds indoors 8-10 weeks before last frost, or buy a single transplant
☀️
Plant in full sun, well-drained soil — poor soil is fine, even preferred
🌿
First harvest once the plant is 6 inches tall — cut stems back by ⅔
✂️
Harvest 2-3 times per season by cutting stems just above a leaf pair
🍝
Use fresh in marinades, sauces, on pizza, and in seasoning blends
🌬️
Hang-dry summer's biggest harvest for a year's supply of dried oregano
🧊
Freeze oil cubes with leftover fresh sprigs for winter cooking
🌸
Let some stems flower to feed pollinators and produce seed
❄️
Cut back to 2-3 inches in late fall — the roots survive winter in zones 5-10
♻️
Divide root clumps every 3-4 years for fresh vigor and free new plants to share