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Thyme

Grow & Harvest Guide

"Tiny leaves, mighty flavor — the herb that makes everything taste like it simmered all day."

View All Thyme Recipes

Thyme is the quiet workhorse of the herb garden — just a few sprigs turn a cheap pot of beans into something that tastes like it's been on the stove since morning. It grows easy, dries beautifully, and asks almost nothing in return.

5
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
42
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — one of the most forgiving herbs
Sun
Full sun (6+ hours)
Water
Low — prefers to dry out between watering
Time to Harvest
First snips in 4-6 weeks, ongoing
Zones
5-9 perennial; annual in colder zones
Spacing
12-18 inches apart

🪴 Where You Can Grow It

Garden bed Raised bed Patio pot (8"+) Window box Herb spiral Between stepping stones Rock garden Hanging basket (creeping types)

🌱 Best Varieties

Common (English) Thyme
Best all-purpose cooking variety — classic flavor for everything
Lemon Thyme
Bright citrus notes — wonderful with fish, chicken, and in teas
Creeping Thyme
Low-growing ground cover — beautiful between pavers and along paths
French Thyme
More delicate flavor and narrow leaves — preferred by many chefs
Orange Thyme
Subtle orange aroma — lovely in desserts, teas, and with pork

✅ Good Companions

Rosemary
Sage
Lavender
Strawberries
Tomatoes
Cabbage
Eggplant
Roses

⛔ Keep Away From

Cilantro (needs more water)
Basil (needs more water)
Mint (will overtake it)

💡 Grandmaw's Tips

🌱 Thyme is a Mediterranean herb — it wants sun, good drainage, and not too much fussing. Overwatering will kill it faster than neglect ever will.
🌱 Buy one plant at the nursery for $3, and you can divide it into 3-4 plants within a year. That's free herbs for the rest of your life.
🌱 Harvest thyme right before it flowers for the strongest flavor. Cut stems about a third of the way down — never strip a stem bare.
🌱 If your thyme gets woody and sparse in the middle after a few years, don't baby it — dig it up, split the good outer parts, replant those, and compost the dead center.
🌱 Creeping thyme between stepping stones is one of the prettiest things you can do in a garden, and every time you step on it, the whole yard smells like Sunday dinner.
🌱 Thyme dries better than almost any herb. Hang bundles upside down for a week, strip the leaves, and they'll keep their flavor for a full year.

Every item below works beautifully with thyme.

🥩 Proteins

Chicken thighs Pork chops Ground beef Lamb Turkey White beans Lentils Eggs Bacon Sausage Canned tuna Beef stew meat

🥬 Vegetables

Potato Carrot Onion Mushrooms Tomato Zucchini Sweet potato Green beans Corn Butternut squash Celery Parsnip

🌿 Herbs

Rosemary Sage Oregano Parsley Bay leaf Marjoram Chives

🧂 Spices

Garlic Black pepper Paprika Onion powder Cumin Mustard seed Red pepper flakes Italian seasoning Poultry seasoning

🧀 Dairy

Butter Parmesan Gruyère Goat cheese Cream cheese Cheddar Sour cream Heavy cream

🫙 Pantry

Olive oil Chicken broth Canned tomatoes Pasta Rice Flour Bread Dried beans Vinegar White wine Dijon mustard Honey

Here's how to keep thyme all year long.

🌬️ Air Drying

1-2 years
Best for: Everyday cooking — soups, stews, rubs, seasoning blends
💡 Tie small bundles and hang upside down in a warm, dry spot. In a week the leaves practically fall off the stems. This is the simplest herb to preserve.

🧊 Freezing (Ice Cube Method)

6-12 months
Best for: Instant flavor in soups, sauces, and braises
💡 Strip fresh thyme leaves into ice cube trays, top with olive oil or broth, and freeze. Pop one out and drop it straight into whatever's simmering.

🧊 Freezing (Whole Sprigs)

6-12 months
Best for: Bouquet garni, stock making, roasting
💡 Lay sprigs flat on a parchment-lined sheet pan, freeze, then bag them up. They crumble easily straight from frozen — even easier to strip than fresh.

🫒 Oil Infusion

2-4 weeks (refrigerated)
Best for: Bread dipping, drizzling over roasted vegetables, salad dressings
💡 Warm good olive oil with a generous bunch of thyme over very low heat for an hour. Strain and refrigerate. Use it up quick — fresh herb oils don't last long.

🧂 Herb Salt Blend

12+ months
Best for: Seasoning meat, vegetables, eggs, popcorn
💡 Pulse dried thyme with coarse sea salt and a little dried garlic. Three parts salt to one part herbs. Cheaper and better than any seasoning salt at the store.

🍯 Thyme Honey

6+ months
Best for: Tea, biscuits, sore throats, cheese boards, glazes
💡 Pack fresh thyme sprigs into a jar and cover with honey. Let it sit a week, then strain or leave the sprigs in. Old-time sore throat remedy that actually tastes good.

Seed to Supper to Seed

Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.

🪴
Start from a nursery plant, division, or stem cutting in spring
☀️
Plant in full sun with lean, well-draining soil
🌱
Let it establish for 4-6 weeks before heavy harvesting
✂️
Harvest regularly — cut stems, never strip individual leaves
🍳
Cook fresh — soups, roasts, gravies, eggs, beans
🌬️
Dry the surplus in bundles for year-round flavor
🫙
Make herb salts, infused oils, and thyme honey
🌸
Let summer flowers feed the bees and pollinators
🪴
Divide mature plants in spring for free new starts
♻️
Compost woody trimmings and spent stems back into the garden