Save Summer Scents All Winter Long
Potpourri recipes keep a cold home smelling spring fresh, including basic potpourri recipe, aunt Wimpy's floral bouquet, essence of musk and spice and everything nice.
July/August 1975
By Robert A. Fanning
The summer I turned 10, I spent two months with my grandmother on a 180-acre Iowa farm. I was a prissy little girl from the city brought up to sneer at anything unfamiliar or unclean, and the simplicity and strength of rural life did much to open my eyes and jolt my prejudices. Soon, thrilled and awestruck, I was watching far hours as horny bulls jumped cows in the smelly barnyard:
RELATED ARTICLES
There are so many beautiful flowers to choose from, why not opt for those that give you more than j...
Grow Flowers For Cash
December/January 2002
by Lynn Byczynski
I get up at down and drink a ...
Cut Flowers December/January 2002 Top Annuals for by DAVID CAVAGNARO The flower varieties listed be...
The symbol of ancient Athens, the sweet violet has been used for medicinal purposes since antiquity...
Country Lore: Create Dried Flower Botanical Plates June/July 2007 By Biz Fairchild Reynolds Dried b...
It's just as well that farm. life had a gentler side to balance the earthiness I found so fascinating. An important part of Grandma's daily blitz on the farmhouse, for instance, was the uncorking of a potpourri jar for half an hour in each room and she and 1 spent most of one month collecting flowers and herbs for the annual renewal of the. container's sweet scented contents. I enjoyed the ritual so much that years later I still prepare batches of potpourri for myself each season. I've every sold some jars to others:, and come to think of it, the sale of potpourri mixes might lie a good way for MOTHERS brood to unload all those pots left over from the last craft fair.
The idea of mixing potpourri is to concoct a pleasant, not overpowering fragrance from sweet smelling flowers, herbs; spices, and oils. Fixatives gum benzoin and gum storax, available at drugstores are added to preserve the colors and scents, and the mixture goes into whatever container is handy traditionally, a tightly closed vessel of china, pottery; or glass. (Clear receptacles must be kept away from light.) The potpourri jar is then allowed to stand open whenever you want to perfume a room.
Rose: petals are the main ingredient of potpourri and you'll need about four times as many of these as of other flowers. Gather the blossoms in the morning; after a rainless period of at (cast 24 hours. Loose buds, not yet past their prince, are the most fragrant.
Carry your treasures indoors and spread the petals to dry in a dark, well ventilated place. A screen, or a piece of cheese cloth suspended between two chairs, makes a convenient rack. In a day or two, pack each variety of blossom into its own screw trip canning jar with orrisroot sprinkled between layers. (If you have trouble obtaining orrisroot locally, the powdered root can be ordered Ire 50 cents or $7,00 packages or in bulk Indiana Botanic Gardens, Inc., Box 5, Hammond, Indiana 46325.--MOTHER) To keep the colors from fading, stare the jars in a dark place until you have time to mix the brew
Here's the basic recipe for potpourri:
1 quart rose petals
1 cup mixed flowers, some fragrant
1 tablespoon each of one or two herbs 2 or 3 tablespoons crushed spices
Several drops, added 1 drop at a time, of for oils
1 tablespoon each of gum benzoin and gum storax