Search 1000s of Fact Sheets
Gardens
Pets
Lifestyle

Keywords

Subcategory

Keywords

Exact matches only

Subcategory

Keywords

Exact matches only

Subcategory

Backyard Blitz Factsheets
Magazine Links
Click here for bonus Burke's Backyard magazine fact sheets, competition terms and conditions, photo galleries, and weblinks for stories featured in our current issue.

ADVERTISEMENT.
ADVERTISEMENT.
In the Magazine

2UE Rosemary growing tips and recipes

Food, Health & Nutrition

Rosemary growing tips

Rosemary is an easy to grow herb. For average backyards, just one plant will provide you with more rosemary than you’ll ever be able to use in cooking. While it can grow up to a height of 1.8m, rosemary is also a terrific hedging plant than can be kept trimmed to any height you like. It also does well in pots.

Growing conditions: rosemary plants love a warm, very sunny spot with good soil soil drainage. They don’t care how hot and dry it gets, but they really thrive in alkaline soils and love lime. If your rosemary isn’t looking too healthy and you know your soil is acid, apply lime and see what happens. Rosemary doesn’t need much fertilising (just a bit of slow-release fertiliser once a year is enough) and doesn’t like too much fertiliser. Wet, humid summers and badly drained soils can make rosemary plants unhappy.

Varieties: several different varieties of rosemary are sold in garden centres, the most common ones have blue flowers but pink-flowered and white-flowered cultivars are around, so too are prostrate growing forms used as groundcovers, also in a selection of flower colours. There are plenty to choose from.

Cuttings: however, you need not buy plants at all if you know someone with a healthy rosemary bush, as it’s very easy to grow new plans from cuttings. Just take 30cm long tip cuttings in spring, summer or autumn, pop them in a pot of potting mix, and they should strike for you.

Best climate: rosemary loves the Mediterranean climates of Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Tassie and southern Australia, but it does pretty well all the way up to Brisbane and in mountain districts, too. It doesn’t enjoy the tropics much, though.  

Barbecued whole leg of lamb

You’ll need a barbecue with a hood for this recipe.

1 leg lamb, deboned and butterflied by your butcher

Marinade
1 cup olive oil
2 cups red wine
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 tablespoon chopped rosemary leaves
juice of 2 lemons

1. Make marinade by combining all ingredients in a bowl and stirring well.
2. Place lamb into a large freezer bag and pour in the marinade. Seal the bag, then place into a second freezer bag and seal. This makes it very easy to turn over the lamb in the marinade. Leave the lamb to marinate for at least 4 hours, or overnight.
3. Preheat both the barbecue grill and hotplate till hot, then remove lamb from its marinade and discard the marinade. Place the lamb on the grill of your barbecue, fat-side down. Let it grill there for 7 minutes. Turn over and grill on the other side for 3 minutes.
4. Transfer the lamb to the hotplate side of the barbecue, turn down the burner heat to low, lower the hood, and don’t lift the hood at all for 25 minutes. If you have a hood thermometer, keep the temperature around 175-180°C.
5. At this stage the meat should be done medium, with a bit of pinkness left in the meat. Let the meat rest 5 minutes, then slice thickly and serve with salads and potato wedges baked in the oven.

Kitchen tips for rosemary

1. Don’t use too much fresh rosemary, it has quite a strong flavour, so go easy when you’re trying it out in a new dish.

2. Rosemary, olive oil and lemon juice are fantastic partners. Try them together when roasting a chicken.

3. Rosemary and potatoes are another great combo. Partly cook some potatoes, then slice or cut into chunks, and use these as a topping for home-made pizza, sprinkled with rosemary and ground rock salt.

4. Cut a solid 30cm stalk of rosemary off a bush, trim off the bottom 15cm of leaves to make a handle, and you have a rosemary brush for the barbecue. Dip the brush in olive oil and brush it onto fillets of chicken or fish cooking on the barbecue.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright CTC Productions 2008

Disclaimer:  Burke's Backyard and Backyard Blitz do not accept payment to promote products. All recommendations are genuine. Details on the fact sheets are accurate at the time of publishing, however prices and contact information are not updated and may change.

Members

JOIN NOW

Members

It's free! Sign up now to
join our forums, get
special offers, enter
competitions and bonus
articles

View all forums
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Message Board

Get help, share your knowledge

4534 posts
1504 users
2930 posts
951 users
1669 posts
754 users
1361 posts
532 users
487 posts
239 users

View all forums

Members
The Lazy Gardener
The Lazy Gardener
Don Burkes’s all new ‘The Lazy Gardener’ is out now.
buy now
Home Grown
Home Grown
Gardening and cooking for good health and
great taste.
buy now
Indigenous
Indigenous
Don's story, his own stunnning native garden, plus expert advice and tips
buy now
Hats and T-Shirts
Hats and T-Shirts
Burkes Backyard Hats and T-Shirts available
in a variety of sizes
buy now
© 2007-2012 CTC Productions, All Rights Reserved
Home | Message Board | Fact Sheets | Members | Magazine | Subscriptions | CTC Facilities | About Us | Privacy Policy | Contact Us