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Dill is, we think, one of the great herbs, and is sadly underappreciated and underused in the U.S. Dill is grown for both its dried seeds and its ferny leaf; though the same plant can be used for both purposes, cultivars aimed at one or the other particular use have been bred, so one is best off using different plants, of different cultivars, for the two purposes. This page deals only with growing dill for seed.
Dill is typical of the remarks above. It is apparently crucial to not plant dill
anywhere near fennel (or vice versa), lest the two cross pollinate and give bizarre crops.
(Indeed, fennel is not a good neighbor to much of anything, and is always best grown
somewhere off in a garden corner.)
Plants are typically cut for harvest when they reach about 12 inches in height. Hang cut plants to dry over a catch-cloth; when they are thoroughly dry (and the seed has turned from green to brown), dump them into a holding bag (which you will later use for threshing them).
When your seeeds are thoroughly dried, thresh the lot: beat the holding bag in which you have collected them against a hard surface to dislodge the seeds. Sift the loose seeds through a 3-inch mesh hardware cloth to remove the chaff. Make absolutely, positively sure the seeds are thoroughly dried before putting them away for storage (in the usual manner for dried herbs and spices: an airtight container stored in a dark place, preferably a cool one).
It is said to be a common practice is to "barber" dill seeds to remove the hair-like
strand or whisker found at one end, but in just what this "barbering" consists is not
stated in any source we saw.
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