How to Grow Chives
Chives are virtually foolproof because they suffer no diseases or pests, are extremely hardy and can grow almost anywhere. With a milder flavor than onion, chives are usually snipped raw as a finishing touch for salads, soups, sauces, and vegetable and fish dishes. Chives also work well in egg dishes such as quiche and omelets.
Where to Grow
Chives are a perennial warm-season herb, hardy to frost and light freezes and the earliest to appear in the spring. They also thrive in a cool greenhouse or on a kitchen windowsill.
Soil
This herb likes rich and well drained soil, but can be found growing wild in dry rocky places in northern Europe and in the northeastern United States and Canada. Chives prefer sandy soil with plenty of organic matter (this is important for perennial herbs in general) and good drainage. When you're preparing the soil, dig in a low nitrogen (5-10-10) fertilizer at a rate of 1/2 pound for 100 square feet.
Planting
When
Where and when to grow: Chives are hardy and will grow
practically anywhere in the united states. They do well in
cool weather but can survive almost any extreme temperature swings.
Plant either seeds or divisions about 4-6 weeks before your average
last frost date. - a late frost won't hurt them. Chives
tolerate partial shade, and prefer
How
You can grow chives from seed or divisions of small bulbs
separated from clumps. The seeds take a long time to germinate
and need a very cool temperature, less than 60F.
After their slow start they grow quickly. Plant
seeds 1/2" deep in rows spaced 12" apart. The plants can
be fairly close together; small clumps (25 plants can be set out 6-8 inches apart in rows. They'll fill
in and make an
attractive array.
Culture
Chives will take care of themselves without much help from you. There are a few things you can do to keep them healthy happy and productive. Chives will bloom midsummer and offer an attractive ornamental addition to the garden; if allowed to bloom, cut them back after flowering so new shoots will come up in spring. As with any plant watering is important for good growth. The plants will survive neglect, but if you let the soil dry out, the tips of the leaves —the part you want to eat—will become brown and unappetizing. Thick overgrown clumps can be divided; split the clumps from time to time. After several years, you can divide them for expansion or renewal. In the fall dig up a clump to pot indoors for continuous winter cutting. If you grow chives indoors, grow several pots so you can take turns clipping from them when you need chives for cooking and flavoring.
How it Grows
A hardy perennial relative of
the onion that has tufts of thin hollow leaves 6-10 inches long.
Chives planted in the garden will produce for years once
established. It has hollow glasslike onion-flavored foliage
that can be snipped for salads, soups, and egg and cheese dishes.
Chive flowers are strikingly beautiful rounded globes of soft purple
that appear in late spring or summer. The chive blossom
appears, dried or fresh, in many Japanese dishes.
Pots of chives are
often sold in supermarkets during winter months. Since these
chives may be infested with onion root maggots, which cause them to
fail in a short time, remove the young plants from the sandy soil,
wash the roots carefully, and replant in fresh, sterilized soil.
These pots will grow nicely on a sunny window sill.
Harvest
you start from seed, you can start snipping chives after 90 days;
from transplanted divisions, after 60 days. Either way, the plants will
produce much better the second year. To harvest, it's usual
to just snip the tops off the leaves, but if you harvest from the
base you'll avoid unattractive stubble.
If you're growing chives on the windowsill or on the border of
your flowerbed, you may not need to store any — you've got a
regular supply right there. However, chives can be satisfactorily frozen or dried.
To dry, tie them in small bunches and hang them
upside down in a warm, dry, dark place. Do not crush or cut them until ready to use.
Store the stem whole if possible. If harvested with the flower, chives can be
stored whole in white vinegar to make a pretty, light
lavender flavored vinegar for gifts. Another storage method is to alternately layer 1"
of kosher salt and with 1" of chives in a glass jar. Pack down each layer with a spoon.
Use these chives in any dish, just as you would fresh chives. They're said to be especially good in soups.
As an added bonus, the brine can also be used to flavor soups and other dishes.
Pests
Chives are trouble-free. Onion thrips may be a problem in a commercial onion-producing area, but they shouldn't bother plants that have enough water.
Disease
Chives have no serious disease problems.
