Fresh to Dried Herb Converter

🌿 Fresh to Dried Herb Converter

Convert fresh herbs to dried and back — with herb-specific ratios and substitution guidance

Quick Presets
Conversion Inputs
Dried Amount tsp
Ratio Used fresh : dried
In Teaspoons tsp
In Tablespoons tbsp
Herb selected
Conversion direction
Input amount
In cups (result)
Intensity category
Cooking tip
Key Substitution Ratios
3:1standard ratio
4:1pungent herbs
2:1delicate herbs
4:1fresh to ground
Fresh to Dried Conversion Table
Herb Ratio 1 tbsp Fresh = 1/4 cup Fresh = 1 tsp Dried = Intensity
Basil3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshMedium
Rosemary3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshStrong
Thyme3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshStrong
Oregano3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshStrong
Parsley2:11.5 tsp dried6 tsp dried2 tsp freshMild
Dill3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshMedium
Tarragon3:11 tsp dried4 tsp dried1 tbsp freshMedium
Sage2:11.5 tsp dried6 tsp dried2 tsp freshVery Strong
Herb Reference Guide
Herb Ratio Best Form Add When Flavor Profile
Basil3:1FreshEnd of cookingSweet, peppery, anise
Rosemary3:1EitherEarly (long cook)Pine, earthy, resinous
Thyme3:1EitherEarly (long cook)Earthy, subtle, floral
Oregano3:1DriedEarly (sauces)Robust, slightly bitter
Parsley2:1FreshEnd of cookingBright, grassy, clean
Dill3:1FreshEnd of cookingGrassy, tangy, fresh
Tarragon3:1FreshEnd of cookingAnise, licorice, delicate
Sage2:1EitherEarly or mid cookEarthy, savory, musty
The 3:1 Rule: For most common herbs, use 1 teaspoon of dried herb for every 1 tablespoon (3 teaspoons) of fresh herb called for in the recipe. Dried herbs have less water content, so their flavor compounds are more concentrated by volume.
When Fresh Is Better: Some herbs like basil, parsley, dill, and cilantro lose much of their bright, volatile aroma when dried. For garnishes, sauces, and cold dishes, always prefer fresh. Save dried versions for long-simmered soups, stews, and braises where the heat can reactivate the dried herb's flavor.

 

herb plants have soft stems instead of wooden. They commonly have separate smell or scent. The definition of herb describes it as a tiny plant that bears seeds and lacks wooden stem.

Upper parts of ground die at the end of every growing season. Normal use of the word herb means perennial species, although it also covers annual and biennial types. The most ancient known usage of that term comes from the medieval English era of 1150 until 1500.

Herb Plants: What They Are and How to Use Them

herb plants serve for many purposes. From them one prepares foods, remedies and perfumes. Since early times folks grow herb species because of their healthy and delicious features.

Farming of herb plants inside home helps to bring greens in the area and enrich everyday meals. Most many of those plants grow fine indoors, requiring only a bit of space and effort. Even so, outside weather seriously afefcts the growth of the herb plants.

Between the most used cooking herb plants find themselves basil, parsley, thyme, rosemary, dill, mint and oregano. Also chives, sage, tarragon, coriander and lavender enjoy big popularity. Best strategy consists in farming of those herb plants that one most commonly uses.

Leaves of basil from the store quickly fade fast, if one does not lay them in water. Even hear they stay fresh only some days until a week. Making of pesto remains one of the most useful ways to use fresh herb plants before they spoil.

Parsley belongs to biennial plants, so it lives during two years before flowering and dying. Chervil is a similar biennial species. Coriander should be biennial, but in warm regions like Florida it grows and ends after only some months.

Mint does not mix with other plants, so it requires its own place.

For fresh against dried herb plants counts this regular advice: triple the use of fresh over dried. Between herb plants and spices happen clear differences about strength. Instead of precise measuring, more practical is to chop small amounts and later add to taste as needed.

For a bunch of fresh herb plants usually one until two units will do.

Do not dump leftover herb stems. One can lay them in a glass with oil to create herb oil. Adding things like stems of parsley, basil, thyme, chives and cloves of garlic, one gets delicious flavored oil.

Fresh herb plants work for adding in soups, sauces and bread. Rosemary bitter bread and herb flatbread rank between favourite recipes. Mixed herb plants like those of Provence, carrying basil, thyme, lavender and fennel, wellwork for baking and cooking alike.

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