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4 Steps to Organize the Herbal Medicine Cabinet

Protect your time, money, and effort by organizing the herbal medicine cabinet for efficient use and ease.

We all have limited time and when you’re in need of a particular herbal remedy searching for it is the last thing anyone should be doing.

Glass jars with cork stoppers full of dried herbs with text overlay stating: how to organize herbal remedies.

Be ready to grab your herbs and your herbal remedies quickly and easily (while also preventing waste) by keeping your supplies organized.

These are simple little things but they add up over time to help keep home and life a little less cluttered and less overwhelming.

1. Use Glass Jars

Canning jars are just fine, but the home herbal medicine cabinet is a great place to reuse spice jars and other glass jars from purchased items.

Those glass jars that oils come in clean up easily enough with some hot water and good soap. This can also be a fun place to use funky jars found at thrift shops and yard sales.

Labeled glass jars full of dried herbs on a counter.

Glass jars with tight fitting lids, keep out smells, bugs, and more, while also keeping flavor in. Clear glass means easy inspection of what’s inside too for mold or other issues.

It’s also much easier in my experience to find what I need when everything is in jars rather than plastic bags. For that reason when I get herbs at the bulk section or in the mail, they also get put into jars for long term storage.

2. Label Immediately

I’m not perfect, please learn from my experience: when that infused dandelion oil is strained and bottled, label it immediately. We all think we’ll remember what we stored where but life has a funny way of ruining our memories. Whole dried herbs might be rescued later by smell but this isn’t fool-proof either. Save that hard work by labeling the jars before storing.

I often use just basic white adhesive labels, but I’ve been known to use a piece of cardstock as well. Simply write the ingredient on the cardstock and adhere to the jar with clear packing tape. Masking tape and a permanent marker work well too.

When storing purchased herbs, I often just use the label from the bag, cutting it and then taping it to the jar.

3. Rotate the Stock

Dried herbs will most likely last a very long time, however may also lose potency and certainly flavor over time. If I have dried mint still in the cabinet from last year when I’m ready to add newly dried mint from this year, I simply compost the dried from last year and start fresh.

4. Keep Records

It doesn’t have to be super scientific (though if that’s your thing, go for it), just basic records of methods, remedies, and their effect. Maybe mint tea didn’t work but ginger tea did on that upset stomach. The sage honey was tasty but maybe didn’t help the sore throat.

A closed journal with pen on top.

Basic thoughts, experiences, and ideas these are the things to record in an herbal journal and refer to later on.

These are simple steps that do not take much time in and of themselves but that will save time, energy, and possibly waste later as you go searching for something in a hurry.

Sharing is caring!

Cris

Tuesday 18th of January 2022

I LOVE painters tape for labeling herbs and Everything! Sticks great, is quick and easy to use, plus easy to remove when want to. And it comes in different colors - I like the wide tape In beige or lavender as easy to read when write in fine black marker. However, I used this label on a salve container, and the oils eventually dissolved the info written, even when used a Sharpie (probably need to cover with clear packing tape). I thought I would label the herbs in the glass jars initially with the tape, and then eventually put “nicer” labels on….but haven’t done that yet😁

Kathryn

Sunday 26th of September 2021

I forget to label my seeds sometimes. Then It is surprise harvest!

Gloria Flora

Tuesday 24th of August 2021

Before you toss your prior years' stored herbs make sure you definitely have harvestable replacement fresh herbs this season. When the drought hit, reliable producers dried up early; mint and lovage were especially hard-hit this year. I am now blessing the abundance from last year that I didn't compost because there is precious little to replace some of them this year.

Angi @ SchneiderPeeps

Friday 19th of June 2015

I'm just really starting my herbal medicine cabinet so thanks for the tips! I really need to make sure I do #4. Also, thanks for helping me not have guilt about just composting herbs that are past their prime. I really struggle with that.

Kathie

Friday 19th of June 2015

I know I struggle with it too - but composting isn't waste and there's no point in storing old when we have new.

Helena

Tuesday 16th of June 2015

SO true about jars vs. plastic bags. Jars are much harder to lose in the pantry or cabinet, whereas bags can get shoved to the side or pushed under something. Ditto clear jars vs. opaque tins--I picked up a bunch of opaque tea tins on super sale when a local tea room closed, and now they're holding teas and herbs. Some I labeled, some have the label from the package inside (in the case of tea bags), which seemed like a clever timesaver at the time but now drives me nuts every time I have to hunt through them looking for something specific. One question--have you found any deterioration from the herbs being in clear glass, or is being in a dark cabinet enough? I always hear that herbs and tea should be kept away from light, so I thought I'd ask.

Kathie

Wednesday 17th of June 2015

I think the most important part is keeping them out of direct sunlight. If they're in a spot that gets some light I would use dark jars but in my case they are in a very dark cabinet with a door so no light gets in there to worry about. Keeping them in a dark spot is easier overall in my opinion and those dark jars are expensive.