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Sage is a useful herb that can be easily grown in your garden.
Discover how to plant, grow, and harvest garden sage—an aromatic, easy-to-grow herb.
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Types
- ‘Berggarten’, a robust plant with very large silver-gray leaves
- ’Tricolor’ sage, for a bit of color in the garden (yellow, mauve, and sage green)
- ‘Icterina’ has green leaves with yellow edges

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Cooking Notes
A great way to incorporate the healing benefits of sage is “Sage Butter.” With two ingredients and 5 minutes, you have an amazing herbal butter that’s wonderful on sweet potatoes, chicken, tossed vegetables, fried eggs, toast, popcorn, and whatever you wish!
In the video below, herbalist Patty Sanders shows us how to make sage butter—and also talks all about the healing benefits of sage.
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A lanky plant with small leaves suggests that your sage is not getting enough light. Ideally, something like 6 to 8 hours of daylight per day is needed; a plant may not get enough if it is just sitting by a window (south-facing is best). You might want to provide artificial lighting: Set up grow-lights (such as two fluorescent tubes, one cool, one warm type) and place the plant under them (about 4 to 6 inches away from the lights) for about 12 to 14 hours per day. Ask your garden center for options--there are several bulb types and setups available.
Also, keep your plant away from cold drafts (such as by a window), and away from heating vents. A temperature around 65 to 70 degrees is good. Mist regularly.
There are so many varieties of sage. Some are good for the kitchen and others are not--and more ornamental. Salvia officinalis or the common sage is the primary sage used in stuffings. To use sage in stuffing and other foods, just chop up the fresh leaves. Sage is best in its first year. After a few years, it gets woody and needs to be replaced.
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