How to Make a Bouquet Garni

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Add a bouquet garni to amplify the flavor of your soups, stews, sauces, lentils, and beans. You don’t really need a specific Bouquet Garni recipe, but once I show you How to Make a Bouquet Garni, all you need is your favorite fresh herbs, a length of kitchen twine, and your imagination.

Fresh herbs with twine to make a bouquet garni.


 

A bouquet garni, which is French for “garnished bouquet,” are used around the world to add depth of flavor to kitchen pots that stew and simmer. Once you learn how to make a bouquet garni, you can amp up a wide variety of moisture-rich recipes, such as:

  • Poaching fish, chicken, or shrimp
  • Cooking lentils, beans, and other legumes
  • Soups, curries, stews
  • Stocks and bone broths
  • Rice, quinoa, farro, and other grains

This is such an easy little how-to, that I fully expect you to take off running with your own bouquet garni ideas and never revisit this recipe again (unless it’s to tell me all the fabulous things you make with this easy French culinary technique).

Before we dive into how to make a bouquet garni, it’s worth noting how this differs from a mirepoix; some readers have approached me with questions about this. Mirepoix is a flavor base that consists of onions, carrots, and celery. Usually these aromatics are diced up and added first thing to a pot, much like soffritto or a Louisiana holy trinity.

Those diced ingredients cook way, way down and lend a rich, savory flavor to the recipe. While you definitely can add a carrot or a stalk of celery to a bouquet garni, it won’t ever have the chance to caramelize and be eaten in the dish, since it’s removed before serving. Think of a bouquet garni as a more of a subtle addition; an infusion if you will.

Bouquet garni ingredients are at their most powerful when submerged in poaching liquid to gently season meats, lentils, beans, legumes, stocks, and sauces.

Ingredients

Labeled ingredients for making a bouquet garni.

At a Glance: Here is a quick snapshot of what ingredients are in this recipe.
Please see the recipe card below for specific quantities.

Equipment notes

  • Kitchen twine: Seek out unbleached cotton kitchen twine, kitchen string, or butcher’s twine, which is strong enough to hold the bouquet together as it simmers. You can buy twine at retailers like HomeGoods or on Amazon; here’s my favorite twine.
  • Cheesecloth: This is optional and only required if you add smaller aromatic elements such as whole spices. Otherwise, simply use the kitchen twine to tie the ends of the herbs together. Or substitute muslin cloth.

Step-by-step instructions

  1. Place a length of twine about 4 to 6 inches long on a work surface (long enough to wrap around everything and tie easily). On top of the twine, add the parsley stalks, bay leaf, and fresh thyme sprigs in parallel next to each other. Tie the wine into a bundle and knot to secure.
Fresh herbs with twine to make a bouquet garni.
  1. To incorporate peppercorns, lay a 4-inch by 6-inch double-layered square of cheesecloth on a work surface. Add parsley stems, bay leaves, thyme sprigs, and peppercorns to the center of the square. Gather up each corner of the cheesecloth to form a pouch and tie it with twine to secure it.
Fresh herbs with twine to make a bouquet garni.

Recipe tips and variations

  • Yield: This bouquet garni method makes one herb bunch, enough to infuse one recipe such as a soup, stew, or batch of lentils.
  • Storage: Fresh elements of a bouquet garni, such as parsley stems or fresh thyme, should be stored in plastic wrap in the refrigerator or freezer.
  • Fresh vs. dried: The classic bouquet garni is made with fresh parsley stems and thyme leaves, but you can substitute dried herbs if that’s all you have.
  • How to make a sachet: Similar to a bouquet garni, a traditional sachet is made with parsley stems, a bay leaf, peppercorns, cloves, and optionally a star anise. It is always tied in cheesecloth.
  • More ways to bouquet: Add bundles of herbs customized to different recipes depending on the theme.
Mediterranean Lentil salad on two plates.
Use a bouquet garni in your pot of lentils for Mediterranean Lentil Salad.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the components of a bouquet garni?

A classic bouquet garni, by the French definition in classical cooking, is made with parsley stems, a bay leaf, thyme, and black peppercorns.

What can I use if I don’t have a bouquet garni?

You can add the herbs and spices directly to the pot instead of tying them together. This works especially well if you’re going to strain your product in the end anyway, such as with stocks and broths. You can also add the ingredients to a loose-leaf tea bag.

Put your bouquet garni to work

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Fresh herbs with twine to make a bouquet garni.

Bouquet Garni

Everything in a Bouquet Garni is in stick or stem form so they can be tied together without cheesecloth, and it's easy to remove the bundle when finished.
Prep Time 2 minutes
Total Time 2 minutes
Servings 1 serving
Course Soup
Cuisine American, French
Calories 13
5 from 9 votes

Equipment

Ingredients 

  • 1 stick carrot peeled
  • 1 stick celery
  • 1 stem leek white part only
  • 4 parsley stems
  • 1 sprig fresh thyme

Instructions 

  • On a clean, flat work surface, lay an 8-inch piece of kitchen twine. On top of the twine, in the middle, add carrot, celery, leek, parsley stems, and thyme sprig. Tie the bundle into a knot to secure.
  • Add to the pot and simmer as directed in your recipe. For easy removal, keep one length of the twine long enough to tie to one of the pot handles. Remove and discard.

Notes

  1. Kitchen twine: Use kitchen twine for trussing turkeys and chickens, tying beef tenderloins, forming sausages, and stringing up fresh herbs to dry. My favorite brand of kitchen twine is Regency Wraps.
  2. Yield: The bouquet garni, as written, is enough to flavor up to 2 quarts (64 ounces) of stock, sauce, or soup.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 bouquetCalories: 13kcalCarbohydrates: 3gProtein: 1gFat: 1gSaturated Fat: 1gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 1gSodium: 3mgPotassium: 81mgFiber: 1gSugar: 1gVitamin A: 367IUVitamin C: 5mgCalcium: 26mgIron: 1mg
Did you make this recipe?Tag @culinaryhill on Instagram so we can admire your masterpiece! #culinaryhill
5 from 9 votes (7 ratings without comment)

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Comments

  1. Thank you so much-exactly what I was searching for. Can I make a bouquet garni in cheesecloth using fresh herbs and freeze it? How long would it last?

    1. Hi Riley, yes! They will need to be stored wrapped tightly in plastic wrap or air-tight freezer-safe container and will hold up to one year. They can be added to soups or stocks directly from the freezer. – Meggan