How can grouping herbs close to the kitchen door make them easier to use in daily cooking?

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Fresh herbs sound great in theory, but if they’re growing somewhere far from the kitchen, you’ll only use them on “special days.” Daily cooking is about convenience. When you’re in the middle of making dal or pasta, you don’t want to walk halfway across the house to pluck a few leaves.

If your herb pots—coriander, mint, basil, curry leaves—sit near the kitchen door or window, you can literally step out, snip a handful, and be back in under a minute. That small ease makes you use them much more. You start adding a bit of fresh green on top of almost everything: omelettes, sabzis, soups, salads.

It also becomes a small pleasant ritual: open the door, feel a bit of breeze, smell the plants, cut what you need. No drama, no big gardening scene, just a practical extension of your cooking space.

So instead of “a balcony garden somewhere,” you basically create a mini “spice rack” in plant form right next to where the real action happens.

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