🌿 Summer Savory

Satureja hortensis
herbs annual herb
Illustration of Summer Savory
☀️ Sun
full sun
💧 Water
moderate (consistent moisture, but tolerates some drought)
🗺️ Zones
2–11 (annual)
🪴 Soil Type
well-drained, moderately fertile loam
🧪 Soil pH
6.0–7.5
💧 Drainage
well-drained
📏 Spacing
6–12 inches
📐 Height
12–18 inches
📅 Days to Maturity
60–70 days

🍴 Edible Parts

🍽️ leaves (peppery-thyme flavor — beans🍽️ lentils🍽️ meat🍽️ stuffing🍽️ poultry seasoning🍽️ herbes de Provence)🍽️ flowering tops

🤝 Companions (7)

🤝 Bean
Classic bean companion: summer savory deters bean beetles and improves bean growth and flavor. Reduces flatulence when eaten together.
Summer savory enhances onion growth and flavor when planted nearby; both repel each other's pests through combined aromatic compounds.
Summer savory deters aphids from roses; its low-growing habit forms a beneficial understory without competing for light.
Summer savory repels aphids and whiteflies from tomatoes; attracts beneficial wasps that control tomato hornworms.
🤝 Squash
Summer savory's strong scent deters squash bugs and cucumber beetles; attracts bees essential for squash pollination.
Summer savory repels cabbage moths and flea beetles from brassicas; its low growth doesn't shade cabbage.
Both are aromatic Mediterranean herbs with similar soil/sun needs; combined scents create a strong pest-repellent zone.

⚠️ Keep Apart (2)

Summer savory may inhibit cucumber growth; cucumbers prefer richer, moister soil than savory tolerates well.
Basil requires consistently moist soil; savory's preference for drier conditions creates cultural conflict. Their strong aromatic profiles may clash.

💊 Medicinal Uses

Antiseptic, carminative, digestive, expectorant. Contains carvacrol, thymol (same antiseptic compounds as thyme), and tannins. Used for digestive complaints (gas, colic, diarrhea), respiratory infections, and sore throat (gargle). Rubbed on insect stings and bites for pain relief. Tea used for menstrual cramps and as an aphrodisiac ('savory' from Latin 'satureia' referring to satyrs).

📜 History & Traditional Uses

Ancient Romans used summer savory extensively — introduced it throughout Europe and Britain along with their legions. Romans believed it was an aphrodisiac associated with satyrs. Medieval monastery gardens grew it as medicine and flavoring. Traditional European bean herb — 'Bohnenkraut' in German (bean herb) because it reduces flatulence from legumes. Used in Ancient Roman vinegar sauces and early European sausages. Colonial Americans brought it for kitchen gardens.

📝 Notes

The 'bean herb' — classic pairing with all legumes because it reduces gas and enhances flavor. Essential in herbes de Provence. Annual (summer savory) is more delicate, sweeter than perennial winter savory (Satureja montana) which is stronger and more pungent. Attracts bees and beneficial insects. Cut back before flowering for best flavor. Reseeds readily. Excellent container herb. Companion plants benefit from its pest-repelling aromatic oils.