The recent heat wave (read: delightful warm, sunny days) kicked my basil plants into overproduction. I'm not ready for them to bolt, so a serious shearing was in order. After a judicious pruning they're back under control, and two giant basil bouquets have been decorating the kitchen for a few days.
Outside of caprese salad, I don't eat much basil. This put me in a quandry, the plants were taking up too much counter space. You see where this is going don't you? Yes, yes it is. But rather than making pesto, I made its Provencal cousin, pistou. (Pistou doesn't include any nuts)
The recipe I used goes much more lightly on the oil than many other recipes I've encountered. I used extra garlic and found the resulting spread to be eerily reminiscent of the pesto served at Carrera's Cafe, the long-gone neighborhood cafe that was my second home in my twenties.
Pistou
3 cups basil leaves, packed
3 large garlic cloves, pressed or finely minced
4-6 Tbsp olive oil
1/2 C grated asiago
1/4 C grated parmesan
1/2 tsp salt
Prep all ingredients first: discard basil stems, press or mince the garlic, grate the cheese and measure the salt and oil, so that everything can move at once.
In a food process bowl sandwich the garlic, cheese and salt in between the basil. Pulse gently until a rough paste forms, then add the oil in a slow stream until the desired consistency is reached.
Yield approx 1 cup
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
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2 comments:
Sounds delicious. Now get back to studying - you have an important test in two weeks. :*
I have already made a bunch of pesto but still need to do the same as you: give those basil plants another haircut. I wonder if pistou might be good spread on a thick slice of French bread or some such thing.
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