(Almost) green eggs without ham
Aug. 8th, 2003 07:08 pmThis morning, far later than I should've, I made a batch of rather chunky vegan basil-walnut pesto. I had a lot of basil; I ended up with a soupbowl full of pesto (along with frustration that my blender doesn't handle larger quantities of basil efficiently).
This afternoon, I decided to make green eggs. More precisely, devilled eggs with pesto mixed into the yolks instead of mayo. They taste just fine, though they're not quite as green as I'd imagined.
There's quite a lot of pesto left for experimenting with... Suggestions welcome.
Though anything not used by Sunday is likely to end up in the freezer, in individual packets, for bringing fresh basil taste into my winter kitchen.
This afternoon, I decided to make green eggs. More precisely, devilled eggs with pesto mixed into the yolks instead of mayo. They taste just fine, though they're not quite as green as I'd imagined.
There's quite a lot of pesto left for experimenting with... Suggestions welcome.
Though anything not used by Sunday is likely to end up in the freezer, in individual packets, for bringing fresh basil taste into my winter kitchen.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 04:31 pm (UTC)Makes for easy measuring.
Now I need to find a local source of basil and make pesto (w/ pine nuts, but I'll have to try walnut now too - thanks!).
no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 04:52 pm (UTC)Ahh, I'll forgive you if you give me some of the egggless pesto. :)
no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 05:22 pm (UTC)(Then you can add whatever other ingredients (cheese or not, etc) at the time of eating. This mostly saves washing the cuisinart when you're just hungry for a basil snack. Frozen pesto cubes can be thawed easily after being placed in a small plastic bag (tied) and dropped in a bowl of hot water. Unsure if it'll actually defrost and not turn odd in the roentgen oven.)
no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 05:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 07:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-08 08:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 01:53 pm (UTC)I've got twelve basil plants this year, double last year's number, and I anticipate making a very large number of pesto cubes! I've used a variety of nuts. Pine nuts being the most classic, but also walnuts (didn't like 'em that much), sunflower seeds (pretty good), and even dry-roasted cashews, salt and all. Yum!
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:13 pm (UTC)See Hauntmeister's comment below for other things to make pesto with. I suspect pecans would also work well, if they're affordable. Oh, and though I haven't tried it, I've heard that using other fresh leafy herbs works for pesto-variants, too (parsley and cilantro come to mind first, neither of them favorites of mine, unfortunately).
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:16 pm (UTC)And what's a roentgen oven? A microwave? If so, I've successfully defrosted many things on low setting in mine, and I think pesto was one of them, though I'm not positive.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:17 pm (UTC)Cookie narration?
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:20 pm (UTC)I never thought of pesto as a sandwich topping. I shall have to try it (and I'd certainly never thought of it with faux-chicken burgers, since I'm unsure what they are: burgers faux because of their chickenness, or burgers made of faux-chicken (perhaps some soy or gluten product?)?). I suppose it's far too predictable that I'd first think of tomato sandwiches.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:22 pm (UTC)Second thought: a large amount for pesto is not nearly a large enough amount for to make wine with.
Third thought: does that really sound good to your mental mouth?
Really?
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 06:24 pm (UTC)I don't like walnuts as much as pine nuts, but it was worth the experiment. I'd heard of using sunflower seeds, but not cashews (and I'd certainly not think of using salted ones!). Have you tried pecans? I'd think their texture would work pretty well. Oh, and if you were feeling beyond decadent: I wonder what a pesto with macadamias would taste like?
no subject
Date: 2003-08-09 10:47 pm (UTC)(2) You can make wine out of almost any amount of anything. I'm sure you would only want a small amount of pesto.
(3) No. But I've seen recipes for good garlic cooking wines, and I'm sure basil would make a very nice wine.
Pesto wine
Date: 2003-08-10 04:28 am (UTC)I suppose you can make wine out of anything.... In my head, I can imagine using wine and pesto in one dish, but not having them be the same thing, as it were.
I suppose I'm just limited.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-10 08:11 am (UTC)