Somehow, throughout the entire excursion of
my Italian cooking, I had never tried nor wrote about making pesto. I had
written countless words about tomato sauce and everything there is to know
about pomodoré, but not one about pesto. Maybe because pesto is not
mainstream here, which is weird since pesto is an integral part of Italian
dishes, especially if one is talking about pasta. It has been embedded into the
eating culture of Italians, sort of like what sambal belacan is to the
Malays, where one would consider a meal as incomplete without it. Somehow not
many people here know about it, heck, if one were to dine in an Italian joint,
or any restaurant serving pasta as one of its menu, one can hardly find any pasta
dish incorporated with pesto as its sauce.
I had prepared pesto many times before and though nowadays you can easily find
ready-made pesto in most supermart and hypermat, they can never beat the taste
of fresh home-made one even when it is stored or frozen.
Borrowing the exact description of pesto from Wikipedia, it is a sauce originating in Genoa in the northern region of
Italy (pesto alla genovese). The name is derived from the Italian wordpestâ("to pound, to
crush", from the same Latin root as the English word pestle), in reference
to the sauce's crushed herbs and garlic. The basic ingredients of a pesto
is obviously herbs (most common is basil) which are washed, dried, put in the mortar with
garlic and salt, and crushed to a creamy consistency with pine nuts,
bounded together with olive oil and cheese. Since pine nuts is not a common ingredient one can easily
find in our local supermart or hypermart shelves, walnuts is our only best bet
for substitute. Stored in a tight jar, or simply in an air-tight plastic container, pesto
can last in the refrigerator up to a week and can also be frozen. Though traditionally pesto is always served with pasta, there are many
other uses of pesto to accompany your favourite dishes. You can also use it as
dipping sauce, and it goes well together with your roasted chicken, grilled
seafood, fishes, and combined as recipes for other delicacies (which I will write about it later perhaps)
Ingredients (Serves approx. 4) a clove of garlic salt and freshly ground black pepper 3 handfuls of fresh basil, leaves picked and
chopped a handful of pine nuts, very lightly toasted a handful of freshly grated Parmesan cheese extra virgin olive oil
Pound the garlic with a little pinch of salt and
the basil leaves in a pestle and mortar, or pulse in a food processor. Add the
pine nuts to the mixture and pound again. Transfer to a bowl and add half of
the Parmesan (note that if you want to
freeze the pesto you make, omit the cheese since it doesn't freeze well. When
you want to use, defrost and only then add in the cheese). Stir gently and add
the olive oil-you need just enough to bind the sauce and get it to an oozy
consistency.
Season to taste, then add most of the
remaining cheese. Pour in some more oil and taste again. Keep adding a bit more
cheese or oil until you're happy with the taste and consistency. Optionally,
you may like to add a squeeze of lemon juice to give it a little twang, but
it's not essential. Try it with and without to see which one suit your taste