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Basil Pesto and Pesto Pasta

January 10, 2018 By appu Leave a Comment

It’s that time of the year again, when our farm in Mahabaleshwar is thriving and blooming. The entire farm is disrupted during the monsoons, which are heavy, non stop and torrential. In fact Mahabaleshwar gets the second highest rainfall in India, next only to Cherrapunji.

Just before the rains are predicted to stop, (and these predictions never come true!), we start planting some seeds in a sheltered area. Once the rains stop, the seeds are now seedlings and can be re transplanted in pots or beds. It’s a lot of work! The soil has to be turned, aired and new top soil has to be spread. Since we plant over almost 2 acres of land, it’s a busy time for all of us.

Seeing the seedlings burst forth into vegetables and flowers is the best thrill and pure fodder for my soul. I love the city but off late ever so often I just want to vacate my senses and vegetate with the vegetation.

This year started with a wild, wild and massive bush of Basil. So much that I did not know what to do with it. I plucked them and got them back to Bombay, still pondering in my head and actually stressing over not wasting this lot. It was fragrant, the leaves heavy with taste. I decided to make Pesto and sell it to my customers.

Pesto made with fresh fragrant organic basil

I came home and experimented with a batch. It was perfect, green and luscious. I bottled it and announced the sale, and it was gone within hours! All the bottles were booked!

Over time, the green becomes pale and dark. So if you want really bright green pesto, make it on the spot and use it. Making it a day in advance allows all the flavours to steep. But if you want to use it as a dip, or in an open sandwich, then make it on the spot.

Basil grows very easily in home cultured pots. And mind you, it can grow wild. Now when you have too much Basil, and your heart is breaking at the wastage, you know what to do with it.

We were all having fondue, and one of our friends did not like the smell of the cheese. So I made Pesto Pasta for her and her husband. I do believe the plate was polished off!!! 😀

Basil Pesto mixed with pasta

I hope you enjoy making this recipe, because there is no better smell than that of, fresh basil, smooth virgin olive oil and fragrant new garlic.

Cheer!

 

 

Basil Pesto and Pesto Pasta
Print Recipe
Fresh fragrant basil, made into pesto. Can be used as a dipping sauce, over sandwiches and salads, and of course made into a pasta.
  • CourseMain Course, Main Dish, Sauces and Jams
  • CuisineItalian
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Basil Pesto and Pesto Pasta
Print Recipe
Fresh fragrant basil, made into pesto. Can be used as a dipping sauce, over sandwiches and salads, and of course made into a pasta.
  • CourseMain Course, Main Dish, Sauces and Jams
  • CuisineItalian
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Ingredients
Pesto
  • 1 Cup Fresh Basil Leaves packed
  • 1/2 Cup Walnuts toasted
  • 1/4 Cup garlic Peeled
  • 1 1/2 tspn Sea Salt
  • 10 pcs Black Pepper
  • 1 1/2 Cup Extra Virgin Olive oil
Pasta
  • 1/2 Packet Pasta Boiled
  • 1/2 Cup Exrtra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1/2 Cup Grated Parmesan Cheese
  • 4/5 Cherry Tomatoes for garnishing, optional.
Servings: pax
Instructions
  1. Add all the ingredients of the pesto to a food processor and mix till its cohesive and no coarse pieces can be seen or felt.
  2. Put aside to use immediately or bottle in sterilised jar for future use.
Pasta
  1. Boil the pasta and keep aside
  2. Add the oil to the pan, and then add the pesto.
  3. Add the pasta and half of the parmesan cheese.
  4. Toss well and add 1/4th cup of the pasta water to the mix
  5. Toss again
  6. Serve hot garnished with the remaining parmesan cheese and cherry tomatoes.
  7. Add a side of toasty garlic or plain bread with this dish.
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Filed Under: Dinner, Healthy, Lunch, Sauces Tagged With: basil, black pepper, comfort food, farm to table, fragrant, fresh, garlic, healthy, italian, organic, parmesan cheese, pasta, quikc dish, virgin olive oil, walnuts

Hasselback Potatoes.

April 5, 2016 By appu 5 Comments

June 2015, my entire family went for a holiday to Grindelwald – Switzerland. Age group – 3 years to 65 years. You can well imagine the pandemonium!!

Luckily the apartment we had hired had huge cooking utensils, a kick-ass oven and some other fantastic gadgets.My sister woke up early, every morning, to cook breakfast for all of us. We would all get out of bed, and sleepy-eyed make our way to the kitchen, heap our plates with whatever dish she had prepared, fill up our tea mugs, and sit outside eating our breakfast and inhale the scenic beauty of sublime Switzerland.

One day the elder of the kids decided to cook us parents and their grandparents a luncheon. They had new potatoes in their repertoire of ingredients, and though we were told to stay out of it, I mildly suggested that they make Hasselback Potatoes.

Soon pots and pans were banging in the kitchen amongst loud voices, instructions and trembling music.

I need to go off track here. (The history behind my fascination for Hasselback Potatoes!)

We had been kindly invited to a party by a friend, who has a lethal ethnic background, and leanings from Germany in his extremely artful cooking skills. He had made these potatoes. Even the worst carnivore in our group, attacked these Hasselback Potatoes, as they came out, hot and crisp from the oven, the aroma of rosemary and cooking potatoes with garlic, filling the room.

Hasselback Potatoes

They were tender in the centre, crisp and mildly charred on the first bite. The flavour of rosemary just tickled the senses, instead of overpowering the entire dish. Every piece that touched our tongue, evoked some sort of long forgotten memory. Later, when all of us spoke about the potatoes, we all realised we had some sort of childhood memory revived, yet none of us had ever tasted it before. To date, we still talk about his potatoes, when we meet up.

_MG_8867

Hasselback Potatoes

Going back to the elder babies – they made a mean dish. The melee of dishes also had a kick ass pasta, fresh salad with honey vinaigrette dressing and salsa with garlic bread.

kids who coked for us. Tanay, Kanupriya, Namrata, Kanak.

salad by kids

pasta

hasselback potatoe in bowl

Hasselback Potatoes
Print Recipe
Soft and tender on the inside, charred and crisp on the outside. Tiring and messy, but Oh! so worth it.
  • CourseSides
  • CuisineFusion
Servings Prep Time
6 people 45 min
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour 45 min
Servings Prep Time
6 people 45 min
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour 45 min
Hasselback Potatoes
Print Recipe
Soft and tender on the inside, charred and crisp on the outside. Tiring and messy, but Oh! so worth it.
  • CourseSides
  • CuisineFusion
Servings Prep Time
6 people 45 min
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour 45 min
Servings Prep Time
6 people 45 min
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour 45 min
Ingredients
  • 500 gm new potatoes
  • 175 ml olive oil
  • 100 gm garlic finely chopped
  • 7 - 10 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • 1/4 C parsley finely chopped
  • 1 Tbspn salt
  • 2 Tbspn pepper
  • chilli flakes
Equipment and other requirements
  • oven preheated at 175 Deg C
  • bake dish Large enough to accommodate the potatoes side by side.
  • aluminium foil sized to cover the bake dish completely.
Servings: people
Instructions
Prepping the potatoes.
  1. If the potatoes are medium sized, slice them into half horizontally. If they are small start the prepping right away.
  2. Wash potatoes in running water. Start slicing from one end. Slice all the way in, but not enough to slice so deep that it separates from the potatoe.
    Wash potatoes in running water. Start slicing from one end. Slice all the way in, but not enough to slice so deep that it separates from the potatoe.
  3. Take each potato in the hand and fan out the slices a bit. Be careful to not break them. Having said that, if a few pieces do come out of the potato they can be also added to the main dish.
Olive Oil Mix
  1. Mix the salt, pepper, garlic, chilli flakes, and parsley into the olive oil. Taste for salt. Optionally you can also add 1/3 rd of the parmesan into this mixture. I do it sometimes. Other times I add it directly in the later step.
Final Dish
  1. Now take each potato and scoop them into the dish with the oil. Try and scoop up as much of the garlic and parsley as you can. Manually fan the slices and fill them with a some of the olive oil mixture. Push in a few pieces of garlic here and there into some slices.
  2. When all the potatoes are scooped and filled with the olive oil mixture, set them side by side on the baked dish. Pour all the left over oil on the potatoes in the dish. Pick up the rosemary sprigs and place them on the potatoes. More than one potato can share a sprig of rosemary. If need be cut the sprigs into half or three pieces, but do not chop fine.
    When all the potatoes are scooped and filled with the olive oil mixture, set them side by side on the baked dish. Pour all the left over oil on the potatoes in the dish. 
Pick up the rosemary sprigs and place them on the potatoes. More than one potato can share a sprig of rosemary. If need be cut the sprigs into half or three pieces, but do not chop fine.
  3. This step should take approximately 1 hour. Each oven has its own tantrums. Please keep a watch on the potatoes. After approximately 45 min to an hour, lift the foil and check the potatoes with a fork. The prongs should sink in easily.
  4. Lift the foil. Crank up the oven to 250Deg C.
  5. Take the dish out and sprinkle all (or the left over) parmesan cheese over the potatoes. Set it back in the oven.
  6. When the potatoes start curling and wrinkling, and look a bit charred at the edges, you can take them out of the oven. At this point if you desire crisper potatoes, bake them for a little longer, but do keep an eye on them. They can go from mildly charred to burnt in a matter of minutes.
  7. Scoop out all the potatoes in a serving dish. Drip all the oil from the bake dish over the potatoes. Replace the fallen (and now toasted) rosemary leaves on the potato.
  8. Serve hot.
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On behalf of the group that went to Switzerland, we hope you enjoy these Hasselback Potatoes.

Here is the link to the travel blog I have written for Switzerland.

Filed Under: Sides Tagged With: Cooked, crisp, fingerlickinggood, Hasselback potatoes, oilve oil, oven, parmesan cheese, Parsley, rosemary, Sidedish

Meet the Author

For the 21 years and some months that I have been alive, there has been this crazy, eccentric, always-charged-up woman with a full-time job of being a mother to 6 (2 children, 4 dogs).

In her spare time she blasts music on her DJ console, reads like a maniac, downloads shows (because God forbid she runs out of something to watch), runs an entire household, and to top it all off, manages a very successful catering business which makes the most delicious food in the entire world. Once you have her food, everything else will taste like stale socks.

This is what you call "Maa ke haath ka khana".

- Kanak

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