This vibrant green kale, garlic scape, and pistachio pesto is all about simplicity.  Wanted to take advantage of the beautiful garlic scapes you find this time of year.  I used garlic scapes in this tasty soup the other day, but also had a garlic scape pesto in mind.

Just needed to figure out what else to put in my pesto?

There are any number of greens you can use in pesto — traditionally, basil or, perhaps something a bit less traditional, arugula, parsley, cilantro, chervil, mint, sorrel, spinach, and/or kale to name a few.  After that, you need to decide, nuts/seeds or no nuts/seeds?  More decisions — pinenuts (traditional) or, perhaps, pistachios, almonds, walnuts, or pumpkin seeds?  Toasted versus untoasted nuts/seeds?  Cheese or no cheese?  Smooth or rustic?  Prepared in a food processor or a mano (by hand) with a mortar and pestle?

I guess what I’m getting at is that there are a seemingly limitless number of combinations when it comes to  pesto.

Once you have some pesto on hand, it is extremely versatile and can be used in a myriad of dishes.  A few ideas…

1. Grilled cheese — with a gooey, melty cheese such as asiago or gruyere — and pesto;
2. Pasta with pesto;
3. Pizza with pesto;
4. Potato salad with pesto (in lieu of mayo).

Other favorite ways to incorporate pesto?

Pesto freezes well (in ice cube trays), so you can make a bunch of pesto when garlic scapes are plentiful, and enjoy it later in the season when scapes are long gone.

 

I topped some homemade mulitgrain (whole wheat, rye, spelt) sourdough walnut bread with this delicious,  verdant pesto.  You can find the recipe for the bread here.

While it is a bit of a process, the end result — a hearty, flavorful, rustic bread — is well worth the effort.

 

Garlic scapes are the edible green stem that shoots up from the hard-neck variety of garlic bulbs, usually in late-May to June.  They are cut off so the plant’s energy goes into growing the bulbs instead of the stem and the flowers, which will be dug up in a couple of months.  The scapes are tender with a mild garlic flavor.

In addition to garlic scapes, came across some shallot scapes for the first time.  Hmm, what to do with shallot scapes?

 

Kale, Garlic Scape, and Pistachio Pesto

1/2 cup shelled pistachios
4-5 large kale leaves, stem removed, roughly chopped
5-6 garlic scapes, roughly chopped
1 small bunch basil
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/2 to 2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil (depending on desired consistency)

Add the pistachios, kale, garlic scapes, basil, salt and pepper, and pulse until broken down and well combined, but still a bit chunky.  Slowly add the olive oil and pulse a few more times until well combined.

 

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10 comments

Reply

Wow the color in that pesto is incredible. Some great flavors as well, definitely bookmarking this!

Happy Blogging!
Happy Valley Chow

Reply

Wow the color in that pesto is incredible. Some great flavors as well, definitely bookmarking this!

Happy Blogging!
Happy Valley Chow

Reply

This pesto looks beautiful. I love making pesto from garlic scapes — it's so delicious. Your photos of the scapes are stunning as well.

Reply

This pesto looks beautiful. I love making pesto from garlic scapes — it's so delicious. Your photos of the scapes are stunning as well.

Reply

That looks incredible! We just got Kale and garlic scapes in our first CSA basket, thinking I will try this!! Does it freeze well?
Thanks for posting!

Reply

That looks incredible! We just got Kale and garlic scapes in our first CSA basket, thinking I will try this!! Does it freeze well?
Thanks for posting!

Reply

How much does this recipe make?
Servings?

Reply

How much does this recipe make?
Servings?

Reply

Around 1 cup to 1 1/2 cups.

Reply

Around 1 cup to 1 1/2 cups.

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