π§ How to Make Pesto with Fresh Basil (And Finally Ditch the Store-Bought Stuff for Good)
Β Β Β Β Β Β Β ποΈRooted Field Note: 22
My Basil Was Winning… Until I Made This
Thereβs something wild about how basil growsβlike, one week youβve got a nice lilβ handful, and the next youβre knee-deep in green leaves, wondering what youβve done. That was me last summer. Iβd already dried some, stuffed a few mason jars, and handed off bundles to neighbors. Still, the plants kept going like over-caffeinated toddlers.
Thatβs when I decided to finally figure out how to make pesto with fresh basilβand friends, Iβve never looked back (or bought a jar since).
If youβve got basil taking over your garden or windowsill, this Rooted Field Note is for you. Weβll go through the classic fresh basil method, what to do if all youβve got is dried, and a vegan twist that still slaps.
πΏ Why Gardeners Should Love Pesto (Beyond the Obvious)
Pesto is more than just a fancy sauce for pasta. Itβs a flavorful, flexible, freezer-friendly way to preserve a basil boom.
It checks every homesteader box:
- β Uses your garden haul before it bolts
- β Stores easily (hello, frozen cubes!)
- β Packs flavor without fancy ingredients
- β Makes you feel like a kitchen genius
Letβs break it down garden-to-kitchen style.
π± How I Make Pesto with Fresh Basil (Simple, Honest, Delicious)
Youβll need:
- 2 cups packed fresh basil leaves
- 1/3 cup nuts (pine nuts are classic, but I usually use walnuts or sunflower seeds)
- 2β3 garlic cloves
- 1/2 cup grated Parmesan (or Pecorino if Iβve got it)
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- Salt and pepper to taste
- Optional: a splash of lemon juice
How I do it:
- Wash & Dry Those Leaves β I give them a good rinse and either pat them dry with a towel or spin βem in my salad spinner. Dry leaves = better texture.
- Toast the Nuts β Just a quick toast in a dry pan. I do this if I have timeβit gives a deeper flavor.
- Pulse Basil & Nuts First β Toss βem in the food processor and pulse until crumbly.
- Add Garlic & Cheese β A few more pulses until it smells amazing.
- Drizzle in Olive Oil While Blending β Slow and steady here. I blend until the texture is thick but spreadable.
- Taste & Adjust β Salt, pepper, maybe a squeeze of lemon. I trust my tongue here.
- Store or Freeze β I jar what Iβll use in a week and freeze the rest in ice cube trays. Those cubes are lifesavers in winter.
My Tip: A handful of spinach blended in helps keep it greener longerβespecially if youβre storing it.
π§ Making Pesto with Dried Basil (Yep, You Can)
Okay, real talk: itβs not the same. But Iβve done it when the gardenβs asleep and the craving hits.
Hereβs what works for me:
- 3 tbsp dried basil
- 1β2 tbsp dried parsley (helps the color)
- 2 garlic cloves or garlic powder
- 1/3 cup nuts or seeds
- 1/2 cup grated Parmesan
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- Lemon juice, salt, pepper
I pulse the dry stuff firstβget it fine. Then slowly add the oil and lemon until it becomes a paste. Let it sit for 5β10 minutes to soften. Itβs more like a spread than a sauce, but it hits the spot on toast or stirred into soup.
π₯¬ Vegan Basil Pesto (No Cheese, No Problem)
Iβve made this version a few times for plant-based friends (and honestly, itβs really good).
What I swap:
- Use 2β4 tbsp nutritional yeast instead of cheese
- Everything else stays the same
Sometimes I even toss in a few cashews to thicken it up. The flavorβs rich, the colorβs bold, and it stores like a dream.
π§ My Basil Cube Trick (AKA Green Gold)
I use silicone cube trays to freeze single portions. When theyβre solid, I dump them into a freezer bag, label it βPESTO – DO NOT EAT RAWβ so my kid doesnβt think itβs mint candy, and pop one out anytime I want a hit of summer.
Keep the Flavor Flowing:
- Coming soon: How to Grow Basil Indoors Year-Round
- How to Propagate Basil from a Cutting
Until thenβstay rooted, stay saucy. π±