Purple basil and sunflower seed pesto

Purple is the new green/ green is the new purple… something like that…

Ingredients

Pesto recipes are always “to taste” – use a little bit of what you have and work around how pungent the herbs are and what you have in the kitchen. Here is what I did with this really strong, sunny number:

  • 2 large bunches of purple basil, leaves carefully wiped with a damp cloth
  • 200g sunflower seeds (I often use sunflower seeds in pesto as a perfectly good healthy alternative to pine nuts and considerably cheaper)
  • 100g parmesan
  • 200ml extra virgin olive oil
  • 3 fat cloves of garlic
  • The zest of half a lemon pared

How To

Blend the ingredients all together in a blender into a thick paste. I like to still retain some texture – a little bit like “crunchy” peanut butter.

The uses for pesto are almost too numerous to list but start with the obvious: pasta and gnocchi and then think crusts on chicken and fish and then spread on crackers and fresh bread….

Apricot, Nectarine and Almond Pain Perdu

stale bread and croissants get the “ooh-la-la” treatment

This recipe has the double smarts. First to use up left over bread, croissants and wrinkly fruit and second to create a tart without the bother of making pastry. For when you butter the bread and press it outwards in and up the tin it creates a delicious crisp crust. Finally it gets zazzed up by a large slosh of Amaretto .”Voila” – something out of nothing magic.

Ingredients & Gizmos

The quantities are “approximate” – leftovers are. Here is what we had and what worked in a 23cm spring cake form. Allow for tidbits for the helper.

  • Softened butter – I probably used a generous 100g
  • Half a stale baguette, 3 croissants, 1 pain aux raisins
  •  2 eggs
  • 500- 750ml creme legere plus some Greek yogurt (I might not use the yoghurt again as a tad too acidic and prone to curdling) or milk
  • 3 tbsp sugar
  • Quite a lot of apricots and nectarines just past their “eat fresh” days
  • Generous slug of Amaretto (optional – almond essence would also work)
  • sugar for dusting
  • Chopped almonds

 How To

  • Break the bread and croissant into chunks and butter pieces individually
  • Place each piece butter side down in the tin, smearing the butter around the tin as you go so as to create a lined tin. Pack the pieces in quite tightly. Now fill with a second layer so the tin is roughly 2/3 full
  • Annoint the bread ensemble with the Amaretto as if making a sherry trifle
  • In a bowl loosely mix the eggs together with the cream or milk and sugar. Pour 2/3 of the custard mixture over the bread and allow it to soak it up.
  • Halve the apricots and nectarines and build up a circle starting with the outer circle of apricot pieces on top of the bread. Make a second and central circle until covered.
  • Pour over the remaining custard mixture
  • Bake at 180C for 35-45 minutes until the fruit is softly baked and the crust is golden
  • Sprinkle a little sugar over when warm and the chopped almonds

Serve warm with creme fraiche, a dreamy garden and a best mate.

You say “syrniki” I say “nalangate” – East European sweet cheese pancakes

Syniki with roast plum compote

Impossibly moreish light little pancakes made from whey cheese, known as “Syrniki” in Ukraine, Russia, Belarussia, Latvia, Lithuania , Slovenia and “Nalangate” in Romania and traditionally served with sour cream and jam. Olia Hercules in Mamushka goes for maple syrup with hers, me? I like an apricot or plum compote with mine.

It is worth being daring with just the smallest hint of flour for lighter fluffier pancakes result. And about that cheese….high quality full fat cheese with a high protein content will give you the best tasting pancakes with great mouth feel and texture. 

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