Sun-dried Tomato Pesto
I am still extremely busy. I got home late from work (although much earlier than my close-to-midnight arrival last night) tonight, so something fast was in order. I’d bought a couple of bunches of basil a few days ago, thinking I would make pesto, and at some point between then and now, I’d thought it would be fun to use sun-dried tomatoes in the pesto, which is exactly what I did. I’m skeptical about calling this “my” recipe because it’s a pretty standard pesto and adding sun-dried tomatoes is certainly not novel, but I’m suffering from lack of posts lately, so I’m putting it up anyway! Toss this with pasta and you can have a meal ready in the time it takes to cook the pasta.
Sun-dried Tomato Pesto
2 cups basil leaves
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, reconstituted in hot water (if using oil-packed, cut back on the olive oil a bit)
1/4 cup pine nuts
1/4 cup olive oil
2 Tbsp nutritional yeast
4 cloves garlic
1/2 tsp salt
Soak the sun-dried tomatoes in hot water until soft (5 minutes or so):
Place all ingredients in a blender.
Blend until smooth.
To serve with pasta as I did, place pasta into a bowl, put a heaping tablespoon-sized dollop of pesto upon it, and dribble a little of the pasta-cooking water over it (I scooped some out with a Pyrex measuring cup before dumping into the colander), then stir everything together.
With a glass of much-deserved wine, this was a very fast but elegant way to wind down. I encountered a lot of interference on the way, though, I must confess. See, Tigger LOVES nutritional yeast; if I so much as go near it, he sinks his claws into my arm and drags me closer to him, head-butting me and meowing. So when I wanted to take a picture of it, he, of course, had to involve himself.
Look at his tongue!
And do you think I learned my lesson the first time and gave him some when he demanded it?
No, I did not.
Yes, I finally caved in and gave the poor, neglected cat what he so badly desired:
Then, while setting up the shot of the plated meal, the mischievous tomato-loving Mark seemed determined to ruin my decorative garnish:
Finally I sat down to eat with my book (the new Salman Rushdie, if you’re curious) and was immediately bombarded with Brachtune’s face directly in mine.
You can actually see my bowl of pasta reflected in her eyes!
But I don’t know, there are worse ways to end a day than in the company of Rushdie, Brachtune, and a big glass of wine, so I won’t complain.
And the pesto must have been good because I caught Mark dipping the extra tomato wedges into the leftover pesto after cleaning his bowl!
Mark Said,
June 17, 2008 @ 11:29 pm
if I was hunting Tiggers I would use nutritional yeast as bait.
Sarah Said,
June 18, 2008 @ 1:18 pm
aw, that is too cute. Your cats are adorable. Late nights at work are shat, but when you know you have a family like that to go home to. And my basil plants are almost ready to make a nice pesto, I might just try yours, looks delicious.
renae Said,
June 18, 2008 @ 4:12 pm
I envy your basil plants that produce enough leaves for pesto! I haven’t killed any of mine yet (surprisingly), but they are nowhere near large enough to use except for plucking a few leaves here and there. No plant has ever lasted long enough under my black thumb to provide me with more than a sprinkling of their leaves here and there. Except rosemary. Even I can’t kill rosemary.
Destiny Said,
June 18, 2008 @ 9:00 pm
Your kitties are awesome! It’s so cool that animals love nutritional yeast.