Wild garlic quiche Lorraine
Food, Making stuff

Making Stuff 18: How to Use Wild Garlic Pesto

Last year I shared a recipe on how to make wild garlic pesto – at the time we made pasta pesto for large boy to count towards a Cubs badge. I’ve made more this year, two batches in fact and I might make another. Honestly, I absolutely love the stuff! Its gorgeously peppery without being overwhelming.

I want to show off some really easy recipes that use wild garlic pesto, but first….

A Warning

Wild garlic can be mixed up with a couple of other plants that can be poisonous. Notably, Lily of the Valley and Lords and Ladies. If you’re foraging, I would recommend making sure each leaf smells garlicky and only taking leaves from plants with the distinctive flower heads so that you’re absolutely sure of what you’re picking. If you want some more guidance, I recommend Totally Wild UK.

Pasta Pesto

Yeah, this really is as simple as it sounds. We just boiled some penne until tender and fried off some left over roast chicken til it was a little bit charred. After draining the pasta, I stirred through two generous tablespoons (cooking for 2 adults and 2 children) of wild garlic pesto and chucked in a gloop (that’s an official unit of measure) of double cream. We served in pasta bowls with a bit of parmesan grated over the pasta and then topped with the chicken. I probably should have put some peas through the pasta for a bit of veg daily allowance but it was one of those days when we needed a super quick tea and honestly, I forgot.

Wraps

I think I had the exact same lunch every day for two weeks after I made the first batch of pesto this year. So simple, but so delicious. A small wrap with a big dollop of hummus (whatever type takes you fancy, I did this using plain, roasted pepper or caramelised onion) smeared down the middle, then a teaspoon of wild garlic pesto smoothed over and topped with halved baby plum tomatoes. Disappeared from my plate in less than 2 minutes.

Salmon with pesto, smashed potatoes and rainbow vegetables

For this one, I took inspiration from a BBC Good Food recipe. I did the potatoes differently, I think I saw a video on Facebook or something with smashed roasted potatoes and they looked amazing. In the event, they day I made this I ended up working til half past 5 and then had to get the kids from after school club as himself was in a webinar until 6pm. So it was all a bit rushed.

I put baby potatoes in the microwave (stabbed them first) for 5 minutes on high. While they whirred around, I placed the salmon on a baking tray and got the oven up to gas mark 6 (200C I think, 400F) and slathered each fillet in a good rounded teaspoon of pesto, with a bit more for luck. Once the potatoes pinged in the microwave I put them in a bowl with a slosh of olive oil and some coarse sea salt and stirred around to coat them. Then I added the potatoes to the baking tray and squished each one with a small glass, the skins split so they each looked like a little pacman. Then the tray went in the oven for 20 minutes and I sliced an orange pepper, courgette, and onions (should have included a red pepper but that got eaten the day before). I fried the veg off in olive oil with a pinch of salt and a dash of lemon juice. Magic, tea was on the table about quarter past 6, only half an hour after getting home. Even better, the boys cleaned their plates quickly too!

Green quiche

Lastly, something a bit more involved and best not attempted if you’re in a rush. Proper recipe time….

Ingredients

  • 4 rashers of bacon, chopped into little pieces
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 4 eggs, beaten
  • 1 pack pre-rolled pastry (I’m really lazy when it comes to pastry)
  • 120g grated gruyere cheese
  • 1 big tablespoon wild garlic pesto
  • Baby plum tomatoes, halved

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to whatever the pastry packet says, mine was gas 5/180C/350F.
  2. Line a pastry dish, one with wiggly edges is best, and put the pastry in it, trim the edges and then top with a bit more baking paper and some baking beads (I didn’t have any so put a plate in, didn’t work great). Blind bake according to the instructions – for mine this was 12 mins and then 5 mins more without the baking beads (or plate) and baking paper.
  3. Chop the bacon and onion up small and start frying off in a little olive oil. You want it to just start to brown the onion and for the bacon to go crispy, so not too much oil.
  4. Meanwhile, beat together 4 eggs and add the pesto and beat until smooth and all mixed in. Then season and add the cheese to the eggy mixture.
  5. Once the pastry is blind baked, take it out of the oven and turn the temperature down a bit (my pastry packet had a quiche recipe on the side and said to turn down to gas 3, but my oven is a little odd so I only went to gas 4).
  6. Load the pastry, first with the bacon and onion, then with the egg mixture. Finally, decorate with the tomato halves, with the insides of the tomatoes facing up so the juices don’t escape and make the egg and pastry soggy underneath.
  7. Bake in the oven for 20 minutes. In the meantime I started to boil some new potatoes with a bit of mint.
  8. Then turn the oven back up to gas 6/200C/400F for 10 more minutes while the potatoes finish cooking and I did some broccoli stems too.

Voila! Himself had seconds and the boys cleaned their plates. I just about managed to salvage a small portion for me to have for lunch one day.

Twisted Leftovers

Being a lazy cook with warm fingers (well when they aren’t bloodless in temperatures under 15°C), I used bought pastry for my quiche and there was a good bit left over. So I rolled it out really thin, spread some pesto and grated gruyere over half, folded the other half on top and sliced into strips about 1.5cm wide. I pressed down and then twisted each strip into a helix, then laid them on a baking sheet and put them in the oven for 20mins at gas 6 (180C, 350F). Bingo, easy peasy cheesey pesto straws.

Anything else?

What are your favourite foraged recipes? Or pesto recipes that you could use wild garlic pesto in rather than the classic basil-based one? Let me know!

Love from Smell xx

25 thoughts on “Making Stuff 18: How to Use Wild Garlic Pesto”

  1. Wild garlic pesto is the best; it is a special tang that you cannot get from anything else. I love the idea of having it over salmon as in your delicious meal here, but we have so many eggs right now from our hens, quiche is the best route for me to take. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Yum, I love pesto! It’s lovely that you have shared so many ways to use pesto. Your photos are gorgeous. I’m feeling a little hungry now, haha. I’ve made traditional pesto, pesto with sage instead of basil (it’s quite savory and good!), and pesto with wild greens. Some of the wild foods I’ve used when making pesto include nettles and chickweed. There’s nothing like the green goodness of pesto!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Wow! These pesto recipes look fantastic…pasta, quiche, salmon! Thanks for sharing this very versatile ingredient! I also love the “gloop” measurement 🤣. Can’t wait to try these recipes for my family!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I love pesto but haven’t had it with garlic– sounds wonderful. These recipes look delicious. Thank you for the enticing meal ideas!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. We started making wild garlic pesto last year after finding it at the farmers market and god, it was a game-changer! I personally don’t love regular pesto but could have this everywhere! WIll check out the salmon wrap, sounds delicious! x

    Liked by 1 person

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