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La Platicona Habla: Tastes, Passions and Pursuits

For food lovers, hungry people, and cooking officionados or novices. This blog is for people who are real cooks, wannabe cooks, or no cooks at all. Almost all of these recipes are vegetarian, some use seafood. Recipes are creations of my own, adaptations from cookbooks, or from other internet sources with links.

Artichoke and Lemon Pesto

May 25, 2006


When cooking gnocchi, I decided to use some leftover artichokes I had in the fridge and prepared them by hand to make a non-herb based pesto sauce. I know, however, that many of you would rather use canned artichokes, and I can't blame you. I recommend you try Roland's brand hearts. This Spanish company makes a line of canned and jarred gourmet foods rather cheaply and you can find them at any local grocery store. So now that you have my blessing to use canned artichokes, feel free to use them as the base of this fabulous simple pesto. I imagine that you could also serve this sauce with bow tie or penne pasta as well, but gnocchi would be the best.

You will need:
- 1 can of artichoke hearts, drained;
- 4 cloves of garlic;
- 1/2 c olive oil;
- zest and juice from 1 lemon;
- 1/2 c grated parmesan;
- handful of italian parsley;
- salt & pepper to taste.
- You need a blender or food processor to make this pesto.

Step One: In your food processor, combine the artichokes, garlic, lemon, parmesan, parsley, and blend until well incorporated.

Step Two: While running the blender or food processor, slowly drizzle in the olive oil to build the consistency of this pesto to a semi-liquid state (a colloidal mixture if you will). If you require more liquid, add olive oil. Season with salt & pepper. You can cover this in a tupperware dish and keep for 2-3 weeks.

To serve this, pour the sauce into a pan over medium heat. Let the sauce warm through and then add your gnocchi (it is already cooked and just needs to be heated up). I added toasted pine nuts as a finishing touch, and I also included them in the pesto sauce - it is not necessary to do so, but it gives the pesto that tradiitonal nutty taste that goes very well with the earthy potato based gnocchi.

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posted by Anonymous, Thursday, May 25, 2006

1 Comments:

I tried this recipe out on a vegetarian friend and both she and I liked it very much. It was super-easy and very good-tasting. I actually don't like canned artichoke hearts because they leave too many tough leaves on them to be eaten without the fear of choking or swallowing a mouthful that hurts going down. But, they actually had Roland's Artichoke "bottoms" at the store which is the heart completely cleared of all leaves--they worked great and cost about a dollar less than the hearts. Although, I suppose it sounds nicer to be eating "hearts" than "bottoms".
commented by Anonymous Anonymous, 8:42 PM  

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