I now harbor a deep grudge in your name.bass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.
It's quite likely to last an eternity.
I now harbor a deep grudge in your name.bass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.

pine nutsfrank grimes jr. wrote:I now harbor a deep grudge in your name.bass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.
It's quiet likely to last an eternity.
fool, pesto is ground pine nuts, garlic, basil, parsley and parmesan. real shit comes from Genova and is fucking pengbass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.
garethom wrote:Let's say for racism's sake that they eat sand or something.

bass hertz should be on the food networkabelard wrote:fool, pesto is ground pine nuts, garlic, basil, parsley and parmesan. real shit comes from Genova and is fucking pengbass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.
seriously, pesto has cheese in it.
edit. seen









Damn you Maroon!!! I busted my ass to fix that recipe and look how it came out.....bright maroon wrote:yep..
the two most common base methods of Italian cooking are called battuto and sofritto
a pesto being a battuto..
and saute being the sofritto..
Here's a nice ASIAN Pesto recipe courtesy of Ming Tsai
- minus dairy/macadamia in place of pine nuts
Asian Pesto Chicken Salad- by Ming Tsai and Arthur Boehm
from Simply Ming
Serves 4
If ubiquity means anything, pasta salad with chicken ranks right up there in
popularity with hamburgers and cole slaw on the American picnic table. But too often
it can be bland or heavy. This spicy grilled-chicken version gives you all the
satisfaction of everyday pasta salads and more. First, instead of the usual fusilli, it's
made with orzo, whose small rice shapes coat beautifully. Second, the salad's dairy
free, so you can serve it at room temperature without worry. Finally, it goes together
really quickly—good news when you want a delicious but unstressful party dish.
Make this with warm or room-temperature chicken, as you prefer—and, for best
texture, avoid tossing the ingredients together until the last minute.
INGREDIENTS
FOR THE PESTO SAUCE
2 jalapeno chiles, stemmed and seeded
8 garlic cloves
1 tablespoon sugar
1 heaping tablespoon peeled and minced fresh ginger
1 cup roasted salted macadamia nuts or roasted salted peanuts
Zest of 2 lemons
2 cups extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup fresh basil leaves, packed
1 cup fresh mint leaves, packed
1/2 cup fresh cilantro leaves, packed
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
FOR THE SALAD
2 tablespoons grapeseed or canola oil, if needed
1 1/2 cups uncooked orzo
4 boneless chicken breasts with skin
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 1/4 cups Asian Pesto, plus additional for drizzling
1 pint cherry tomatoes, halved
Juice of 2 lemons
1/2 pound baby spinach, washed and dried
METHOD
MAKE THE PESTO SAUCE
1. In food processor - chiles, garlic, sugar, ginger, nuts, zest, and 1 cup of the oil and blend until smooth.
Add the basil, mint, and cilantro and blend while slowly adding the remaining oil until a thick puree is formed.
Season with salt and pepper.
Store in a tightly covered jar and refrigerate.
ASSEMBLE THE SALAD
1. Prepare an outdoor grill, heat to hot, and spray the grid with nonstick cooking oil.
Alternatively, heat a grill pan or heavy sauté pan over high heat, add the oil, and swirl to coat the pan.
2. Bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to a boil.
Cook the orzo until just tender, about 10 minutes. Drain well.
3. Meanwhile, season the chicken on both sides with salt and pepper.
Grill the chicken, turning once, until the juices run clear when the meat is pierced @10 minutes.
Alternatively, grill the breasts in a pan over medium-high heat, turning once, about 10 minutes.
Cut the chicken with its skin into 1/4-inch-wide slices.
Allow the chicken to come to room temperature if you prefer, or proceed with the warm chicken slices.
4. In a large bowl, combine the chicken with 1 cup of the pesto, the orzo, and the tomatoes.
Season with salt and pepper. ]
In a medium bowl, combine the remaining 1/4 cup of pesto with the lemon juice, then toss with the spinach.
Season with salt and pepper.
5. Divide the spinach mixture among 4 plates.
Mound the chicken salad on the spinach, drizzle with additional pesto, and serve.

sort of right... wiki disagreesHelix [Delay] wrote:Pesto translates to "paste" I'm pretty sure. Which gives you a LOT of latitude as to what it contains.
The name is the contracted past participle of pestâ ("to pound, to crush", from the same Latin root as the English word pestle)
So you've never actually had Pesto then. One of the main ingredients of Pesto is parmigiano-reggiano or pecorino cheese.miscreant wrote:hackman wrote:miscreant wrote:hackman wrote:pesto has cheese in it you mug, of course it will go![]()
Wtf kind of pesto have you been buying?![]()
![]()
I have genuinely never had pesto that also had cheese in it.
And for the later years of my adolescent life I would eat pasta and pesto 3/4 times a week.
tr0tsky wrote: InI man nuh go to nah rasclot independent ethnic butchers seen.
Selassie-I man shop in Morrisons.
I was close.knell wrote:sort of right... wiki disagreesHelix [Delay] wrote:Pesto translates to "paste" I'm pretty sure. Which gives you a LOT of latitude as to what it contains.
The name is the contracted past participle of pestâ ("to pound, to crush", from the same Latin root as the English word pestle)









baron_von_carlton wrote:So you've never actually had Pesto then. One of the main ingredients of Pesto is parmigiano-reggiano or pecorino cheese.miscreant wrote:hackman wrote:miscreant wrote:hackman wrote:pesto has cheese in it you mug, of course it will go![]()
Wtf kind of pesto have you been buying?![]()
![]()
I have genuinely never had pesto that also had cheese in it.
And for the later years of my adolescent life I would eat pasta and pesto 3/4 times a week.
pesto is well poshbass hertz wrote:ffs
pesto is just oil, garlic, and ground up basil.
you guys act like its come kinda culinary cure for the plague.
bass hertz wrote:hummus > pesto

mikey g wrote:bass hertz wrote:hummus > pesto
hmmm. i love pesto but i eat loadsa hummus so you may have a point.
chip and hummus sandwich ftw
EBR wrote:- Back in the day we used to add a couple of these to the mac n cheese in true ghetto style. Who didnt have extra Taco Bell hot Sauce packets hanging around ?
http://www.soundcloud.com/particleimami wrote:i put secret donks in all my tunes, just low enough so you can't hear them
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