I am afraid my days of fresh basil are over now that we have frosty nights BUT I did make a LOT of pesto. I love to saute a few fresh cherry tomatoes in olive oil to top off some pesto pasta but the cherries are starting to fall like the leaves. This is just a sampling of the pesto I made for the freezer. It should taste oh so good when it's snowing outside.
But on the bright side, it's soup making season! We usually make soup every Sunday. Along with a dutch oven beer bread recipe. (Add some pumpkin, flax and/or sunflower seeds to crank it up.) So, I have been harvesting carrots to use in soups ... butt crack carrots. Thankfully they don't taste like butt crack! They taste oh so sweet.
Butt Crack Carrot |
All cleaned up and in the pot. These are a variety named jewel-toned so some are yellow-orange. Yum yum.
Not sure if I mentioned this before but a favorite way we like to prepare beets - large bulbs - is to make a little core in the top of a cleaned beet, insert a garlic clove, drizzle with olive oil and a sprinkle of sea salt, then wrap in tinfoil - grill (oh yeah), or bake. The smell alone is delicious.
you've made hungry! Just might go off and make some soup, but the ingredients won't be nearly as wonderful as your home grown ones.
ReplyDeleteThe beet with the garlic clove -- YUM! Worth the price of admission to your blog for sure!
ReplyDeleteI read this post and think I HAVE to be more efficient in my vegetable plot - I have nothing to take photos of right now except some sad pink fur apples. There is quite a lot of discpline in this vegetable growing and i am READY for it!
ReplyDeleteWow...everything looks fabulous..such dazzling goodies! I love pesto..and beets too..Id love to have some right now!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post!
Kiki~
The pesto looks delicious, and I will definitely try the beet and garlic idea. Like you, I make a pot of soup every week during the cold weather, and have it for lunch every day. Here in southern PA, it's not cold enough yet for soup; but I have been collecting pumpkins to cook, puree and freeze for pumpkin soups during the winter. -Jean
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