Seasonal Recipe: Wild Garlic Pesto

Seasonal Recipe: Wild Garlic Pesto

07/03/2022 Off By Peter Gladwin

Wild Garlic Pesto

The first signs of Spring are at last here – the countryside speckled with yellow primroses and wild daffodils;
birds singing their welcome to a new season; a touch of warmth in the sunshine
and an abundance of Wild Garlic growing on steep banks along shady country lanes.
This is a foragers paradise – the garlic grows so ferociously that no one can object to you gathering a few bundles
and the result is a condiment that can be used in 100 different dishes throughout the year.
Wild Garlic Pesto can be served with pasta dishes, salads, dressings, pan-fried fish
and as a salsa or marinade for barbecued meats. We actually prefer wild garlic to it’s cultivated cousin, garlic bulbs;
it is somehow fresher and more fragrant. It is also free if you take the trouble to seek it out!

Ingredients

A large bunch of wild garlic leaves (approx. 150g)
60g hard goats cheese, finely grated
60g hazelnuts, lightly toasted in a hot dry pan
1 tbsp. honey
1 tbsp. cider vinegar
200ml rapeseed oil
Salt and pepper

We find that a hard goats cheese makes the pesto light and very special but it is sometimes difficult to find.
Grated parmesan will do just as well.

Method

Blitz the wild garlic leaves, cheese, hazelnuts, honey and vinegar in a food processor.

Then with the blade still running slowly add the oil a little at a time.

Season well with rock salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Transfer to a sterilised Kilner jar and keep in the back of the fridge.

© Peter Gladwin


Wine Pairing: Bacchus 2019

“What grows together goes together” and there is no better pairing than Bacchus wine with Wild Garlic.
The stringent minerality and fragrant fruit flavours of the wine blend perfectly with the aromatic fresh savoury of the pesto.

The 2019 vintage of our Bacchus was a gold medal winner at the WineGB Awards in 2021.

Available for only £12.50 from our online shop until 15th April.


This lovely image was captured by Ed Dallimore