Pampers and Paklava

  • Home
  • Photography
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Garden
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Garden / Get savvy with sage: Rustic Sage Pesto Recipe

Get savvy with sage: Rustic Sage Pesto Recipe

February 25, 2016 by Beth Shepherd

Sage. Oh how I love its silver-gray leaves, its earthy, herbaceous scent and how plentifully it grows in my garden! This spring my herb box overfloweth with sage: large-leaf, small-leaf, purple and variegated. I have them all. And maybe a bit more of them than I need, which means…it’s time to make Sage Pesto!

I make a lot of pesto because the possibilities of what to do with it are endless:  stir into risotto, slather over shish-kebab, smear on bruschetta, tuck inside an omelet, mix into salad dressing, garnish a soup. I also make a lot of pesto because I grow a lot of herbs. Sage, thyme, rosemary, oregano, and basil (in summertime) grace my herb boxes. And once you’ve tasted garden-fresh herbs, it’s impossible to go back to using dried.

Sage Pesto Recipe

Pesto recipes are plentiful and while they all incorporate many of the same ingredients–olive oil, herbs, garlic, cheese, nuts–there are infinite ways you can mix and match to create your own unique pesto recipe. Change up your nuts. I lean toward pine nuts for most of my pesto recipes but walnuts, almonds or even hazelnuts can be used.  Add a touch of mint to brighten things up, a few tablespoons of lemon juice or grated lemon zest. Cheese can be traditional Parmesan (Parmigiano-Reggiano) but you can also try Asiago, Pecorino, Romano or Spanish Manchego.

You can also vary the texture of your pesto. Run your ingredients through a blender or food processor and you’ll wind up with creamy pesto, whereas if you chop the ingredients by hand you’ll have a more gritty, rustic pesto. I’ve come to really enjoy pesto made this way.

However you make it, pesto is one of the most versatile condiments around! Here’s my recipe for hand-chopped, rustic sage pesto.

Rustic Sage Pesto Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1/3 cup sage
  • 1/3 cup flat leaf (Italian) parsley
  • 1/3-2/3 cup pine nuts, depending on how nutty you like your pesto
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1/4 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, grated
  • 1/4  cup Pecorino-Romono cheese, grated
  • 1/2 cup virgin olive oil (or to your preferred consistency)
  • Optional: sprinkle of coarse Kosher salt to taste

How to

I like to toast my pine nuts. If you choose to do this, brown them in a dry saute pan, but be careful not to burn them. Next, get out a big wooden cutting board and bit by bit chop the sage, parsley, pine nuts, garlic and Parmigiano-Reggiano. I find the best way to go about this is start with a half-cup of combined dry ingredients, adding more until all the dry ingredients have been coarsely chopped. You can chop your ingredients with a knife or, better yet, try a mezzaluna, is a single or double curved blade with a handle on each end. A half-moon shaped pizza cutter also works nicely. After everything is coarsely chopped, drizzle in the olive oil, stirring to combine.

If you’re not up for hand-chopping–though you really should try it–combine the sage, parsley, pine nuts and garlic in the bowl food processor or blender and process to the consistency you prefer. Then, with the motor running, drizzle in the olive oil, adding more olive oil for a creamier consistency.  Thoroughly mix in the Parmigiano-Reggiano. Add salt to taste if desired.

Note: You can store your pesto in the refrigerator for up to a week or freeze it–a lovely thing to defrost in the middle of winter when some herbs are sparse.

 

garden sage pesto

It’s all about the journey,

Beth

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Related

Filed Under: Garden, Recipes Tagged With: sage

« Favorite things: Whiskers on kittens
Favorite things: Spring blossoms! »

Some might fend off a mid-life crisis by leaving the comforts of their corporate salary to jet off to a deserted island. Others might buy a Jaguar. I’ve chosen to dive head-long into my 50s and beyond by becoming a first-time parent. At any given moment you might find me holding a camera, a spade, a spatula or a suitcase. Or my little girl's hand. Adopted from Armenia, she puts the Pampers and Paklava into my life.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Recent Posts

  • Ghosts and goblins of Halloweens past
  • Raise a glass—or ten
  • No me without her: A life before motherhood
  • Leaving the orphanage with a priceless pair of tights
  • Rock of ages: Celebrating five years together as a family

Tags

366 Project Adoption anniversary Armenia autumn Bainbridge Island Baja Birds birthday blog cat cats chickadee China Christmas fall ferry flowers France Garden Gyumri Halloween Hawaii Holiday ice cream Kauai leaves London Mamas with Cameras Mexico Mother's Day Mt. Rainier New York orphanage Paris Puget Sound robin Seattle taxi Thanksgiving Tibet USCIS Valentine's Day wedding Yerevan

Categories

  • Adoption
  • Armenia
  • Family
  • Food
  • Friendship
  • Garden
  • Holiday
  • Miscellaneous
  • Paris
  • Photography
  • Recipes
  • Review
  • Seattle
  • Things to do with kids
  • Travel

Sites I like

  • The Wayfaring Voyager
  • Wanderlit
  • Wanderlust and Lipstick
follow us in feedly

Image Copyright

Unless specifically mentioned, all images on my blog are my own original photographs and, therefore, copyright protected (©Beth Shepherd). Feel free to use my images for non-commercial use so long as you provide me with the image credit. Likewise, if you pin my images to Pinterest, please mention me by name.

Copyright © 2026 · Pamperspaklava · WordPress Barista