Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (2024)

Canning and Preserving

ByMerissa

This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy here.

This homemade pesto recipe is made with fresh basil and a few other simple ingredients. It can be used over pasta or spread lightly over bread, and a little goes a long way.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (1)

Table of Contents

Homemade Pesto

Did you plant and harvest basil from your herb garden this year? Then you might have a little bit of extra basil that needs to find a use! Or if you need a simple pesto recipe for a dish you are planning on making, you will love this one.

Homemade Pesto Recipe

What You Need:

  • 2 cups fresh basil
  • ½ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • ½ cup Parmesan cheese, grated
  • 1/3 cup pine nuts
  • 2 medium cloves of garlic, minced
  • ¼ tsp. salt
  • ¼ tsp. ground black pepper
  • 1 pint jar

How to Make Homemade Pesto

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (2)

Rinse your basil leaves and pat dry.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (3)

Add them to the food processor with the pine nuts and pulse several times.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (4)

Next, add the olive oil and blend until smooth.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (5)

Add the Parmesan cheese and pulse.

At this point, you may need to scrape any ingredients that have stuck to the side of your processor.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (6)

Mince one garlic clove before adding to the processor and pulse again. I recommend taste testing at this point to determine if you’d like the other garlic clove.

Scrape the sides of your processor again if necessary.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (7)

Once you’ve added your garlic, add the salt and pepper, blending one last time.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (8)

Transfer your pesto to a clean pint or half-pint jar. A thin layer of olive oil should begin to accumulate on top of the pesto. Twist the lid on the jar and refrigerate.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (9)

Canning Pesto

Canning pesto is not recommended. The parmesan cheese, olive oil, and garlic within the recipe can create an environment for botulism to thrive in, even when pressure canned.

The National Center for Home Food Preservation says, “Pesto is an uncooked seasoning mixture of herbs, usually including fresh basil, and some oil. It may be frozen for long-term storage; there are no home canning recommendations.”

Preserving Pesto

To preserve the pesto you could place itin either 1/2 pint containers or freezer bags and freeze for future use. Fresh pesto will last about a week in the fridge if stored in an air-tight container. Freezing is the preferred method of preservation if you want to make it in advance.

Here’s another great way to preserve pesto! Pour the finished recipe into ice cube containers and then freeze. After the pesto has frozen you can pop the pesto cubes out of the ice tray. Store them the freezer in a freezer bag until ready to use. This way you can quickly grab out only the amount you need for a recipe.

–Have you ever tried Freezing Kale?

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (10)

How to Use Homemade Pesto

You can use Homemade pesto is a variety of ways. Here are a few things you can add homemade pesto to:

  • Pasta
  • Guacamole
  • Veggie Dips
  • Scrambled Eggs
  • Pizza (replace the sauce)
  • Bread (add into any basic bread recipe!)
  • Sandwich Spread
  • Salad Dressing
  • Veggies
  • Meatballs
  • Burgers

–Do you grow mint? Here are 10 fun Uses for Mint!

Frugal Substitutions for Pesto

If you don’t have all the ingredients for the basic recipe above, you might be interested in some of these simple substitutions.

  • Replace the pine nuts for walnuts, cashews, or almonds.
  • Replace the basil with cilantro., spinach, zucchini, or other green veggies.
  • Replace the pine nuts with sunflower seeds.

Want to print this Homemade Pesto Recipe? Grab it below!

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (11)

5 from 3 votes

Print

Homemade Pesto Recipe

Ingredients

  • 2cupsfresh basil
  • ½cupextra virgin olive oil
  • ½cupParmesan cheesegrated
  • 1/3cuppine nuts
  • 2medium cloves of garlicminced
  • ¼teaspoonsalt
  • ¼teaspoonground black pepper
  • 1pintjar

Instructions

  1. Rinse your basil leaves and pat dry.

  2. Add them to the food processor with the pine nuts and pulse several times.

  3. Next, add the olive oil and blend until smooth.

  4. Add the Parmesan cheese and pulse.

  5. At this point, you may need to scrape any ingredients that have stuck to the side of your processor.

  6. Mince one garlic clove before adding to the processor and pulse again. I recommend taste testing at this point to determine if you’d like the other garlic clove.

  7. Scrape the sides of your processor again if necessary.

  8. Once you’ve added your garlic, add the salt and pepper, blending one last time.

  9. Transfer your pesto to a clean pint or half-pint jar. A thin layer of olive oil should begin to accumulate on top of the pesto. Twist the lid on the jar and refrigerate.

Head over here to find all our other free Canning and Preserving Recipes!

Do you have a special homemade pesto recipe? Have you ever tried preserving pesto?

This Homemade Pesto Recipe was originally posted on Little House Living in August 2013. It has been updated as of January 2019.

Homemade Pesto Recipe with Frugal Variations (2024)

FAQs

How do you make pesto less rich? ›

Making a lightened-up pesto sauce was a tricky balancing act of not stripping away pesto's identity while also changing it to be healthier. The balance I found to be best was still using a good amount of olive oil, but stretching the oil with another ingredient. That secret ingredient is… ::drumroll:: lemon juice!

Is it worth making your own pesto? ›

Homemade basil pesto is a wonderfully versatile and tasty sauce/spread made from a handful of flavorful ingredients. It comes together in minutes and tastes worlds better than store-bought because it's so fresh.

Why is pesto so expensive? ›

Its scarcity, plus the fact that the plants are picked roots, soil, and all to ensure that only juvenile leaves make it into pesto, makes it extraordinarily expensive and something that only premium, artisan pesto makers can justify using.

What happens if you put too much garlic in pesto? ›

Adding a small amount of acidity (lemon juice or vinegar) and balancing that with a little sweetness (sugar or honey) is the best way to take the edge off a pesto that tastes overwhelmingly of garlic. Almost every cuisine on earth makes use of garlic, and it's a vital component in pesto.

What to use instead of nuts in pesto? ›

Sunflower seeds in pesto

Seeds give you the same texture as nuts and are easy to just throw in the food processor with the rest of the ingredients. I always have sunflower seeds on hand to throw in salads (or just eat by the handful when I'm being a hungry monster) so I can always rely on them for a great pesto sauce.

What are the disadvantages of pesto? ›

2 Potential Downsides

First, since traditional pesto contains nuts, someone with a nut allergy must avoid traditionally prepared recipes. Luckily, there's an easy workaround using recipes without nuts. Second, store-bought pesto may or may not contain extras you may not want to eat.

Is pesto healthier than tomato? ›

As you would expect, pesto's wider variety of ingredients means it does slightly better in the vitamin and mineral stakes. Pesto outsmarts tomato sauce in many of these, but the pasta sauce still provides a sizeable chunk of your recommended daily targets.

Is it OK to eat pesto everyday? ›

You'll want to be mindful of the sodium content. Some jars have more than 500mg per serving and the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines recommend you eat no more than 2,300mg per day. It would be hard to stay within those guidelines if you get more than 20% of your sodium from pesto.

How to make pesto Rachael Ray? ›

Add nuts, garlic, zest of 1 lemon and salt to a food processor and pulse into a fairly smooth paste. Add cheese to nut paste and add about 3 tablespoons EVOO; process until smooth. Pulse process basil into sauce until fairly smooth, adding juice of 1 lemon and remaining EVOO.

Can you use the stalks when making pesto? ›

Can you use basil stems in pesto? Absolutely! The great thing about making pesto is that you can use the entire herb in the sauce. If you get a bunch of basil with extra thick stems, you may want to trim those off, as your blender or food processor might not be able to handle them.

How to tone down pesto? ›

Add a little lemon juice to the pesto. This helps mellows out any bitterness. Lemon juice also gives the basil pesto a little tang. Add more Parmesan cheese.

What if I put too much basil in my pesto? ›

Pesto – This green sauce usually consists of basil, pine nuts, garlic, olive oil, and Parmesan cheese. If you find the basil flavor is too strong, try replacing half of the basil with spinach. You can also substitute walnuts or almonds for pine nuts.

How to dilute pesto? ›

Also, if your pesto is too thick, feel free to thin it out with a few tablespoons of extra olive oil or water. Taste and season. Give the sauce a taste (you can dip a veggie stick or piece of bread in, if you'd like), and season with extra salt and pepper if needed.

Is there such a thing as too much pesto? ›

You'll want to be mindful of the sodium content. Some jars have more than 500mg per serving and the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines recommend you eat no more than 2,300mg per day. It would be hard to stay within those guidelines if you get more than 20% of your sodium from pesto.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lidia Grady

Last Updated:

Views: 5643

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lidia Grady

Birthday: 1992-01-22

Address: Suite 493 356 Dale Fall, New Wanda, RI 52485

Phone: +29914464387516

Job: Customer Engineer

Hobby: Cryptography, Writing, Dowsing, Stand-up comedy, Calligraphy, Web surfing, Ghost hunting

Introduction: My name is Lidia Grady, I am a thankful, fine, glamorous, lucky, lively, pleasant, shiny person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.