Southwest Pesto
This recipe has been kicking around in my head now for over ten years.
I can still remember thefirst time I
roasted a red pepper tosauce up some
noodles. It was in my first college apartment, and the recipe called
for garlic cloves. Having no clue what that was, I took a trip to the
supermarket and came back with my first bulging white head of garlic.
Actually, the recipe called for two cloves of garlic, so I came home with
two heads.
I began pulling apart those garlics, thinking all the while, my this
is a strange vegetable! After tediously peeling about eight
cloves, I thought, forget the other "clove". Yes, I put eight
cloves of garlic in the sauce, mistakenly thinking that the entire head of
garlic constituted oneclove... My
roommates were very good sports and ate my pasta creation, although we were
all pretty sick that night. It took us three days to sweat out that garlic!
Ten years and many less notable attempts later, I've developed a much
more palatable red pepper sauce that has a bit of a kick.
Just don't add thewhole head of garlic.
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Remove the seeds and the ribs of the
Serrano pepper. This is where most of the heat comes from, and for
this recipe, we're just looking for flavor, not heat. |
Cut tomatoes in half, remove
the seeds from your red pepper, and place on a cookie sheet with onion,
garlic, and Serrano. Roast in the oven on 450 for 30 min. |
While the vegetables roast, prepare
your pasta. I used linguine, but anything will work. Grate your
parmesan or pecorino cheese. Any aged hard cheese will work really
well. |
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1/2 Lb.
prepared noodles, such as linguine 2 1/2 tomatoes 1 red pepper 1/2
Serrano pepper, or 1 whole jalapeno 1/2 red onion |
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The vegetables are
done when the skins are black in places. |
Remove the skin
from your red pepper and tomatoes, leaving some of the char marks for
flavor. |
Add all of the
vegetables to a blender or a bowl for immersion blending. Add 1 t
salt, |
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2
cloves garlic, whole 1 t salt
1/2 lemon, juiced, about 2 T
1/2 C parmesan cheese |
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And the juice
from 1/2 a lemon, about 2T |
Next add 1/2 C
of Extra Virgin Olive Oil and blend on low speed, leaving some small pieces
in the pesto. |
Once you have
blended the pesto, add the 1/2 C cheese and stir until combined. |
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Serve over
noodles. |
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Southwest Pesto
(serves 4)
1/2 Lb. prepared noodles, such as linguine
2 1/2 tomatoes
1 red pepper
1/2 Serrano pepper, or 1 whole jalapeno
1/2 red onion
2 cloves garlic, whole
1 t salt
1/2 lemon, juiced, about 2 T
1/2 C parmesan cheese
- Preheat oven to 450. Remove the seeds and the
ribs of the Serrano pepper. This is where most of the heat comes
from, and for this recipe, we're just looking for flavor, not heat.
- Cut tomatoes in half, remove the seeds from your red
pepper, and place on a cookie sheet with onion, garlic, and Serrano.
Roast in the oven on 450 for 30 min.
- While the vegetables roast, prepare your pasta.
I used linguine, but anything will work. Grate your parmesan or
pecorino cheese. Any aged hard cheese will work really well.
- The vegetables are done when the skins are black in
places. Remove the skin from your red pepper and tomatoes, leaving
some of the char marks for flavor.
- Add all of the vegetables to a blender or a bowl for
immersion blending. Add 1 t salt, And the juice from 1/2 a lemon,
about 2T.
- Next add 1/2 C of Extra Virgin Olive Oil and blend on
low speed, leaving some small pieces in the pesto.
- Once you have blended the pesto, add the 1/2 C cheese
and stir until combined.
- Serve over noodles.
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Notes: I prefer using the Serrano pepper for this recipe
because it has more flavor; however, jalapeno works well too. |
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