Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Pesto Garlic Bread



Summer is finally here! Our last school day was Friday, and while I was sad to say goodbye to the students, I am so grateful for some time to myself. The past three weeks have been so nutty- I swear I've had more sugar in the past month than I've had in the past 12 months. I feel a bit out of whack, but looking forward to a restful and restorative summer.

I'm sure I'll share more about that later, but for now I'm going to share something that..isn't quite restorative.

Hm, well, it restored my beliefs in homemade compound butters!



I bought this cookbook a few months ago and this jumped right out at me. Certain parties in this household love buttery, cheesy garlic bread. Like, love love love. I'm ambivalent, I prefer pizza if I'm going to go all bread and cheese. But I do like to see everyone smile so, I'm often on the lookout for a good garlic bread for those fancy dinners I sometimes like to prepare at home when I'm sick of restaurants. It happens!







This recipe is good for two loaves of your favorite bread- I like a good whole grain bread. You can bake one up and freeze the other for a quick side dish.



This bread was rated as a top 5 contender for favorite things made in my kitchen. Seriously. Make it. Make someone's day (maybe your own!) and save that leftover basil butter, you'll thank me later.



Pesto Garlic Bread
By Tyler Florence 

ingredients

1 pound butter
1/2  bunch of fresh basil
10-15 garlic cloves
1/4 cup grated parmesan cheese
2 loaves of crusty bread
sea salt
pepper

Put all the ingredients (except the bread, duh) in a food processor (or blender, as I did) and whip it up until it is all mixed up and creates a gorgeous basil butter.

Next, slice the bread almost all the way down, leaving the slices hanging together (see photo above). Butter the bread by spreading basil butter between each slice of both loaves, then spreading the remaining butter on the tops of the loaves. Honestly, I end up with a good 1/2 cup left and I freeze it and cook up veggies with it later. Yum.

Wrap both loaves with foil and either bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes or freeze for up to a month. When you take it out of the freezer, simply bake it at 350 for 30-40 minutes (mine tends to take longer than the suggested 30 minutes). Let it cool a bit before slicing again and serving.

Enjoy! 
-m  





No comments:

Post a Comment

Have any questions? Did I miss something in my post? Can you make a great connection to something above? I'd love to hear it! Share!