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Showing posts with label CONTINENTAL DELIGHTS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CONTINENTAL DELIGHTS. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Creamy Basil Pesto Pasta with Cherry Tomatoes


Creamy Basil Pesto Pasta with Cherry Tomatoes

✨️A Bowl of Comfort with Italian Flavours🍜

The beauty of pesto lies in its freshness. Fragrant basil leaves, garlic, nuts, olive oil, and cheese come together to create a sauce that is vibrant, aromatic, and full of character. When tossed with pasta and sweet cherry tomatoes, it transforms into a comforting meal that feels both rustic and elegant.

Pesto traces its roots to the region of Liguria in northern Italy, particularly the city of Genoa, where traditional pesto alla Genovese has been prepared for centuries using fresh basil, pine nuts, Parmesan cheese, garlic, olive oil, and salt. Over time, this beloved sauce travelled across the world and inspired countless variations.

Today, I am sharing my creamy version of Basil Pesto Pasta. The addition of cream creates a silky sauce that gently coats every strand of pasta while allowing the fresh basil flavours to shine through. Sweet cherry tomatoes add bursts of freshness and colour, making this a beautiful meal that is perfect for busy weeknights as well as special occasions.

This pasta comes together quickly and makes a satisfying lunch or dinner that the whole family will enjoy.


Preparation Time

15 minutes


Cooking Time

20 minutes

Serves

4



Ingredients

For the Pasta

Pasta (Penne, Fusilli, Farfalle or Spaghetti) – 250 grams

Water – 2 litres

Salt – 1 tablespoon

Olive Oil – 1 tablespoon



For the Creamy Pesto Sauce

Fresh Basil Leaves – 2 packed cups

Garlic – 3 cloves

Pine Nuts – ¼ cup

Parmesan Cheese (grated) – ½ cup

Extra Virgin Olive Oil – ⅓ cup

Fresh Cream – ½ cup

Milk – ¼ cup

Black Pepper Powder – ½ teaspoon

Salt – to taste




For the Pasta

Olive Oil – 1 tablespoon

Cherry Tomatoes – 1 cup, halved

Fresh Basil Leaves – a handful

Parmesan Cheese – for garnish

Chilli Flakes – optional



Method

Bring water to a rolling boil in a large pot. Add salt and olive oil. 
Add the pasta and cook until "al dente" according to the package instructions.

Drain the pasta and reserve about one cup of the pasta cooking water.

Meanwhile, prepare the pesto. Place the basil leaves, garlic, pine nuts, Parmesan cheese and olive oil into a blender or food processor. Blend until smooth.

Transfer the pesto into a bowl and set aside.

Heat olive oil in a large pan. Add the cherry tomatoes and sauté gently for about two to three minutes until they begin to soften but still retain their shape.

Reduce the heat and add the prepared pesto. Stir gently.

Add the cream and milk. Mix well until the sauce becomes smooth and creamy.

Season with black pepper and salt if required. *Remember that the Parmesan already contains salt.

Add the cooked pasta and toss gently until every piece is coated with the creamy pesto sauce.

If the sauce appears too thick, add a little reserved pasta water and mix well.

Add a few torn basil leaves and toss once more.

Serve immediately garnished with Parmesan cheese, fresh basil leaves and a sprinkle of chilli flakes if desired.



Variations

  • You can replace pine nuts with cashew nuts or walnuts.
  • For a vegetarian version, use vegetarian Parmesan or omit the cheese altogether.
  • You can add mushrooms, zucchini, broccoli, spinach, sweet corn or roasted bell peppers.
  • For added protein, you may add tofu cubes or paneer cubes.
  • For a lighter version, replace part of the cream with milk.
  • You can use whole wheat pasta for a healthier option.



Serving Suggestions

Serve with garlic bread, focaccia, toasted baguette slices or a fresh garden salad.

A bowl of warm soup alongside this pasta makes for a complete and comforting meal.



Sukanya's Musings🤓

There is something magical about the aroma of fresh basil. The moment the pesto is blended, the entire kitchen fills with its fragrance. Combined with sweet cherry tomatoes and silky cream, this pasta becomes one of those dishes that feels indulgent without being complicated.

Whether enjoyed on a quiet weeknight or served to guests, this Creamy Basil Pesto Pasta brings together freshness, comfort, and elegance in every forkful.




#CreamyPestoPasta #BasilPesto #VegetarianPasta #ItalianInspired #CherryTomatoes #PastaRecipe #SukanyasMusings #ComfortFood #HomemadePasta #EasyRecipes 🍝🌿🍅

Sunday, May 24, 2020

BREAD PIZZA


BREAD PIZZA
When you want to eat a Pizza, but don’t want to go through all the elaborate steps, you can satiate your cravings with Bread Pizza.
Bread Pizza is a quick and easy snack that you can rustle up on those lazy days, when you don’t want to cook anything, but yet, please everyone. It’s a complete visual treat, with the array of colors. You can involve the kids in the assembly process and make it a family activity.
The texture of the toast is crunchy with the soft richness of the cooked cheese and the yummy vegetables. Kids would love this in their Lunch Box.
Bread Pizza can be made in the Conventional Oven or even cooked on a stove top.
Enjoy this as a Snack or a Party Starter


Ingredients
Bread – A loaf or as per requirement
Pizza Sauce – As required
Yellow Capsicum (Bell peppers) – ½ cup diced
Green Capsicum (Bell peppers) – ½ cup diced
Red Capsicum (Bell peppers) – ½ cup diced
Tomatoes – 1 diced (Optional)
Onion – 1 diced
Artichokes – 2 tbsps (Optional)
Black Olives – ½ cup (Optional)
Pineapples – ½ cup (Optional)
Red Chilly flakes
Italian seasoning
Coarse Pepper Powder
Cheese – Can Use Mozzarella Cheese/ Cheddar Cheese/ Feta Cheese
Butter




Method

Conventional Oven Method (Most preferred)
Pre-heat the oven to 200 C or 400 F
Apply butter on one side of the bread (Optional), I prefer it like that as I feel the bread gets a good crunch. Place the butter smeared bread slices on a baking tray and grill them for 2 -3 minutes. Butter actually quickens the toasting process.
Remove them from the oven and place them for your toppings.
First spread a spoonful of Pizza Sauce over the lightly toasted bread, then add the toppings of your choice.
I have added green, red and yellow bell pepper’s(Capsicum), Artichokes, Black Olives, Diced Pineapples.
I take the toppings in a big bowl, add a dash of Himalayan Pink Salt, some coarse black pepper, red chili flakes and give it a good toss. After which I added them to the bread as Toppings
I did not add Onions and Tomatoes as my kids didn’t want them in the toppings.
Grate the cheese on top of the vegetables. After adding this sprinkle, some Italian seasoning, some red chilly flakes if you like a dash of spice, can avoid for kids and some Pepper. Since I already tossed them into the vegetables, you can avoid it.
Keep the Tray in the oven and Bake for another 5-8 minutes at 200-220C or until the veggies get grilled partially and the cheese melts and turns golden. Serve the Bread Pizza hot. Bite into this crunchy delight.

Stove Top Method
Toast the bread on one side. Keep on a board.
Add the Pizza sauce, toppings of your choice and grated cheese on the toasted side of the bread. Smear a little butter on the Open pan (Tawa) and on a very low flame.
Lay the toasts on the Tawa and cover the pan, it will get cooked until the cheese melts,
Keep the untoasted piece of the bread face up.

Variations
·       My kids don’t like Tomato as they feel it gets gooey when baked, so my recipe doesn’t have tomato. You can add diced Tomatoes.  
·       You can add Spinach to this recipe, if your kids like.

Tips
·       I take the toppings in a big bowl, add a dash of Himalayan Pink Salt, some coarse black pepper, chili flakes and give it a good toss. After which I added them to the bread as Toppings. If doing this, don’t toss and keep as it will get soggy. Do it just before you make a batch and immediately add the toppings.
·       I have not added the measurements for the spices as it can be as per your choice
·       If you don’t have Pizza sauce, you can just use the tomato sauce available at home.


Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Homemade Basil Pesto Recipe | The Culinary Story of Italy's Famous Green Sauce


Homemade Basil Pesto

There are some recipes that instantly transport you to another part of the world, and Basil Pesto is certainly one of them.

Made with fresh basil leaves, garlic, pine nuts, cheese, and extra virgin olive oil, pesto is one of the simplest yet most flavourful sauces ever created. A spoonful of freshly made pesto can transform an ordinary bowl of pasta, a slice of toasted bread, or even a simple vegetable dish into something truly special.

The first time I made pesto at home, I was amazed at how a handful of humble ingredients could create such a vibrant burst of flavour. The fragrance of freshly crushed basil filling the kitchen was reason enough to make it again and again.

What I particularly love about pesto is that it reminds me so much of our Indian chutneys. Across cultures and continents, people have always relied on fresh herbs, nuts, oils, and simple ingredients to create flavourful accompaniments that elevate everyday meals.

Today I am sharing my homemade Basil Pesto recipe, a versatile sauce that can be used in countless ways and one that deserves a place in every home cook's repertoire.


The Culinary Story of Italy's Most Famous Green Sauce


Imagine yourself standing on the rugged coastline of Liguria, a crescent-shaped region in northwestern Italy where colourful villages cling to steep cliffs overlooking the sparkling Mediterranean Sea.

The air is fragrant with the scent of basil growing in small kitchen gardens. Olive groves stretch across the hillsides. Fishing boats bob gently in the harbour while families prepare meals using ingredients gathered from the surrounding countryside.

It was here, centuries ago, that one of Italy's most beloved sauces was born.

Long before electric blenders and food processors existed, Italian grandmothers stood patiently over heavy marble mortars, rhythmically crushing fresh basil leaves with wooden pestles. Into the mortar went garlic, pine nuts, coarse salt, cheese, and golden olive oil. Slowly, the ingredients transformed into a vibrant green paste bursting with aroma and flavour.

The name pesto itself comes from the Italian word pestare, meaning "to pound" or "to crush" — a tribute to the traditional method by which the sauce was prepared.

Yet the story of pesto may begin even earlier.

Food historians believe its roots stretch back to ancient Rome, where a rustic herb and garlic paste known as moretum was prepared by farmers using simple ingredients pounded together by hand. While basil was not part of that ancient recipe, the idea of transforming humble ingredients into a flavourful paste laid the foundation for what would eventually become pesto.


Over time, the fertile lands of Liguria proved perfect for cultivating sweet, fragrant basil. The local variety, known today as Genovese basil, became the star ingredient of the sauce. Combined with the region's olive oil, pine nuts, and hard cheeses, it created a preparation that captured the very essence of Ligurian cuisine.

What began as a humble village sauce soon travelled beyond the shores of Italy.

As Italian families migrated across Europe, the Americas, and eventually the rest of the world, they carried their treasured recipes with them. Pesto journeyed from small coastal kitchens to bustling cities, fine dining restaurants, and family homes across the globe.

Today, countless variations exist. Some use walnuts, almonds, pistachios, spinach, kale, coriander, or even sun-dried tomatoes. Yet the classic Pesto alla Genovese remains the gold standard, a simple green sauce that continues to tell the story of the land, climate, and people who created it.

Whenever I make pesto, I cannot help but think of our own Indian chutneys. Across continents and cultures, people have always discovered the same truth, that a few fresh ingredients, lovingly ground together, can create something far greater than the sum of their parts.

Perhaps that is why pesto has endured for centuries.

It is not merely a sauce.

It is a culinary story preserved in every spoonful.

Long before food processors hummed in modern kitchens, Ligurian grandmothers stood over heavy marble mortars, patiently crushing fragrant basil leaves with wooden pestles. The rhythmic grinding released the herb's essential oils, filling the kitchen with an aroma that spoke of Mediterranean sunshine, olive groves, and generations of culinary tradition.

Traditionally, pesto was not blended at all. It was made by hand using a large marble mortar (mortaio) and a wooden pestle (pestello) in the region of Liguria, especially around Genoa.

Traditional Method

The ingredients were added in a particular order:

Coarse sea salt and garlic were crushed first.

Fresh basil leaves were added gradually and gently pounded into a paste.

Pine nuts were incorporated.

Grated cheeses (typically Parmigiano Reggiano and Pecorino Romano) were mixed in.

Extra virgin olive oil was stirred in slowly until a smooth sauce formed.

The key was crushing and grinding, not chopping. The motion was often circular, pressing the basil against the rough marble surface. This released the basil's aromatic oils without generating heat.


Why Marble and Wood?

Marble mortar remains cool and does not react with acidic ingredients.

Its slightly rough surface helps tear and crush the basil effectively.

Wooden pestles are gentler on delicate basil leaves than stone pestles and help preserve the bright green colour and fragrance.

Many Italians still argue that authentic pesto can only be made this way because electric blenders:

Heat the basil.

Oxidise the leaves more quickly.

Can produce a darker colour and slightly different flavour.

A Little Culinary Detail

Traditional Ligurian cooks often say that basil should be "crushed, not cut." The resulting pesto is usually a little more textured and aromatic than the smooth, bright-green versions commonly made in modern food processors.

Why I Love Pesto

Pesto is one of the most versatile sauces you can keep in your refrigerator.

It can be tossed with pasta, spread on toasted baguettes, stirred into soups, drizzled over roasted vegetables, served with boiled potatoes, used as a sandwich spread, or simply enjoyed as a dip.

One important rule when working with pesto is that it should not be cooked for long periods. Excessive heat can cause basil to lose its fresh aroma and develop bitterness. This is why pesto is usually stirred into hot pasta just before serving.


Ingredients

Fresh Basil Leaves

1 large bunch, leaves only

Garlic

3 medium cloves

Pine Nuts

1 small handful

Parmesan or Romano Cheese

¾ cup, freshly grated

Extra Virgin Olive Oil

A few tablespoons

Salt

As required


Method

Pick the basil leaves carefully, using only the leaves and discarding the stems. Wash thoroughly and spread on a clean kitchen towel or paper towel to dry completely.

Traditionally, pesto is prepared using a mortar and pestle. While this method requires more effort, it produces a wonderfully aromatic sauce with excellent texture.

For convenience, I used a food chopper. A chopper allows you to control the texture better than a blender, which can sometimes turn the mixture into an overly smooth paste.

First chop the garlic until fine.

Add the pine nuts and pulse until they are broken down into small pieces.

Next add the basil leaves and continue chopping until the mixture is evenly combined.

Add the freshly grated cheese and pulse again until everything is well incorporated.

Taste and adjust the salt if necessary. Remember that Parmesan and Romano cheeses already contain salt.

Transfer the pesto to a clean glass jar and pour a few tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil over the top. This helps preserve freshness and prevents discoloration.

Your homemade pesto is now ready.

I also did a small batch in a marble mortar with a wooden pestle, the taste was different, everything came together so beautifully since we could manage the process. 

You can try both methods. But please don't use a blender🙏🏻

Store refrigerated and stir gently before use. Properly stored pesto keeps well for about one week in the refrigerator.


Freezing Tips

Pesto freezes beautifully.

If planning to freeze, it is best to omit the cheese and add it only after thawing.

Spoon the pesto into ice cube trays, freeze until firm, then transfer the cubes to freezer bags.

Whenever required, thaw a cube and mix in freshly grated Parmesan or Romano cheese before serving.


Variations

  • You can replace pine nuts with walnuts, almonds, cashew nuts, or pistachios.
  • You may use Parmesan cheese, Romano cheese, or a combination of both.
  • For a vegetarian version, use vegetarian hard cheese.
  • You can add a little lemon juice for extra brightness.
  • For a creamier pesto sauce, stir in a little fresh cream before tossing with pasta.

Serving Suggestions

  • Pesto is commonly used on pasta, lasagna, strozzapreti or trenette (forms of pasta). 
  • It is sometime used in minestrone as well.
  •  Pesto tastes good when served on tomatoes and sliced boiled potatoes. 
  • It can also be served as a dip for chips also.   
  • It can be served, spread on a baguette (French loaf)

Sukanya's Musings

A handful of basil leaves may not seem like much, but once crushed together with garlic, nuts, olive oil, and cheese, they transform into something truly magical.

Pesto is a beautiful reminder that some of the finest dishes in the world are created not from luxury ingredients, but from simple ingredients treated with care and respect.

Every spoonful carries the fragrance of basil fields, olive groves, and generations of culinary tradition, making this humble green sauce one of Italy's most enduring gifts to the world.


Sharing My Joy 🌸

This recipe of mine goes to Srivalli's blog who is hosting the Weekend Herb Blogging event which was started by Kalyn and the herb Iam using in this recipe is " Basil
You can read more about the Benefits of the herb Basil in my blog(Click on the link)








#BasilPesto #HomemadePesto #ItalianCuisine #CulinaryStory #BasilRecipes #PestoAllaGenovese #VegetarianRecipes #SukanyasMusings 🌿🇮🇹🍃🍝


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