Last week at my little farmer's market, I spied Daniel's favorite - bunches of heirloom carrots in all their multi-colored, tangled glory. If you look at them in just the right way, you'll find they have legs and arms and thank goodness they are rubberbanded together because they might just get up and walk right out of your tote. I've been told that their gnarliness is an indication that growing conditions weren't quite right, but I think they're fabulous. They are roots after all. I snatch up a few bunches and hold tight, happily squirreling them home. With a simple splash of olive oil, salt and pepper, they're into a hot oven to become the silkiest, sweetest, most gorgeous side dish ever. Roasted carrots are outrageously easy and make Daniel extremely happy - we're all winners here.
But what to do with those intimidating, guilt inducing carrot tops? I've heard of carrot top soup, but that sounds rather blegh. And sure, you can add them to chicken stock and it's great! I
was roasting a chicken that day and
should have used the carcass for stock, but I already have two very large jars of homemade stock in my freezer that haven't moved in months. I take that back, they moved from my last freezer to my new one, despite Daniel's insistence that we need not move frozen jars of stuff we don't use. But we might! Just wait until soup season starts!
So what to do with those carrot tops that I just can't throw out because because because? I decided to do with them what I do with any extra herb or green I have lying around, begging to be made into something more delicious. Pesto! Whirred up with some good olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, and a healthy handful of walnuts, the carrot tops transformed into something earthy, grassy, and rich. The walnuts added a gentle toasty depth and thickened the pesto nicely. Originally I was planning on using it to dress my roast chicken, but upon tasting it I decided that it needed something fattier - bread and cheese. Thus another dinner was born - carrot top pesto pizza with radicchio, roasted summer squash, garlic blossoms and feta. Slow roasted tomatoes rounded out the meal, which was made complete with a few glasses of Copain's 2010 Tous Ensemble Pinot Noir, our house red. We're extremely spoiled, that gem of a wine is just so so good and we have so so much of it!
CARROT TOP PESTO
carrot tops
a good glug of good olive oil
salt and pepper
garlic cloves, crushed
lemon juice
a handful of toasted walnuts
Combine all ingredients in a food processor and blend until a smooth pesto forms, adding olive oil as needed and seasoning to taste. The carrot tops are a little stemmy, so they take a while to puree.
Use like any pesto - with pasta, pizza, cheeses, crudites.
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