parsley Archive

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Terracotta Pot Herb Garden

My dad gave me the pot above. Its a Parsley Pig, and I love it. Based on this and a few other pots I had laying around I decided that...

My dad gave me the pot above. Its a Parsley Pig, and I love it. Based on this and a few other pots I had laying around I decided that I wanted a potted terracotta herb garden. So far I have quite a few herbs and quite a few pots. It is about to be moved out into the front yard but for now its out the back, waiting for spring to hit and extend some growth. Below are some highlights so far.

The first image is sweet purple basil flower. The second is spicy purple basil flowers. Both are beautiful.

This is my first strawberry a few days before it was picked and eaten. It was so amazing.

Here we have sweet basil flowers and my excellent Greek basil plant.

Finally two of my favourites. A rainbow birds-eye chili. They start off a deep purple and as they grow in heat and maturity they go to a light yellow to a deep red. You can eat them at any stage, the redder the hotter however. I use these to make my pasta arrabiatta. The second pot is very large and in the center it is growing a bay tree. Around the base I am growing some organic garlic. Three kinds. A giant russian, 3 red italian and 3 red chinese heads. They are growing excellently, and I plan to keep growing garlic so I never have to buy it again.

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Potato Salad

I love potato salad. I can’t buy store brought potato salad anymore because they all have onion in them. And while its nice and convenient and also potato salad, I...

I love potato salad. I can’t buy store brought potato salad anymore because they all have onion in them. And while its nice and convenient and also potato salad, I find its heavy on the dressing and a little bland. So I came up with my own recipe.

You need a stack of herbs, I use a bunch of parsley and a bunch of chives. I also have two secret ingredients. The first is a jar of perinaise which you can get from the super markets these days, if not from a local Nandos restaurant. The second is chilli baby cucumbers. Both add some spice to this dish, but not too much! If you can’t get either or aren’t a chilli freak like me, then use plain! You will also need 400g of sour cream, 2 kgs of baby potatoes and two medium sized sweet potatoes. Clean the potatoes (but leave the skin on) and boil until they are soft. Sometimes if the baby potatoes are really small they will cook faster than the sweet potato so I take them out and leave the sweet potato in for longer.

Take the chives, lay them out and slice into little pieces. I find it quite an easy herb to slice.

Get your parsley and remove all the leaves from the major stalks. I leave some of the finer stalks in, but I’m a rebel. Mince it up nice and finely. Add both herbs to a large bowl. This recipe makes LOTS its a party food, not a food for two.

Grab 200g of the pickles and dice them small. I tend to slice them length ways first, into halves or quarters depending on their size, then line them up and dice them into neat little cubes.

Add them to your bowl with the herbs, add your sour cream and jar of mayo. I couldn’t get perinaise when I was making this particular batch so I added cayenne pepper instead. I actually added a little too much, and it was one spicy potato salad. That is your dressing, mix it up.

When your potatoes are done and cool enough for you to handle. If your like me you can do this right out of the pot, but I have ceramic fingers apparently. I leave the skins on the potatoes, I really like the flavour and extra texture not to mention that it is good for u. I peeled the sweet potato in this instance as I cooked it a little too long and it was just falling off instead of sticking to the potato itself. You cut the potatoes at this stage. Into the size that you prefer, I like mine quite chunky.

Add the potatoes to your mixed dressing. and Stir. Stir quite gently if your potatoes are quite soft. Mix until it is all coated. I add my potatoes warm as they tend to suck up a bit of the dressing. By the time it is ready (I usually make it the night before) it has soaked up most of the dressing. Try not to just eat it with your fingers at this point. Its actually quite hard, and while trying to stop myself I also have to try to stop my husband too. Share this with many many people.

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Herb & Garlic bread w/ Parmesan

I’m not a fan of the soggy style garlic bread. I definitely prefer to have crush and crispness when it comes to garlic bread. Also I like flavour and freshness....

I’m not a fan of the soggy style garlic bread. I definitely prefer to have crush and crispness when it comes to garlic bread. Also I like flavour and freshness. So my garlic bread is open faced, full of herbs and added Parmesan for extra yumminess.

The ingredients are really very simple: some form of crusty bread, any herbs that are fresh and you like, some Parmesan cheese and butter. We tend to use either olive oil spread or recently the vegan Nuttlex. Seriously guys, use whatever butter or butter like spread you like. No judgment here. (If you use butter, it would have to be room temperature/softened. The spreads I use are soft from the fridge. So no pre-thought is required.)

Herbs, fresh herbs, incidentally all of these herbs were from out of my garden from my initial planting. So Top row we have some rosemary and thyme. De-stalk the wonderful rosemary leaves, and also the same with the thyme, and mince with a sharp knife. For the parsley I pull all the leaves from the stalks then I scrunch and roll the parsley into a sort of cigar to then shred. I take all the shredded parts and then go to town on it with a sharp knife. You want a fine mince of herbs. The smells are divine.

Take two cloves of garlic (or more or less depending on your level of vampirism). Mince. My garlic looks a little odd there because sometimes I buy full clove garlic. Its Australian. Its wonderful, slightly milder. I used a half of one for this amount. Now put all of your herbs and garlic into a bowl.

Add about 3 heaped large big tablespoons of your chosen spread. You also want a small handful of grated Parmesan. Add to bowl and mix til combined. The pictures here are in the wrong order. My care-factor is little, because the order wont really matter, you can put the Parmesan in after you have mixed or before. Go wild.

Take your crusty bread, and slice it on an angle, or straight if you are like that. Cut it as thin or thick as you like. Thicker it will stay a little more soft, thinner it will be toastier. Again personal preference. My husband likes soft, I like crunchy. Take a tablespoon and spread that mix over one side of the bread. You want to cover the bread right to the edges, and it needs to be a thick enough layer to soak right in.

Do you have left over spread? No worries! Take some glad wrap (or cling film) and cut off a sheet, and then double it over. Spoon the remaining mixture into the middle, and roll it up like a cigar. Take the ends and twist until it is nice and tight. You should be able to at least cross both ends over each other in the middle. This can be frozen or put in the fridge for the next batch of garlic bread or used on baked mushrooms.

Place your prepared breads into a lined baking sheet. If you are like me, you will take the two end pieces of the bread, smear them in a very thin layer of the raw spread and eat it as is. But you do have to be a freak and really really like garlic even when raw.

Bake the bread in a hot oven (200C) until the bottom is toasty and the spread has melted to your preference. Remember that the garlic is raw so you will want to make sure it is cooked long enough. I find that the edges of the top go a little brown too. Serve as soon as possible, with a nice big bowl of pasta or something else appropriate. Here I am serving it with pasta Arrabiata.

Enjoy.