Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez
Pesto is one of the best ways to use up an abundance of bright, fresh herbs. "Pesto" comes from the word for "crushed" in Italian, as cooks traditionally use a mortar and pestle to crush basil, pine nuts, and Parmigiano-Reggiano until it forms a creamy sauce. Though pesto is typically made with basil, many other herbs and greens—including ramps, cilantro, tarragon, parsley, and mint—can also be used. There are also pestos, such as Sicilian pesto alla trapanese, that don't contain greens. Below, you'll find our staff's favorite ways to cook with the condiment. Although you'll never find us complaining about a big plate of pesto-covered pasta, there are many other wonderful ways to use the sauce: Consider tossing it into potato salad, serving it with flank steak, or even incorporating it into a vibrant green soup. And if you just want to eat it with a spoon, that's perfectly fine, too.
Pesto Pasta With Potatoes and Green Beans
Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
This classic Genovese method of making pesto pasta with potatoes and green beans is simple and delicious. Cooking the potatoes with the pasta adds extra starch to the water, helping to bind the sauce and absorb excess oil from the pesto. To preserve the pesto's fresh flavor and vivid green hue, be sure to toss the pasta and pesto together off the heat.
The Best Pesto Alla Genovese (Classic Basil Pesto Sauce)
Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
After many rounds of testing, we found this method and ratio of ingredients produces the best pesto. You may be tempted to shortcut your pesto by blitzing the ingredients in a food processor, but we recommend using a mortar and pestle for a luxuriously creamy sauce with rich depth of flavor.
Yukon Gold Potato Salad With Tarragon Pesto and Pickled Onions
Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer
This simple pesto tarragon sauce has bright, clean flavors and is delicious as a dressing for potato salad. Torn black olives and tangy pickled onions add salinity and tartness.
Pesto alla Trapanese (Sicilian Pesto With Almonds and Tomatoes)
Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
Pesto alla trapanese is rich with nuts, basil, olive oil, garlic, and cheese. But there's a secret ingredient that transforms the sauce into something even lighter and more refreshing: tomatoes.
Continue to 5 of 14 belowPizza with Pesto, Ricotta, and Mozzarella
Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt
A thin New York-style crust is covered in melty mozzarella, then dolloped with fresh ricotta and bright green pesto for a bright and creamy white pizza.
Ramp Pesto
Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez. Here's a garlicky, savory pesto made from a foraged wild onion that chefs (and food writers) go wild for. Blanching the greens preserves their vivid green, while processing the still-raw stems and bulbs preserves the vegetable's unique flavor.
Zucchini and Lettuce Soup With Pesto
Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt
When summer produce is at its peak and there are enormous zucchini and bunches of almost-wilting lettuce that need a home, blitz it all together to make this emerald-green soup. Finished with a dollop or two of pesto, the soup is creamy and bright, with a mild sweetness from the basil in the pesto.
Fennel Frond Pesto With Lemon and Anchovies
Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer
Fennel fronds, garlic, lemon juice, Dijon mustard, and a lot of anchovies make this pesto a flavorful and versatile condiment to have on hand. Use it as pasta sauce, spoon it into soup, or swirl it into ricotta.
Continue to 9 of 14 belowGrilled Stuffed Flank Steak With Pesto, Mozzarella, and Prosciutto
Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt
Grilling and pesto are summer essentials. Here, we combine the two by slathering a butterflied flank steak with fresh pesto, layering it with mozzarella and prosciutto, then slicing it into pinwheels before grilling it over hot coals.
Mint, Feta, and Pistachio Pesto
Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer
This pesto consists of roughly equal quantities of mint and parsley. Parsley helps rein in the mint without competing too much with its fresh aroma and flavor, pistachios bring a nutty depth, and feta adds creaminess.
Cilantro Pesto
Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel
In this cilantro pesto, pumpkin seeds take the place of pine nuts, and Cotija replaces Parmigiano-Reggiano. A serrano pepper adds a touch of heat, while lime juice brings a kick of acidity.
Garlic Scape Pesto
Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez
Garlic scape is a versatile ingredient that functions as a vegetable, aromatic, and herb all in one. Here, we turn scapes into pesto by blitzing them together with pine nuts, lemon juice and zest, Parmigiano-Reggiano, and basil. Stirring in the oil—instead of blending it in—means it's less likely the pesto will become bitter. For an easy meal, serve it with pasta or toss it with white beans.
Continue to 13 of 14 belowPesto Chicken Salad
Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
This tender chicken salad, coated in a tangy pesto dressing, features sun-dried tomatoes woven throughout. A cold-water start and gentle poach ensures the chicken breasts are tender and juicy.
Grilled Mozzarella
Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
This meaty Italian grilled cheese is creamy, savory, and chock-full of flavor.