Tomatoville® Gardening Forums

Tomatoville® Gardening Forums (http://www.tomatoville.com/index.php)
-   Herbs (http://www.tomatoville.com/forumdisplay.php?f=75)
-   -   Best way to preserve basil we've found (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=184)

ScottinAtlanta August 16, 2013 08:37 PM

[COLOR=Red]I do the ice cube thing for pepper puree too.[/COLOR]

Nolabelle, please tell us about pepper puree.

nolabelle August 17, 2013 07:39 AM

[QUOTE=ScottinAtlanta;371628][COLOR=Red]I do the ice cube thing for pepper puree too.[/COLOR]

Nolabelle, please tell us about pepper puree.[/QUOTE]
Hi Scott,

I think I posted this in the "Carmen" thread somewhere. It's very easy, but you'll need a food mill unless you don't mind pepper skins.

I've begun doing this to preserve cayenne peppers because there are so many of them. Also because the pepper skins were slightly tough and unpalatable when used in cooking.

Cook the peppers in minimal liquid until tender.
Chop in a food processor
Run through a food mill using the medium or course blade.

You end up with a puree sans the seeds and skins. I freeze in ice cube trays, then store in freezer bags. Easy to pop into soups, stews and gravies. I've begun using it as a marinade for meats too. (Someone here gave me that idea. Thank you very much!)

A decent food mill will run approximately $30. This is the one I recently bought.
[url]http://www.amazon.com/MIU-France-Stainless-Steel-Food/dp/B0000DZDFN[/url]

Labradors2 August 17, 2013 08:23 AM

Lazy Man's Dried Basil
 
Here's what I do most years.

Forget all about the Basil plants. There's a frost. Notice that the Basil has gone brown and it's too late to harvest and hang it up to dry. Leave it alone until the leaves have gone crunchy. Get a large bowl and pull leaves off the plant and into the bowl. Crumble them up and put into containers. Use the dried Basil for sprinkling over soups and stews. Easy peasy! :D

Linda

livinonfaith August 17, 2013 03:48 PM

I do the pureed basil and oil thing, too. But after spreading it out in a metal pan, I score it with a pizza cutter before putting it into the freezer. After it's frozen, I go over the score lines again so that I end up with small squares. Those go into a plastic container with wax paper in between the layers.

It hardly takes up any space and is super easy to take out as many squares as you need.

habitat_gardener August 17, 2013 04:09 PM

[QUOTE=Labradors2;371710]Here's what I do most years.

Forget all about the Basil plants. There's a frost. Notice that the Basil has gone brown and it's too late to harvest and hang it up to dry. Leave it alone until the leaves have gone crunchy. Get a large bowl and pull leaves off the plant and into the bowl. Crumble them up and put into containers. Use the dried Basil for sprinkling over soups and stews. Easy peasy! :D[/QUOTE]

This sounds like something I could do.

ScottinAtlanta August 17, 2013 07:20 PM

[QUOTE=nolabelle;371705]Hi Scott,

I think I posted this in the "Carmen" thread somewhere. It's very easy, but you'll need a food mill unless you don't mind pepper skins.

I've begun doing this to preserve cayenne peppers because there are so many of them. Also because the pepper skins were slightly tough and unpalatable when used in cooking.

Cook the peppers in minimal liquid until tender.
Chop in a food processor
Run through a food mill using the medium or course blade.

You end up with a puree sans the seeds and skins. I freeze in ice cube trays, then store in freezer bags. Easy to pop into soups, stews and gravies. I've begun using it as a marinade for meats too. (Someone here gave me that idea. Thank you very much!)

A decent food mill will run approximately $30. This is the one I recently bought.
[URL]http://www.amazon.com/MIU-France-Stainless-Steel-Food/dp/B0000DZDFN[/URL][/QUOTE]

Very cool idea. Thanks. I wonder what Yellow Scorpion paste would taste like?

ramapojoe February 8, 2015 05:21 PM

i love dried basil. not the tasteless stuff you buy in the bottle. i just cut and dry the whole plant inside when it starts turning brown but still has beautifull green leaves. dont even bother crumbling it before i put it in jars. it may be a mental thing but i think it taste better grabbing a few leaves and crumbling them when i need them in january8-)

EBCIII March 25, 2015 09:35 AM

Can Basil be caned? Or does that not work for basil? Beale.

Karrr_Luda May 14, 2015 09:32 AM

Thanks for the awesome pesto recipe, and the rest of the great tips here! What I do is chop basil or other herbs, mix with olive oil and freeze in ziplock baggies shaping it flat and thin squeezing out all air maybe .25" or thinner that is approx. half a cm. I can break off a piece when I need it without any difficulties. No oxidation and maximum flavor. Easy peasy! I freeze butternut squash pure and anything similar the same way without the oil, after roasting or steaming it. Just break off a chunk I need and throw back the rest. Love the pepper idea!


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:33 AM.


★ Tomatoville® is a registered trademark of Commerce Holdings, LLC ★ All Content ©2022 Commerce Holdings, LLC ★