Make This Bright and Fresh Garlic Scape Pesto Recipe (2024)

If you’re not sure what to do with all of the scapes from your garlic crop, this post will teach you how to make my favorite garlic scape pesto for use in delicious meals during the cold winter months.

One of the fun things that naturally happens once you start preserving food from your garden is you get in the habit of daydreaming about all of the delicious ways you’re going to eat the item throughout the year.

This week when I was making my annual batch of garlic scape pesto I flashed to our annual winter ski trip to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. We rent a cabin that has no electricity or running water, and we have to load all of our supplies onto sleds and ski them into the cabin.

The weekend is one of my favorite of the winter season. We spend a few days cross-country skiing on beautiful trails, taking turns cooking for each other on the woodstove, and eating great food and drinking good beer by candlelight.

Tradition calls for everyone to bring food for lunch to share with each other.

There’s usually a big spread on the table for a few hours in the afternoon so skiers can arrive on their own schedules and dig in.

We eat my husband’s famous homemade hummus, cured local meats and cheeses, fermented goods, sliced vegetables, fresh greens, salty chips, and various spreads and pestos.

It’s a sandwich-making feast for famished skiers!

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We always bring a jar or two of our garlic scape pesto to sit amongst the other homemade sauces and spreads (it’s a food preserving kind of group).

And while I’m tucking into a delicious sandwich in a snowy cabin many miles and months away from my garden’s garlic season, I’ll gaze out the window and think of the sunny and warm day in June when I made that pesto in my kitchen.

Food preserving is about more than just using up your excess harvest. It’s about creating your own yearly traditions of preserving what you grow so you can use those ingredients in delicious meals all winter long.

If you’re a garlic grower like me (220 heads every year!), you might be swimming in garlic scapes each season around early summer. Making garlic scape pesto is hands down my favorite way to use up piles of scapes from my garden.

Here’s the simple recipe I use every year.

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What is a Garlic Scape?

There are two types of garlic – hardneck and softneck. About 4-6 weeks before hardneck garlic is ready to harvest it starts pushing up a tender, curly stalk from the top of the plant’s stem. This is the garlic scape.

At the end of the scape is what will eventually be a flower. It’s the whitish part in the photo above. If you left the scape on the plant the flower would eventually open and develop “bulbils”, which can be planted and used to propagate garlic over several years.

The conventional wisdom is that the garlic scapes sap some of the energy that would be going into bulb production, resulting in smaller bulbs at harvest.

This is why most gardeners and farmers remove the scapes – in the hopes of producing larger bulbs and cloves.

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How to Harvest Your Garlic Scapes

Depending on where you live and what type of garlic you’ve planted you’ll start to see the scapes emerge sometime around late May through mid-June.

Personally, I like to let them grow until they’re curling into a u-shape before I start cutting them off. You can use a knife or clippers and cut where it’s originating from the stem to get the most possible length of scape.

All of the plants might not produce scapes at the same time depending on how many different varieties you’ve planted. I usually harvest several times over the span of two weeks or so as the scapes emerge and grow.

It’s a fine balance though! The longer you wait to remove the scapes the tougher, spicier, and less edible they become. Give them a little time to grow, but not too long.

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How to Make Pesto From Your Garlic Scapes

This is a very simple pesto recipe that’s easy and quick to make. Here are a few of my preferences:

  • I don’t eat dairy anymore so I leave out the cheese. It’s still delicious!
  • I prefer using walnuts in this recipe.
  • Using just garlic scapes can result in pesto that packs quite a punch! I usually try to mellow out the pesto by mixing in cilantro, parsley, basil or kale to cut the spiciness. Play around and see what combinations you like.
  • I don’t measure the herbs and kale I add. I do measure the garlic scapes. I just keep adding the other greens until I like the taste.
  • We love garlic, so we don’t mind the strong taste, but here’s your warning that you will have garlic breath after eating!

Garlic Scape Pesto Recipe

Recipe by Bjorn Bergman (one of the ski trip members!)
Makes 1 ½ cups, or not quite two half-pint jars

Ingredients:

2 cups garlic scapes, roughly chopped
Other herbs or kale to cut the spiciness (no need to measure, just add to your liking)
½ – ¾ cup of olive oil or sunflower oil
½ cup grated parmesan cheese (feel free to leave out if you don’t eat dairy)
½ cup walnuts or sunflower seeds or pepitas
Pinch of salt
Pinch of pepper

.WStepStepp

Instructions:

Step 1: Add garlic scapes, other herbs or kale, Parmesan (if using), walnuts, salt, and black pepper to your food processor and pulse until well blended. (We invested in this 11-cup food processor many years ago and have used it several times a week since then.)

Step 2: Turn processor on and slowly add ½ cup oil. Once added, stop and scrape the sides to make sure all ingredients are incorporated.

Step 3: Taste and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. If pesto is too thick, add more oil while the processor is running.

Optional: If you don’t like the taste or it’s too strong, mix in other herbs and/or kale from your garden to tone it down.

Step 4: Process pesto once more until it is creamy, about 1 minute.

Step 5: Load the pesto into your preferred containers and store in your chest freezer for up to a year. I use either pint or half pint glass jars.Make This Bright and Fresh Garlic Scape Pesto Recipe (7) You can also freeze it into discs or ice cubes and then store in a freezer bag. Don’t forget to label the jar or bag with the item and date. Frozen food is best if eaten within a year.

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How to Use Garlic Scape Pesto

You can use garlic scape pesto the same way you would any other kind of pesto. Just beware, it packs quite a garlic punch!

These are the three most common ways we use our pesto.

Lunch Wraps

One of our most common lunch foods is homemade hummus. It’s inexpensive to make and provides lots of protein. Hummus wraps are also handy for traveling and easily packable on long hikes or bike rides. No lunch wrap is complete without a smear of pesto.

Would you believe that we ate hummus wraps for lunch almost every day of our year-long sabbatical in 2019? I do not lie.

Pizza

Friday night is often pizza night at our house featuring whatever garden veggies we have on hand. All of our pizzas are spread with a layer of pesto, then veggies, then cheese (or dairy-free cheese) on top. Yum!

Breakfast Foods

Egg sandwiches are a staple for weekend breakfasts. When we go camping in the summer, we always throw a jar of pesto into our cooler and layer it in our sandwiches with tomatoes, peppers, greens, and fermented goods.

We also use garlic scape pesto in other egg dishes like omelets and frittatas.

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Don’t you love how food preservation brings you full circle each year?

The garlic season starts with planting garlic in fall, continues with making garlic scape pesto in the late spring, peaks with harvesting and drying garlic in summer, and culminates with spreading pesto on a sandwich in winter.

Wow! What a journey full of life and love and beauty.

And that’s exactly how I want my food to feel and taste.

So, in honor of lazy summer days and in preparation for the long winter nights to come, harvest your scapes this season and make some garlic scape pesto.

You never know what occasions will present themselves to break out a fresh jar this winter!

Additional Resources for Food Preserving

Check out my free mini-course: Get Started Stocking Your Pantry for Winter. I’ll show you how simple it can be to fill your pantry with lots of healthy food that will save you trips to the grocery store this winter! Start watching the videos here.

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Preserving your excess produce is the best way to make your garden harvests last all year.And, preservingdoesn’t have to be difficult or take up a lot of time.

In fact, since I’m not a big fan of canning, I’m constantly on the hunt for the quickest way to preserve each vegetable.I compiled my favorite techniques, recipes,and tips into my book,Super Easy Food Preserving. You can purchase the eBook, print book, or bundle here.

Other articles on food preserving:

  • Here’s the Greatest Way to Quickly Freeze Kale
  • How to Freeze Peppers for Delicious Winter Meals
  • Freeze Tomatoes – It’s the Easiest Way to Preserve Them

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Make This Bright and Fresh Garlic Scape Pesto Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is my garlic scape pesto bitter? ›

Why is my garlic scape pesto bitter? Scapes can vary in flavor depending on the region they are grown and the time they are picked. To make the garlic scape pesto less pungent or bitter, blend in some fresh herbs with it.

What happens if you put too much garlic in pesto? ›

Adding a small amount of acidity (lemon juice or vinegar) and balancing that with a little sweetness (sugar or honey) is the best way to take the edge off a pesto that tastes overwhelmingly of garlic. Almost every cuisine on earth makes use of garlic, and it's a vital component in pesto.

How to prepare garlic scapes for eating? ›

Grill scapes turning occasionally until they wilt and char slightly. Carefully remove cooked scapes from barbecue transferring to a bowl. Squeeze on lemon juice and season with salt and pepper. Toss and then serve immediately.

What part of garlic scapes do you cut off? ›

Because of the way scapes curl, and the fact that they tend to vary in size, it's recommended that you cut them one at a time. Trim the ends off the stalk. Cut away the tip of the scape just below the bulbous white neck. Do the same for the lower end of the stalk where it starts to become hard and woody.

What happens if you don't cut garlic scapes? ›

The scapes are the stalk of the garlic and if left on the plant they will eventually flower. While there seems to be some controversy around whether cutting scapes is benefitial, we do cut ours. The idea is that if you cut the scapes, the plant will put the energy into the bulb and not into the flower.

How to get rid of bitter taste in pesto? ›

Anything sugary will work: granulated white sugar, honey, fruit juices, even sweet dessert wines. Acid in the form of vinegar or citrus juices can make a pesto taste less bitter and could even enhance the flavour of the sauce at the same time.

Why does my homemade pesto taste like grass? ›

The most common reason for pesto tasting bitter is that the olive oil is past its best and has started to turn rancid. If the pesto has been made in a food processor or blender, there's also the possibility that it has turned bitter from the crude, sheering action of the blades.

What is the best thing to do with garlic scapes? ›

Cut garlic scapes into coins and add them to a hot pan to make all sorts of stir-fries. Mix finely diced garlic scapes into a vinaigrette or green goddess dressing to instantly upgrade your next salad. Blister whole garlic scapes on the grill for a lightly charred snack or side dish to serve at your next barbecue.

Why does my homemade pesto taste bitter? ›

“Extra-virgin olive oil contains bitter tasting polyphenols coated by fatty acids, which prevent them from dispersing. If the oil is emulsified in a food processor, these polyphenols get squeezed out and the liquid mix turns bitter.

Is eating too much pesto bad for you? ›

A. While pesto has impressive amounts of nutrition, it's still not the healthiest sauce. It would be best to eat it in moderation because pesto contains fats and calories from olive oil and nuts. Moreover, it is higher in fat and calories than most tomato-based sauces.

Can you eat too much pesto? ›

Many people ask us if pesto can make you fat, and the simple answer is that eating too much of it and not getting enough exercise can lead to weight gain. You may have seen jars of pesto in the supermarket slapped with red and amber warning labels, indicating high levels of fat and salt, respectively.

Can you eat garlic scapes raw? ›

Garlic scapes can be eaten raw or cooked and added to many dishes. Wash the garlic scapes, and trim the end and the bud. Many people discard the bud because it can be quite fibrous, particularly in raw preparations.

Should I keep garlic scapes in the fridge? ›

Storing Garlic Scapes

Garlic scapes keep well in a plastic bag in the fridge for two to three weeks. They will keep for a few days (and will look beautiful) in a glass with a little cool water in it, on the counter in a cool room.

Can you eat garlic scapes raw in a salad? ›

Scapes have a softer, less assertive flavor than raw garlic cloves, with a fresh vegetal note, and they can be used in both raw and cooked applications.

How do you cut garlic scapes? ›

You can cut garlic scapes with pruners, but snapping it off is quicker. Snap the garlic scape off at the base to harvest. Make sure you don't cut off any of the leaves though. That same Canadian University found that yield could be reduced by up to 25% by cutting leaves, as many farmers do with sickle bar mowers.

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