Salsa Verde

Salsa Verde

Salsa Verde

 

With its oily acidity, salsa verde has so much of the vinaigrette about it, yet is barely a sauce in reality, with the merest oiliness keeping it mobile. Parsley is the beating heart of a good salsa verde, around which to adapt to what you have and what it is accompanying – perhaps upping the mint for lamb, the fennel fronds for fish, basil for roasted vegetables etc. I often add a finely diced shallot; sometimes a few chopped cornichons.

 

Makes a medium jarful

 

big bunch of flat-leaf parsley, leaves only

small bunch of basil or mint, leaves only (or use a combination)

4 anchovies, rinsed if packed in salt and finely chopped

2 T. salted capers, rinsed and roughly chopped

2 garlic cloves, finely chopped

1 T. Dijon mustard

2 T. red wine vinegar or lemon juice

¾ fl oz good-quality extra virgin olive oil, plus more to seal

sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

 

Chop the herbs, anchovies, capers and garlic with a large knife all together on a big board, then tip into a bowl. Stir in the mustard and vinegar, then mix in the oil until you achieve your desired consistency. Taste and add more vinegar/lemon if you like, plus salt and pepper to taste. Store in a jar with a thin layer of oil on the top in the fridge. Keeps for a day or two.

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