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Рецепт Grilled Tuna with Pesto; it’s hot and snarky here
by Katie Zeller

A simple dollop of pesto sauce is a great accompaniment to grilled fish.

I’m embarrassed to admit that I am now, and likely will be all summer, using commercial pesto.

I had such high hopes this spring.

I pulled out the lavender and the rosemary that were taking over their respective areas in my herb garden, and replanted the areas with lots of parsley and 5 different kinds of basil.

I put eggshells around the basil (along with some little blue anti-snail pellets) to protect the tender plants from the snails and slugs.

But I didn’t have any problem with snails and slugs…..

Because the mole who moved in ate them all as he tunneled under my struggling basil plants on a daily basis.

Every morning I go out and tuck the little plants back into the dirt and collapse the tunnels.

Every night he digs them out again.

Please don’t bother to give me any sure-fire ways of getting rid him. I’ve tried them all…. Many, many times.

Tomorrow I’m going to buy some planters and put a few seeds on the balcony. We may not get fresh pesto but we ought to get a few leaves for a caprese salad.

This is good with any pesto.

Grilled Tuna with Pesto

Total time: 25 minutes

Ingredients:

Instructions:

Mix oregano, oil, vinegar and ketchup.

Brush onto tuna and let marinate for 10 – 25 minutes.

When ready grill over direct heat using grill basket, mat or directly on the grill, brushing with oil first. Grill for 2 – 4 minutes per side for medium rare. If not sushi-grade, cook until medium – medium well, still pink in the middle, 6 – 7 minutes per side, all times depending on thickness of tuna and personal taste.

Can also be cooked under broiler or sautéed in nonstick pan for roughly the same amount of time.

Pesto Sauce:

Mix pesto, olive oil and vinegar.

To finish:

Serve with 1 1/2 tbs Pesto Sauce on top of each steak.

I’ve been on Pinterest again.

You see, it’s hot here. Yesterday was 39C (102F) and today is 38C (100F). It’s supposed to last another week, with a slight break tomorrow of only 35C (95F).

When it’s hot we open up the house in the morning to let cool air in, such as it is, then close it up, including closing the shutters, to keep the hot air out.

The heat outside plus the closed up dark house makes me bored and a wee bit cranky.

The boredom sends me to Pinterest (and Facebook, Twitter….) and the crankiness makes me want to leave snarky comments about the, ahem, perceived stupidity of others.

Fortunately, I am able to control myself and hit ‘delete’ instead of ‘publish’.

But there have been some close calls.

It took a vast amount of will-power to not comment on the tutorial on cutting a watermelon.

First…. how does one grow to adulthood, marry, and have children without ever having cut or eaten a watermelon? I posit that if you have eaten watermelon it should be obvious how it’s cut. Okay, not if it’s cut into cute little shapes, but that’s not the norm. (Or is it?) It’s a big round fruit – cut it in half and slice it. Quarter the slices if you like. It’s not rocket science; I surely don’t need a 15 photo tutorial.

And why would you do all that on a table cloth? Supposedly to save cleaning up the mess – but then you have to launder the sticky, seedy encrusted cloth and the juice would seep through anyway.

Admittedly, I grew up in a house where the children were sent outside to eat their watermelon…. and no, we didn’t use plates and forks….. Where’s the fun in that? Can’t have a seed spitting contest in the house!

Then I saw a pin on Garlic Aioli, and the description was that it was ‘just a fancy mayonnaise’.

There was so much wrong with that statement that I actually typed 3 comments (all deleted) just to relieve my frustration.

I couldn’t bring myself to look at the recipe.

1st. Garlic Aioli. It is not possible to make aioli without garlic. Calling it Garlic Aioli is like saying your burger is made from beef ground beef or you have cabbage coleslaw. You can not make kale aioli – that would be something else.

2. Aioli (or Allioli if you’re in Spain) is not mayonnaise.

Mayonnaise is made with oil, egg yolk, lemon juice and/or vinegar. No garlic

French aioli is made with oil, egg yolk and garlic. No lemon or vinegar

Spanish aioli (allioli) is made with just olive oil and garlic. No egg yolk, lemon or vinegar

You’ll find my Spanish aioli recipe here. Be warned – it will knock your socks off if made properly. It’s very hot!.

We won’t even talk about the Vegetarian Cassoulet (baked beans anyone?) BTW, I made Cassoulet for our friends – they heartily approved.

Finally, some bright spark decided to put cookie dough on top of a cupcake. Now I couldn’t bring myself to check out the details of this one either so I don’t know if the big blob on top was raw cookie dough (why would one eat that?) or if they had somehow managed to bake a domed cookie on top of a cupcake (why would anyone do that?)

Okay, one more….. I just saw a ‘perfect for a picnic crockpot 3 ingredient meatball recipe’. The ingredients were: grape jelly, bottled barbecue sauce and purchased meatballs.

Well, sweet cheeks, I hate to tell you, but that recipe has been around since the ’50’s At least they made the meatballs from scratch and did the whole thing in a chafing dish, not a crockpot.

If this heatwave is lasting another week I need to come up with a more calming past time. Maybe I’ll go through my cook books – or, better idea, my photography books.

Anything to control my inner-curmudgeon.

Last update on July 1, 2015

Grilled Tuna with Pesto; it’s hot and snarky here was last modified: July 1st, 2015 by Katie Zeller

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