Making wild garlic pesto with walnuts started as a chaotic kitchen experiment after I foraged too much β turns out, itβs now my go-to spread for everything! My Utrecht balcony canβt grow it, but this recipe turns those wild leaves into a garlicky goldmine. Itβs quick, simple, and a little nutty β hereβs how I mess it up and still win!
What You Need
Basic stuff β youβve got this:
- 2 cups (about 2 oz/56 g) wild garlic leaves β foraged fresh.
- Β½ cup (2 oz/56 g) walnuts β toasted if youβre fancy.
- Β½ cup (120 ml) olive oil β extra virginβs my pick.
- ΒΌ cup (1 oz/28 g) grated Parmesan β or skip for vegan.
- Salt β Β½ tsp (2 g) to taste.
- A blender or mortar β I use my beat-up blender.
How to Do It
Step 1: Gather Your Greens
Snag 2 cups (2 oz/56 g) of wild garlic leaves β I forage mine in spring (March-May) when itβs 50-65Β°F (10-18Β°C) out. Read my howto about Foraging Wild Garlic in Spring: A Tasty Adventure. Rinse them in 1 quart (1 liter) of cold water β my first batch had grit because I got lazy. Pat dry β soggy leaves ruin the vibe.

Step 2: Toast the Nuts
Toss Β½ cup (2 oz/56 g) walnuts in a pan at 350Β°F (175Β°C) for 5-7 minutes β I burned mine once, total flop. Skip this if youβre short on time β raw works too. Let them cool so your blender doesnβt overheat.
Step 3: Blend Your Wild Garlic Pesto Recipe
Chuck the wild garlic, walnuts, ΒΌ cup (1 oz/28 g) Parmesan, and a pinch of salt (Β½ tsp/2 g) into a blender. Pour in Β½ cup (120 ml) olive oil β I drowned it once with too much, oops. Pulse till itβs chunky or smooth β I like it rough for texture.
Step 4: Jar and Enjoy
Scoop it into a jar β 1 cup (240 ml) fits my stash. Store at 35-40Β°F (2-4Β°C) in the fridge β lasts 2-3 weeks, or freeze in cubes for months. I smeared it on toast once straight from the blender β instant win!
Making wild garlic pesto with walnuts is a no-brainer β my kitchenβs a mess after, but this stuffβs worth it. Spread it, dip it, or gift it β forage some leaves and get blending!