
Renee M. Ergazos
First foraged dish of the year
Although the snow in our woods had been melted for less than a week and more snow was in the forecast, I found the earliest of edible greens: chives.

Once the plant flowers, the chives become too strong to use as anything other than a garnish (potatoes, deviled eggs, soups).

I made a second batch the next day for a party and replaced a few ingredients based on what was available in my friend's kitchen.
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This follows a basic pesto approach:
= process herb (chives), olive oil, and salt in food processor to desired texture.
= process herb (chives), olive oil, and salt in food processor to desired texture.
= I also add a squeeze of
lemon, sundried tomatoes, some crunch (almonds first batch, pistachios second
batch and pistachios worked better than the almonds), and some additional fresh
herbs/greens (parsley for the first batch, red chard second batch).
=I did not add fresh garlic or parmesan.
=I did not add fresh garlic or parmesan.
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Sunday morning, I had a handful of clean chives still in a towel on the cutting board, so cheesey, chivey scrambled eggs had to happen.
Easter dinner will have deviled eggs and chilled beet soup, garnished with fresh chives; I might even sneak some in the pirohy (pierogis).
Sunday morning, I had a handful of clean chives still in a towel on the cutting board, so cheesey, chivey scrambled eggs had to happen.
Easter dinner will have deviled eggs and chilled beet soup, garnished with fresh chives; I might even sneak some in the pirohy (pierogis).
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