How to Make Basil Oil
With a color tantamount to freshness and vibrancy and an aroma redolent of a Provencal breeze, basil oil is like a bit of the Mediterranean in a bottle. The esters and flavanoids in basil -- these are the chemicals responsible for its aroma and taste -- infuse flavor into pure fats like olive oil. For the purest, highest-quality infusion, you need the purest, high-quality ingredients. That means fresh, organic basil and cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil.
Things You'll Need
- Basil
- Glass bottle with a rubber stopper
- Bleach
- Water
- Extra virgin olive oil
- Measuring cup
- Sieve
- Cheesecloth
- Bowl
Instructions
-
Wash the basil under cold running water and let it air dry overnight in the refrigerator on a tray lined with paper towels.
-
Choose a bottle that has a rubber stopper instead of a screw cap, then wash it thoroughly. Mix 1/2 cap of bleach with 1/2 gallon of water and pour it into the bottle. Let the bleach water sit in the bottle for 15 minutes, then rinse and let the bottle air dry.
-
Snip the basil leaves from their stems and stack them. Measure equal parts basil and oil, by volume; stack but do not compress the leaves in a measuring cup to determine the volume. Press the basil leaves gently with the bottom of a spoon to bruise them.
-
Roll the basil leaves into a tight cylinder and drop them into the jar. Pour extra-virgin olive oil into the bottle and seal it with the stopper. Mince the leaves instead of leaving them whole if you want a medium- to dark-green basil oil.
-
Set the bottle in a cupboard or pantry for one week. Taste the oil after one week and every day thereafter until it reaches the desired flavor.
-
Strain the oil through a sieve lined with cheesecloth and into a bowl. Transfer the oil back into the bottle with the rubber stopper.
-
Store basil oil in the refrigerator for as long as three days. Store basil oil in the freezer for as long as three months.
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