We planted cilantro seeds in all of the Toddler garden beds back in May. Cilantro is an easy to grow herb that is one of the dozen that are featured in our new Herb IQ program made possible by an environmental grant from the Rusticus Garden Club.
This morning, we harvested most of the cilantro because it was starting to bolt.Bolting is when a plant shoots up a flowering stem in a natural attempt to make seeds.
Cilantro likes to grow in cooler, moist conditions and will bolt quickly in hot weather, like what we are having now. This a survival mechanism for the cilantro plant. Plants are so smart! Cilantro knows that it will die in hot weather, so it will try to produce seeds as quickly as possible to ensure that the next generation of cilantro will survive and grow. The seeds of the cilantro plant are coriander.
The cilantro traveled to the kitchen where Linda and Marla turned it into a wonderful cilantro pesto. This is one of our recipes from the Feed Me Fresh curriculum. The children LOVE this cilantro sauce on their pasta.
Here’s the Cilantro pesto recipe from our curriculum, try it at home!
Cilantro Pesto
Ingredients
3 garlic cloves,
2 cups fresh cilantro, stems and leaves
1/4 cup olive oil
2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
Juice of one lemon
salt and pepper
Directions:
Gently rinse cilantro in a colander to remove any soil or insects. Drain or blot dry with paper towels.
Place the garlic and cilantro in a food processor.
While the processor is running, slowly add the oils, lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Process until smooth.
Pour the pesto over a bowl of pasta, stir to blend. Serve.