If making your own pesto, try this alternative to pine nuts: cobnut pesto. Available in some supermarkets during autumn, cobnuts taste like smooth creamy hazelnuts. They’re a bit fiddly to prepare but the flavour is well worth the effort.

Removing the shells with nutcrackers reminded me of two things; firstly Christmas and secondly an amusing incident with my grandmother.
I once presented my grandma with some fresh chestnuts I’d picked up in some woodland. She put them into the oven to bake when twenty minutes later there was a loud bang: some of them had exploded and made a terrible mess. She was not pleased.
The best part is, I also gave my mother a bag of the same chestnuts and she did exactly the same thing. The lesson here is to score your chestnut skins – or indeed cobnuts – so that pressure doesn’t build up inside from steam cooking the kernels and make them pop.
Today’s dish of pesto pasta salad can be served warm or cold, it is ideal for making in bulk at parties, indeed it is my usual savoury contribution to short notice gatherings (although I’ve not done it with cobnut pesto).
If you make it with jarred pesto, keep a vacuum pack of olives in the cupboard and toss in some frozen peas, you can make it entirely with store cupboard ingredients.

Today I am making it with Garofalo pasta, received in my Cybermummy goodie bag back in July. It’s a good quality pasta, and one of my favourite dried pasta brands alongside De Cecco.
I absolutely love your photos of your town. 🙂 What a splendid thing to do with Ted. I know my goddaughters would love a jaunt like that!! Such a clever new way to make pesto, Sarah. 🙂
I never, ever, ever get tired of gorgeous autumn photos.
I remember seeing an Ottolenghi recipe that used cobnuts, but I couldnt find them any where! I’d love to find them to make this delicious sounding pesto.
*kisses* HH