Pesto Ratio Calculator
Scale pesto from any amount of basil. Calculates nuts, cheese, garlic, and oil quantities using the classic Genovese ratio. Shows total yield, pasta servings, oil percentage, emulsion stability, and heat sensitivity.
Basil Leaves
50g fresh basil = ~2 packed cups of leaves
Nut Type
Cheese Type
Garlic and Olive Oil
~3g total
~6.7 tbsp
Lemon Juice (optional)
Lemon juice brightens flavor and helps preserve color. Traditional Genovese pesto uses no lemon.
50g basil • Pine Nuts • Parmigiano Reggiano
225g pesto
1 cups • 16 tablespoons • 3 pasta servings
Classic Pesto Ratios by Weight
| Component | Classic (50g basil batch) | % of total | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh basil | 50g | ~21% | Primary flavor, color |
| Pine nuts | 30g | ~13% | Body, creaminess |
| Parmigiano | 50g | ~21% | Emulsifier, umami, salt |
| Garlic (1 clove) | 3g | ~1.3% | Aromatic sharpness |
| Olive oil | 100mL (~92g) | ~40% | Carrier, mouthfeel, emulsion |
| Total yield | ~225g | — | ~1 cup pesto |
Oil percentage in the sweet spot of 40–50% gives a pesto that is pourable but not greasy, with enough cheese to form a stable emulsion. Batches above 55% oil tend to separate during storage and break easily when heated.
Nut Substitution Guide
| Nut | Flavor profile | Toast first? | Classic/regional |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pine nuts | Buttery, mild, sweet | Optional (watch — burns fast) | Genovese — authentic |
| Walnuts | Bold, slightly bitter | Yes — reduces bitterness | Regional alternative |
| Almonds (blanched) | Neutral, firm | Yes — enhances depth | Budget substitution |
| Pistachios | Sweet, savory, green | Yes | Sicilian pistachio pesto |
| Sunflower seeds | Mild, earthy | Yes | Nut-free version |
Pesto Storage and Shelf Life
Fresh pesto (no blanching, no preservatives) keeps refrigerated for 3–5 days under a layer of olive oil. The oil cap prevents surface oxidation. Blanched-basil pesto keeps for 7–10 days refrigerated.
Frozen pesto maintains quality for 3–6 months. Freeze in ice cube trays (each cube approximately 15g = 1 tablespoon) then transfer to freezer bags. Do not add cheese before freezing — add freshly grated cheese after thawing for best texture.
Commercially jarred pesto uses citric acid (E330), ascorbic acid, or both to prevent browning. Some producers use a high-heat fill process that extends shelf life but reduces fresh basil flavor significantly.
Serving and Usage Guide
| Application | Pesto per serving | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pasta main course | 60–80g per person | Always off heat, pasta water helps |
| Pasta appetizer | 30–40g per person | Smaller portion, often with cream |
| Bruschetta / crostini | 10–15g per piece | Spread thinly, room temp |
| Pizza sauce | 30–40g per pizza | Add after bake for raw pesto freshness |
| Salad dressing base | 15–20g diluted | Thin with vinegar or lemon juice |
| Marinade | 30–50g per portion | Coat protein, refrigerate 2–4 hrs |
- Consorzio del Pesto Genovese — Official Genovese pesto recipe and DOP specification
- Hazan, Marcella — Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking: pesto technique
- McGee, Harold — On Food and Cooking: emulsion chemistry in sauces
- Fearnley-Whittingstall, Hugh — River Cottage Every Day: nut pesto variations
- Italian Academy of Cuisine — Pesto alla Genovese recipe archive