
Since "leaving the nest," I've lived in dorms or apartments. After seven years of not so great living conditions, I've decided I will never, ever live in an apartment again. I simply do not like strangers that much, nor do I have any interest in smelling their cooking, hearing their fights or seeing their trash.
I live in a house now, and I couldn't be happier. Aside from the obvious perks of more space and not sharing walls with other people, having a yard is the best part about house-dwelling. My house's backyard is well shaded, which makes it almost tolerable during the southern summer, if you look past the fact that when it rains, it becomes a swamp and therefore a mosquito breeding ground. The backyard also has a carport bolted down in the middle of it. At first, I hated it but I have since grown to love the redneck patio. I like thinking of clever names for the somewhat less classy aspects of our house.

Imagine a hammock on the right side. I spent about a week re-doing the table and chairs and the boyfriend made a makeshift fire-pit out of some bricks and an old grill. All the way in the back is my second favorite part of living in a house - the ability to have a garden. This year's garden was my first ever attempt at growing. We got a few tomatoes and peppers but all in all, we didn't get much more than a learning experience and some notes for next time. What I got a lot of, however, was basil.
Basil is magic. It’s a wonderful looking plant that smells great all summer and tastes amazing. It has the ability to make anything you've cooked taste better - like magic. My favorite thing to make is pesto.

I'm not going to tell you how to make pesto. There are a million recipes online, most of them the same but all you really need to do is throw garlic, parmesan cheese, pine nuts, olive oil and as much basil as you've got in a food processor and let-er-rip! When you've made your pesto, you can do what I do and freeze it in cubes for easy usage whenever the mood hits you. The mood should hopefully hit often.

Now that you've got your pesto, you could….
Make Pesto Cheese Bread:
1 loaf French or Italian bread, cut in half lengthwise
Lots of pesto
Lots of mozzarella cheese (feel free to use feta, parmesan, goat, or any other similar cheeses)
Evenly spread the pesto over the bread and top with the cheese. Place on a cookie sheet or other broiler safe dish. Preheat the broiler on Low and broil the bread until its hot and bubbly and looks delicious. Cut into pieces and serve with ANYTHING! Mmm
Or you could make Pesto Crescent Rolls:

1 tube crescent rolls
1/2 c. Pesto (ish)
Shredded mozzarella cheese
Unravel (?) the crescent rolls. Spread pesto over each triangle and sprinkle with mozzarella cheese. Roll the crescents up like you normally would and cook according to the tubes directions.

Maybe you could do some Pesto Grilled Chicken!
Take your pesto and mix it with a little more lemon juice and olive oil to thin it up a bit. Put it in a bag or bowl with whatever kind of chicken you'd like and let it marinade for as long as you've got (at least an hour) and then throw those beauties on the grill. Nothing tastes more like summer. Unless you grill some corn along with it, then it'll taste more like summer.
If that's not your thing, you could simply toss it in with some cooked pasta and add whatever other veggies you've got on hand. Sauté the veggies to soften them up, tomatoes and mushrooms are my favorite but zucchini is also great!
And last, but not least, you could make amazing Pesto Stuffed Shells:
4 oz stuffed shells (16 shells)
1/4 fat free cream cheese
1 c. parmesan cheese, divided equally
1/2 c. pesto (homemade is best!)
1 1/2 c. chicken (cooked & shredded)
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 fat free mozzarella cheese
Cook, drain and rise the shells according the package's directions. Make a few extra shells in case some break.
Combine the cream cheese, half the parmesan cheese, the pesto, chicken and garlic. Evenly divide and use to fill the shells
Place the shells into a baking dish prepared with cooking spray to prevent sticking!
Combine the remaining Parmesan and mozzarella. Top the shells with the cheeses.
Bake in 350 oven until warm and bubbly. May be prepared ahead of time. If you do this, cook covered.
Next time I make this, I'm adding mushrooms and/or artichokes.

I don't really care what you do with pesto as long as you do something with it!