
Easy Olive Tapenade
Olive tapenade is something I don’t make very often. I’m not sure why because every time I do it gets used very quickly. While you can save time using pitted olives, I find they’re never as nice as olives with the stones still in.
takes: 15 minutes
makes: about 1 cup
2 handfuls olives (120g / 4oz)
1 small clove garlic, optional
8 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
lemon juice, to taste
1. Remove pits from olives and chop the flesh coarsely.
2. Transfer the chopped flesh to a bowl and stir in the garlic (if using), olive oil and about 2 tablespoons lemon juice.
3. Taste and add extra lemon if needed. Use straight away or store in a clean airtight jar in the fridge.
Variations
optional extras – add any or all of the following: 1 tablespoon capers, 1/4 small red onion finely chopped, 2-3 finely chopped anchovies.
tuna tapenade – toss in a small drained can of tuna in oil.
different olives – I’ve used large green sicilian olives in the picture but any olive will work. Again, the flavour and texture is better if you pit the olives yourself.
herby – a little thyme or oregano can add lovely freshness.
sun dried tomato tapenade – replace olives with sun or semi dried tomatoes.
smooth tapenade / short on time – whizz everything together in the food processor.
Usage Suggestions
with fish – surprisingly lovely with pan fried fish like this recipe.
as a dip – serve with crusty bread for a lovely starter.
as a sauce – lovely with pan fried or grilled lamb cutlets, steak, chicken breast or pork chops. For vegetarians try it with roast eggplant or mushrooms.
for breakfast – dollop on your favourite fried eggs.
Prepare Ahead?
Absolutely. Takes about 15 minutes.
Storage Best Practices
Store in a glass jar. Will keep in the fridge for 3-4 weeks.
Waste Avoidance Strategy
olives, garlic, oil – pantry.
lemon – keeps in a plastic bag in the fridge for months.
Problem Solving Guide
too salty – extra oil can help.
bland – a little more lemon can help as can adding the optional extras suggested in the variations. Next time use olives from a different deli.
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Add to my Old Favourite Recipes
Yum! I stuck it all in a blender and used as a sauce over halloumi, it was delicious!
oh yum Sarah-Louise – I have some halloumi in the fridge that needs eating up. Thanks for the inspiration!
Excellent with the fish recipe. I used shallot, garlic and anchovy as seasoning with the olives.
ooh YUM Linda!
I made this in advance, and to let the ingredients get to know each other, for the Fish Steak recipe. A third of a cup = 4 Tbsp of leftover oil from a jar of sun-dried tomatoes seemed to be sufficient liquid. and I can always add more oil later if not. I’ll let you know how it went when I use it later.
P.S. how much of a cup or individual olives do 2 of your handfuls translate to? At first I guessed 16 olives, but that seemed a bit scant so I upped it to 24.
Good idea to make ahead Mark!
I recently tested this and used 120g (4oz) olives which would be about 30 olives at a guess – so am sure your 24 would be great!
Thanks!
Made this with black Kalamata Olives (120g) and a small
Handful finely chopped parsley for extra freshness. Gorgeous big bold flavours that went perfectly with a BBQ steak and salad.
Was thinking I would want to add capers or anchovy but happy with the simple recipe as written.
Keen to make again with Ruba’s walnut suggestion
I add walnuts and some chilli sauce to mine and omit the garlic, will try this next time
I like the idea to add nuts Ruba…
It’s funny I wouldn’t have thought of that.
Thanks for sharing!
Jx