Italian Salsa Verde Made in a Mortar and Pestle

Salsa Verde with Potato
Last updated: May 2026

This recipe is a typical Piedmontese sauce that was created to give flavor to food that isn’t tasty enough on its own, such as boiled meat (or leftovers) and vegetables. The sauce is super tasty because it’s made with garlic, anchovies, and the star of the sauce: parsley. Many also use boiled egg yolks or old bread soaked in vinegar in this sauce but I would rather use a boiled potato as the starch for this dish. 

Hi, my name is Alessandra Lauria, I am a Sicilian pasta maker expert, a dinner party host, and creator and founder of The Pasta Studio - an online (and offline) pasta school. As my roots are Sicilian, I tend to share what’s locally delicious to me. Hope you will enjoy it as much as I do!

I discovered this sauce during the 2020 lockdowns when exploring regional Italian traditions for social media content. You might think, “how did you not know!?” Well, for more than 14 years, I lived abroad and the Italian cuisine that was familiar to me was Sicilian from when I was younger. But during the pandemic, when we all had to come up with different videos and recipes for social media content, I started to investigate more Italian traditions that I wasn’t familiar with and came across Salsa Verde. Ever since, you can usually find a side of salsa verde on my tables and between many of my dishes just because of how simple, cheap (coming from the Cucina Povera cuisine), and delicious it is. 

Traditionally, this recipe was made in a mortar and pestle and this is still the best way to create a creamy and delicious sauce.

Why in the KROK

Salsa verde is built in layers, not blended all at once. You need a smooth anchovy-caper-garlic base, then a creamy potato middle, then bruised parsley folded in at the end. A food processor dumps everything together into a uniform, gray-green sludge. The KROK's unpolished Thai granite interior grips slippery anchovies and capers so they don't slide around while you grind them into paste, and the heavy pestle mashes the boiled potato into the emulsion without turning it gluey. The 3-cup bowl gives you the room to work in stages, which is the only way to get the traditional layered texture where you taste each ingredient. Because granite stays cool, the parsley stays bright and doesn't oxidize into a dull, bitter mess.

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