A good batch of rosemary infused olive oil turns plain bread, roasted vegetables, and simple weeknight proteins into something with real depth. This version uses a gentle warm steep rather than a long raw cure, which pulls the piney aroma from the herb without scorching the oil. You end up with a pantry staple that tastes like a Mediterranean hillside and takes about twenty minutes of active work.
The method below is built for consistency. We control the temperature so the rosemary stays green and the oil keeps its fruitiness instead of turning bitter. Once you see how the color shifts and the kitchen smells, you’ll understand why home infusion beats most store bottles. If you enjoyed this, our magnesium oil is worth trying next. Making this rosemary infused olive oil at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These Rosemary Infused Olive Oil
- Low effort: only two core ingredients and one pot.
- Flexible: use it on meat, bread, pasta, or salad.
- Safer than raw cure: gentle heat cuts botulism risk from garlic if added later.
- Long window: stays fresh and aromatic for up to four weeks refrigerated.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 500 ml extra virgin olive oil – use a mild, fruity bottle you’d cook with, not your most expensive finishing oil.
- 4 sprigs fresh rosemary (about 12 g) – firm, deep green, no yellowing tips.
- 2 cloves garlic, peeled and lightly crushed – optional, adds savory backbone.
- 1 small strip lemon peel (optional) – just the yellow layer, no white pith.
Ingredient Substitutions
Extra virgin olive oil: Replace with an equal volume of refined olive oil if you want a more neutral base. Refined oil has a higher smoke point and a softer flavor, so the rosemary reads clearer but the peppery finish disappears. The infusion will look lighter gold and hold heat slightly better during the warm step. The rosemary infused olive oil works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Fresh rosemary: Use 2 tbsp dried rosemary for the 4 fresh sprigs if that’s what you have. Dried herb releases flavor faster and can turn the oil dusty if left too long, so strain after 10 minutes of steeping instead of 15. Expect a sharper, less resinous note and a slightly muted green color.
Garlic cloves: Swap the 2 crushed cloves for 1/4 tsp granulated garlic if you want the savory hint without any raw-allium safety concerns. Granulated form disperses without sinking, so skip the optional lemon peel to keep flavors from muddying. The oil will taste rounder but lose the bright fresh bite that whole cloves give during the warm rest.
Lemon peel: Replace the strip with 1/4 tsp lemon zest added after straining if you only have zest on hand. Zest disperses fine but browns during heating, so always add it post-strain for a clean citrus lift. The aroma stays higher and the oil stays clearer than with heated peel.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Pour 500 ml olive oil into a small saucepan and add 4 rosemary sprigs, 2 crushed garlic cloves, and 1 strip lemon peel if using.
- Warm the mixture on medium-low heat until you see the first tiny bubble at the edge, about 5 minutes, then turn off the burner.
- Cover the pan and let the herbs steep off heat for 15 minutes until the oil smells distinctly piney and the rosemary looks dull green.
- Strain through a fine mesh sieve into a heat-safe jug, discarding solids, then pour into a clean 500 ml glass bottle.
- Seal the bottle and label it with the date; cool to room temperature before moving it to the fridge.
Pro Tips
Keep the warm step under medium-low heat because oil climbs temperature fast once it starts shimmering and burnt herb tastes like cardboard. A thermometer reading near 60°C is the sweet spot for extraction without cooking the rosemary.
Dry your rosemary sprigs with a towel before they hit the oil so water droplets don’t spit or encourage microbial growth during the short steep. Even a small amount of surface moisture changes how clean the finished bottle looks.
For a clearer pour, line the sieve with a coffee filter on the final strain, especially if you used dried herb or lemon zest. This catches fine particles that would otherwise cloud the bottle over time.
Learn more about gentle herb extraction from infusion techniques that keep oil flavor intact without high heat.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Letting the oil boil is the fastest way to ruin a batch; once it reaches a rolling boil the rosemary turns brown and the fruitiness drops out. Watch the edge of the pan and pull it the moment you see the first bead of movement.
Skipping the cooling step before refrigeration traps condensation inside the bottle, which waters down the oil and shortens its safe window. Always let it reach room temperature on the counter first.
Using wilted or yellow-tipped rosemary gives a stale, hay-like note that no steep can fix. Buy or pick firm sprigs the same day you plan to infuse for the brightest result.
Serving Suggestions
Drizzle a thread of rosemary infused olive oil over fresh bread with flaky salt for an easy appetizer. The herb oil soaks into warm crumb better than cold butter and needs no prep at serving time.
Brush it on steak pinwheels right before they rest so the aroma lifts off the meat as it carries to the plate. A light coat also keeps the outside from drying during a short oven finish.
Mix a spoonful into pasta e lenticchie just before bowl-up to add a green lift to the earthy lentils. The oil floats on top and carries scent with every bite.
Storage and Reheating
Store the sealed bottle in the refrigerator for up to 4 weeks since the cool temperature slows oxidation and keeps the herb from fading. Bring it to room temperature for 10 minutes before use because chilled oil turns thick and won’t pour.
This infusion is not a reheat dish, but if you use it in a warm pan sauce, keep the temperature under medium-low heat so the rosemary notes stay soft. Don’t leave the open bottle on a sunny counter beyond 2 hours or the oil will sour.
Yes, rosemary infused olive oil keeps its aroma well in the fridge for a month, which makes it a solid make-ahead gift or meal base.
Recipe Variations
Garlic-Free Version
Omit the 2 crushed cloves and keep only rosemary and optional lemon peel for a pure herb oil with no allium sharpness. The result pours clearer and suits people avoiding garlic while still giving the piney lift. Use it on fish where a heavy savory note would cover the meat.
Chili Rosemary Blend
Add 1 small dried chili split open with the rosemary during the warm step for a gentle heat that builds after the herb hits. The chili tints the oil faint red and pairs well with roasted potatoes or ground meat dishes. Strain the chili out with the herbs so the heat stays even.
Thyme Swap
Replace 2 of the 4 rosemary sprigs with fresh thyme for a softer, lemony profile that reads less resinous. Thyme steeps a minute faster, so cut the off-heat rest to 12 minutes to avoid a dusty taste. The bottle will smell like a French herb garden rather than a pine wood.
Citrus Heavy
Double the lemon peel and add a strip of orange peel for a bright oil that works on fruit cream desserts or cold soups. The extra peel needs the full 15-minute steep to release oils without bitterness. Expect a gold color and a scent that leads with zest before the herb follows.
Rosemary Infused Olive Oil
Description
This rosemary infused olive oil uses a controlled warm steep to pull piney aroma from fresh herbs without scorching the oil. It turns bread, vegetables, and proteins into something with real Mediterranean depth using only two core ingredients and about twenty minutes of active work.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Combine oil and herbs
Pour 500 ml olive oil into a small saucepan and add 4 rosemary sprigs, 2 crushed garlic cloves, and 1 strip lemon peel if using. Make sure the pan is small enough that the oil covers the herbs and the heat will distribute evenly on your burner.
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Warm the mixture
Warm the mixture on medium-low heat until you see the first tiny bubble at the edge, about 5 minutes, then turn off the burner. Keep the temperature near 60°C and never let it boil, as oil climbs temperature fast once it starts shimmering and burnt herb tastes like cardboard.
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Steep off heat
Cover the pan and let the herbs steep off heat for 15 minutes until the oil smells distinctly piney and the rosemary looks dull green. This off-heat rest extracts the aroma without cooking the rosemary or dropping the oil's fruitiness.
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Strain the oil
Strain through a fine mesh sieve into a heat-safe jug, discarding solids, then pour into a clean 500 ml glass bottle. For a clearer pour, line the sieve with a coffee filter on the final strain to catch fine particles that would cloud the bottle.
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Seal and cool
Seal the bottle and label it with the date; cool to room temperature before moving it to the fridge. Skipping the cooling step traps condensation inside the bottle, which waters down the oil and shortens its safe window.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 40
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 880kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 100g154%
- Saturated Fat 14g70%
- Sodium 4mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 2g1%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Store the sealed bottle in the refrigerator for up to 4 weeks; bring to room temperature for 10 minutes before use because chilled oil turns thick and won't pour.
- Pro tip: Dry rosemary sprigs with a towel before they hit the oil so water droplets don't spit or encourage microbial growth during the short steep, and see pro patterns for gentle extraction methods.
- Food safety: Do not leave the open bottle on a sunny counter beyond 2 hours or the oil will sour; always cool to room temperature before refrigerating.
- Clarity: Line the sieve with a coffee filter on the final strain if you used dried herb or lemon zest to keep the bottle clear over time.
