There are recipes you come back to once a month – and then there are recipes you make every single week without thinking. This sunshine sauce is the second kind.
It’s bright, herby, slightly garlicky, and tastes like it came from somewhere with a better climate than wherever you are right now. One jar lives in my fridge at almost all times. It takes five minutes, uses pantry staples, and somehow makes everything it touches taste more considered, more alive.
This isn’t a recipe so much as a small, golden ritual.
In This Post
Honestly, What’s Not to Love?
- Ready in 5 minutes – No cooking, no blending required. Just stir and taste.
- Fridge staples only – Nothing exotic 6 olive oil, herbs, lemon, garlic, a little heat.
- Endlessly versatile – On grains, over eggs, with roasted veg, as a dip. It goes anywhere.
- Keeps for a week – Make a batch Sunday and reach for it all week long.
Here’s what you’ll need:

How to Make Sunshine Sauce
- Wash and dry your parsley thoroughly, excess water will dilute the sauce. Finely chop the leaves and tender stems. No need to be too precise here; a little rustic texture is part of the charm.
- Grate or finely mince the garlic. If you’re sensitive to raw garlic, grating on a microplane gives you a paste that distributes more evenly and feels less sharp.
- Zest the lemon directly into a clean jar or small bowl, then halve and squeeze in the juice. Fish out any seeds.
- Add the parsley, garlic, olive oil, red pepper flakes, salt, and honey if using. Stir everything together gently, don’t whisk aggressively; you want the oil to stay loose and the herbs to remain defined.
- Taste. Adjust. Add more lemon for brightness, more salt for depth, more chili for warmth. Spoon into a jar. Done.

A Few Helpful Tips
- Use fresh parsley – not dried. The brightness of this sauce lives entirely in that herb. Dried parsley will give you something flat and a little dusty.
- Zest first, then juice. It’s much easier to zest a whole lemon than one you’ve already squeezed into a deflated little dome.
- Let it sit for 10 minutes before serving if you can. The garlic mellow slightly and everything blooms together beautifully.
- Taste as you go. The salt, lemon, and heat balance is entirely personal. Start small and adjust upward.
“So simple and fresh. The olive oil and garlic combo is perfect! This is my go-to Sunshine Sauce.” – Zaid Mercer.
Serving Ideas
This is where the sunshine sauce earns its name. Once you have a jar in your fridge, you’ll find yourself reaching for it constantly.
- Drizzled over a bowl of warm farro or quinoa with roasted vegetables
- Spooned over soft scrambled or fried eggs in the morning
- As a dipping sauce for crusty bread or warm flatbread
- Over grilled or pan-seared fish – salmon especially
- Tossed with chickpeas and cucumber for an instant lunch salad
- On roasted cauliflower, sweet potato, or carrots
- Swirled into a simple soup just before serving
- As a sauce for pasta or orzo with a handful of cherry tomatoes

Storage Tips
- Counter – 2 hrs at Room temperature only
- Refrigerator – 5-7 days In a sealed jar
- Freezer – 3 months In ice cube trays
- The olive oil may solidify slightly in the fridge – this is perfectly normal. Just let the jar sit at room temperature for a few minutes and give it a quick stir before using.
- For longer storage, spoon the sauce into an ice cube tray and freeze. Pop out individual cubes to stir into soups, sauces, or pasta throughout the month.

5-Minute Sunshine Sauce
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Wash and thoroughly dry 1 cups fresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped (leaves and tender stems). Pat dry with a clean towel, excess water dilutes the sauce. Finely chop and set aside.
- Grate 3 garlic cloves, minced or microplane-grated on a microplane directly into a small bowl or jar. Zest 1 lemon, zested into the same bowl, then squeeze in 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice (from the zested lemon). Remove any seeds.
- Add the chopped parsley, 0.5 cups good quality extra-virgin olive oil, 0.3 teaspoons red pepper flakes, 0.5 teaspoons flaky sea salt, and 1 teaspoons honey or maple syrup (optional) if using. Stir gently until everything is combined, don't whisk hard; you want the oil loose and herbs visible.
- Taste the sauce. Add more lemon juice for brightness, salt for depth, or extra red pepper flakes for warmth. Adjust until it tastes alive and vibrant.
- Rest (optional): Let the sauce sit for 10 minutes
Notes
- Calories 125
- Fat 14g
- Saturated Fat 2g
- Carbohydrates 1g
- Fiber 0.3g
- Sugar 0.5g
- Protein 0.3g
- Sodium 145mg
FAQs
Can I use cilantro instead of parsley?
Absolutely – it becomes a different sauce but a wonderful one. Cilantro adds more citrus-herbal punch. Some people make it with half and half for the best of both.
Is sunshine sauce the same as chimichurri?
It’s inspired by chimichurri, but simpler and a little softer. Traditional chimichurri often includes oregano and red wine vinegar. This version leans into lemon and is a touch brighter.
Can I blend it for a smoother texture?
Yes, a quick blitz in a food processor or blender gives you a vibrant, creamy green sauce. Add an extra splash of olive oil to help it emulsify.
What if I don’t have fresh parsley?
Try fresh basil, mint, or a combination. This sauce is a template more than a rigid recipe – fresh herbs are the essential thing, not which ones specifically.
More Recipes Like This
- Creamy Garlic Parmesan Sauce
- 5-min Garlic Herb Oil Recipe
- 5 Minute BBQ Sauce Recipe
- 5 Minute Tomato Sauce
- 5 Minute Stir Fry Sauce
Some recipes ask a lot of you – time, patience, technique. This one only asks for five minutes and a sharp knife. In return, it gives you a whole week of meals that taste a little more intentional, a little more alive. That, I think, is exactly what a good sauce should do.






