Dinner Tonight: Popcorn Chickpeas
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saluki
Member Posts: 2,287
I can vouch for this one from Serious Eats--- just made it--- I grow fresh Rosemary on my Deck. Its really tasty and I can see it going nicely with some kind of drink. Really great.
PS. I had no black pepper so I used some Ground Chipotle
instead which I get from Penzeys Spices. ---IT gave it a nice Kick!
Susie
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Dinner Tonight: Popcorn Chickpeas
Posted by Nick Kindelsperger, August 13, 2007 at 3:55 PM
Dinner Tonight: Popcorn Chickpeas
Call me crazy, but I didnt know that if you heated whole chickpeas they would get crisp and pop. Most of the chickpeas I ingest come all puréed or in deep-fried balls, so I guess I was missing out on this phenomenon.
I pulled this from the The Herbal Kitchen, a gorgeously laid out book about the joys of using herbs in just about everything. I had also thought about chickpeas and parsley, probably because of the hundreds of falafel sandwiches Ive downed. But the rosemary makes this a much heartier dish. Though definitely not a main course, it is an easy little snack good for those tired of the normal chips and dips. It even tastes good reheated, which you can't say about popcorn. However, like popcorn, it tastes better and better with every additional pinch of salt.
Popcorn Chickpeas
Ingredients
1 15-ounce can of chickpeas
1 tablespoon rosemary, finely chopped
1 clove garlic
3 tablespoons olive oil
Salt and pepper
Procedure
1. Drain the chickpeas and dry off on a paper towel.
2. Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium high heat. Add the chickpeas. Cook for 5 minutes, shaking occasionally, until darkened.
3. Drain the chickpeas again to get rid of some of the oil. Return the chickpeas back to the empty skillet over medium heat and add the garlic and rosemary. Season with salt and pepper, and plate festively.
PS. I had no black pepper so I used some Ground Chipotle
instead which I get from Penzeys Spices. ---IT gave it a nice Kick!
Susie
============================
Dinner Tonight: Popcorn Chickpeas
Posted by Nick Kindelsperger, August 13, 2007 at 3:55 PM
Dinner Tonight: Popcorn Chickpeas
Call me crazy, but I didnt know that if you heated whole chickpeas they would get crisp and pop. Most of the chickpeas I ingest come all puréed or in deep-fried balls, so I guess I was missing out on this phenomenon.
I pulled this from the The Herbal Kitchen, a gorgeously laid out book about the joys of using herbs in just about everything. I had also thought about chickpeas and parsley, probably because of the hundreds of falafel sandwiches Ive downed. But the rosemary makes this a much heartier dish. Though definitely not a main course, it is an easy little snack good for those tired of the normal chips and dips. It even tastes good reheated, which you can't say about popcorn. However, like popcorn, it tastes better and better with every additional pinch of salt.
Popcorn Chickpeas
Ingredients
1 15-ounce can of chickpeas
1 tablespoon rosemary, finely chopped
1 clove garlic
3 tablespoons olive oil
Salt and pepper
Procedure
1. Drain the chickpeas and dry off on a paper towel.
2. Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium high heat. Add the chickpeas. Cook for 5 minutes, shaking occasionally, until darkened.
3. Drain the chickpeas again to get rid of some of the oil. Return the chickpeas back to the empty skillet over medium heat and add the garlic and rosemary. Season with salt and pepper, and plate festively.
Comments
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Chickpeas are great roasted in the oven, too. Here's a recipe from my good friend Tubby-or-not-Tubby, posted on Prevention's South Beach Diet message board:
Roasted Chickpeas
Crispy Chick peas from Tubby or Not Tubby
First, open the can, drain and rinse. The rinsing will lead to less gas and fewer embarrasing excuses that invariably involve an old and innocent family pet.
Now take an old fashioned Baggie, not the pricey kind with ziplocs, but the big old fellows that need a bag tie.
Dump the peas into the bag and throw a TBLS of oil in after them. You can use olive oil if you wish, but since the peas are going to be subjected to a lot of heat, I prefer canola oil.
Puff out the bag so it resembles a balloon. Twist the top to keep the peas from escaping and shake the life out of it.
Stop shaking when every pea is coated with oil. Sample one or two to be sure; now stop snacking and add more oil if needed and resume shaking.
Now stare into your spice cupboard scratching your head until inspiration strikes. You may settle for (yawn) salt. I chose the Mrs Dash spice blend. Go crazy here and share your discovery.
Take a tsp or two of your selected salt/spice and throw it into the baggie. Sample again and add more to taste.
Shake up any peas that still remain after your wanton snacking and sampling. Shake till they're speckled with spicing.
Cover the pan with a sheet of foil. I like Release because nothing sticks to it. These likely won't stick to ordinary foil anyway, unless you like a lot of spice and totally cover up the film of oil on the individual peas, in which case,you're pretty well on your own...
Put the pan on the lower rack of an oven preheated to 400 degrees. If you've used the Release and precoated the peas you won't have to turn them.
When the first peas start turning black, don't panic. There are always a handful of wimpy chickpeas in every can that will discolor before their canmates. This is their futile bid to escape being eaten. At my place it doesn't work. Eat the suckers anyway and teach 'em a lesson.
Now put the other chickpeas back in till a few more start to blacken.
The remainder should be more or less uniform in their goldenness.
And every last one will be crisp.
I mention this to emphasize that, while chickpeas may seem to be dull and insensitive creatures --no doubt resulting from their identity crisis -- they're never quite sure if they're chickpeas, garbanzos or cicis -- they are in fact extremely sensitive and often appear to have a mind of their own.
They will demand your full attention during the latter stages of cookery. You'll know you have it right when you sink your teeth into one and it snaps in two like a peanut. If it's the least bit chewy, it's undercooked.
I should also add that these were canned peas. The procedure may or may not work as well with dried and soaked chickpeas. These things are just so damned tasty that I prefer to limit myself to the fixed quantities in the can. -
I adore chickpeas and these recipes sound awesome! But do you eat them hot out of the pan or oven OR let them cool? Also, don't your fingers get way messy?
Thanks!
Marin -
OMG that was soooo funny...but I must try this one...tahnks
MB -
My adventerous, young son got home last night. I had been racking my brain, trying to come up with an interesting menu. I am putting this on my list!!! I just can't decide if I should fry (everything tastes better fried) or baked (sounds oh so much easier).
Thanks for the recipes. I'm doing this tonight.
Karen -
Karen- They were surprisingly simple in the pan. Since the oven one takes some experimenting to get right I'd go with the pan the first time so you can see what you are aiming for.
Marin-I think the draining makes a big difference with avoiding the excess greasiness, but you do need some napkins. They do taste best warm but, I hear they reheat well.----Now what drink would they go well with ? I guarantee if you don't use them to nibble with a drink--
they will disappear at break neck speed! They are soooo good!
Thanks Towanda--I had several variations for the oven but could not figure out the temperature
Here are some variations.
drain and rinse a can, toss with olive oil, rosemary, salt and a tbsp of sugar, then roast for about half an hour. yum
Roasting chickpeas in the oven for about a 45 minutes until they're crispy and crunchy, and then sprinkling salt, or chili powder, or cumin/cinammon/chili, or herbs/garlic/parmesan.
and this is from seriously good
http://seriouslygood.kdweeks.com/2007/08/cece-fritos.html
Theyre so easy to do that even making them at the very last minute is practical, which is good because theyre best when eaten still warm from the skillet. Theyre also messy a greasy finger food so provide plenty of cocktail napkins.
Cece Fritos (Fried Chickpeas)
2 cans chick peas/garbanzos (15oz cans)
1/4 c olive oil
2 tsp garlic powder
3 tbsp thyme leaves
1 1/2 tsp cumin
salt and pepper to taste
Drain, rinse, and dry the chick peas. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium high heat. Add the chick peas and cook, shaking the pan occasionally, until the peas begin to pop.
Drain chick peas on a paper towel and sprinkle with seasonings, taste, and adjust seasonings. -
I sometimes buy little bags of already roasted chickpeas from a little interenational market near my house. They have several varieties with different seasonings.
I eat them for a snack, straight out of the bag, like nuts, but I try to limit my serving size because they are soooo full of fiber! -
I'm trying both recipes. They sound so good! Will report back. Given the oven , it make take a while!!!!
-
Oh, those recipes sound deliciously good! I'm getting chickpeas next time I go to Trader Joe's, and experiment!
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