T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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873.1 | Hummus bi Tahini is easy to make | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Dec 11 1987 17:37 | 10 |
| It's not hard to make, if you own a blender or food processor, anyhow.
In the processor, mix about half a cup of tahini (sesame seed paste,
but don't try to make it yourself - if the Big D doesn't have any,
I know for sure that the Victory up the street does), one large
can of chickpeas (garbanzos - drained, of course), a sprinkle of
lemon juice, some chopped garlic or even garlic powder, and some
cumin. Spin this mixture until it is smooth enough to dip your
pita bread in - you may need to add water. Some people add or sprinkle
on top of the hummus some olive oil. Some people add or sprinkle
some paprika. Some people would be horrified by the cumin.
|
873.2 | I think there's an older note about this too. | PSTJTT::TABER | Alimentary, my dear Watson | Mon Dec 14 1987 09:30 | 15 |
| Re: .-1
I am horrified by the cumin. I recommend the olive oil (you
want the real high quality cold-pressed, extra extra virgin stuff. It
should be green. The yellow stuff has no flavor and is meant for high
temp cooking, not for flavoring food.) Although it's hard to keep your
fingers out of it, you should let it rest in the fridge at least
overnight. That lets all the flavors get together.
The sesame paste should have directions for hummus on the side. If you
really go through large amounts, you might want to buy the paste at a
(yuck) health food store where you can buy it in bulk at a much lower
cost.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
873.3 | Take it from it's origin | JACOB::ALKOTOB | | Tue Dec 15 1987 10:33 | 20 |
|
I too recommend the olive oil. The cumin spoil the humus real
taste. When you open the humus can, drain the water, and add some
tab water and a pinch of baking soda. Get the humus to boil for
5 minutes, This will soften the chich peas (humus) skin. Drain the
water, but don't waste it because you will need some of it later.
Add some fresh minced garlic, don't use powder, and fresh squeezed
lemon juice and tahini. Use 1/2 cup for every can of humus and about
2 medium lemons. Also don't forget the salt. You don't have to leave
it in the fridge at all. You can eat it warm. This is the way we
eat it back in the middle east.
Try this
Cook 1/2 lb of groud meat. In a seperate pan, fry some pine nuts/seeds
with 2 ts of butter of margarin until the pine nuts are light brown.
When the meat has no more water, add the cooked pine nutes with
the butter and add a pinch of all spice. Let it cook together for
two minutes and then put it on top of the humus and enjoy.
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873.4 | | DARTS::WIERSUM | The Back Deck Wizard | Wed Dec 16 1987 15:33 | 5 |
|
re .1
Never... never use GARLICK POWDER!
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873.5 | Easy Hummus | BRSIS0::STAHLY | | Thu Jun 22 1989 05:23 | 20 |
| Okay, this is really easy. I take one can of chick peas (I think
the can is about 16 ounces) and drain it. I dump the chick peas
in the food processor and add as much garlic as I want (I usually
crush it first and discard the bit that remains in the garlic crusher),
a tablespoon of tahini (oriental sesame oil), and some lemon juice.
Process until smooth and add more lemon juice until you get the
right consistency. I think I use less than 1/4 cup lemon juice.
Spoon into serving bowl. Swirl a bit of oil into the top and serve
with warm pita bread and fresh red onion slices (my dad once taught
me the best way to separate onion slices - cut the onion in half
and then each half into quarters and then throw them into a plastic
bag and shake them around until the onion separates, it's fast,
easy, and your hands don't smell of onion, and your eyes don't tear).
I don't know how you'd do it with beans and peas but everything
is worth a try.
Christine :^) (who happens to have a bowl of hummus in the fridge
as we speak)
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873.6 | Don't drain the chick peas | ISLNDS::BARR_S | | Thu Jul 06 1989 13:45 | 11 |
| That's the recipe I use, except I use the liquid in the chick peas,
it keeps the right consistancy. You might want to drain it and
set it aside and just add a little at a time while you are processing
it. Also add a little paprika to the mixture and sprinkle some
on top, it adds to the color.
I noticed in Donelan's over in Acton they have a lot of varieties
of Hummus. You might want to check them out. Look at the ingredients
and you will know if they use other beans or peas.
|
873.7 | Some more variations | WOODRO::ARDEN | Bush, just say NO!! | Tue Jul 25 1989 12:09 | 13 |
| Re: .2
Tahini is sesame paste not oil. It comes in quite a variety of types from
smoked to raw to toasted. Arrowhead Mills makes a very good toasted
tahini. The different types will make different tasting hummus. Another
tip is to add some tamari or soy sauce to the recipe. It gives it another
very different taste.
I am not sure what type of beans you wanted to make the hummus with, but
you could probably add any kind of bean into the food processor and see how
it turns out.
Ron
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873.8 | Calories/Fat Content on Hommus | ISLNDS::FIELD_C | | Mon Mar 11 1991 11:08 | 8 |
| Lately, I have started to eat hommus on pita bread. I wonder if
anyone knows or has any caloric or nutritional information on this
spread.
Thanks!
Corey
|
873.9 | It's probably pretty reasonable if you're dieting | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Mon Mar 11 1991 12:26 | 10 |
| Offhand, I don't know, but if you make the hummus yourself it ought to
be pretty easy to compute: 1 large can of garbanzos, drained (hopefully
has caloric count printed on the label), about half a cup of tahini
(ditto - may be fairly dietwise expensive since it contains a lot of
oil), some lemon juice (negligible), garlic or garlic powder and cumin
if you use it (free), plus enough water to make a good consistency
(also free). Some people put a little olive oil on top (a few
calories) or some paprika (free).
/Charlotte
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873.10 | middle-eastern food on a diet | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Mar 11 1991 15:05 | 30 |
| Chickpeas are a low-fat legume. You will be eating a great deal of salt if
you use canned chickpeas or commercially prepared hummus, so if it is a
concern, buy the chickpeas dried and cook them yourself. The package will
have instructions. Any middle-eastern cookbook will have hummus recipes.
As an alternative to hummus, you might try a yoghurt-based dip, something
made with plain yoghurt, mint, garlic, a little salt, a grind or two
of black pepper, and seeded, drained, chopped cucumber. I also add seeded,
drained, diced tomato and some diced onion. all amounts are "to taste", so
start with:
2 cups plain, low-fat yoghurt
1 clove garlic, pressed
1 teaspoon dried mint, crushed
1/4 teaspoon salt
a grind of black pepper
1 cup of cucumber that is peeled, seeded, pressed in
paper towel to remove moisture, and diced fine
1/4 cup diced onion
1/4 cup diced, seeded, drained ripe tomato
Let this sit in the refrigerator for an hour or so.
It makes a great dip for pita bread, a great sauce for grilled chicken, a
great cold soup...it is wonderful, and very middle-eastern.
Minimize the amount of tahini you use - it is very high-fat, and that means
the worst kind of calories.
The pita bread is made without fat, if I remember correctly, so it is all
good calories, and not very many at that.
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873.11 | If you add exchanges | AKOCOA::THORP | | Mon Mar 11 1991 16:58 | 6 |
| If you add up the "Weight Watchers" exchanges, hummus adds up to be
approximately 230 calories per 1/3 cup. As stated in the previous
replies, you can reduce the calories by preparing it yourself.
Chris
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873.12 | Make it Yourself!!! | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Mon Mar 11 1991 17:37 | 5 |
| I should add that it tastes SOOOO much better if you make it yourself
with your own chick peas. After you boil the chick peas (for 2 hours)
you save the liquid. That, and some fresh lemon juice, will make the
hummous the consistency that you want.
|
873.13 | Look on the Tahini can | BOSOX::KIMBALL | | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:47 | 3 |
| There is a recipie for it on cans of Tahini. I think the Tahini
would be the most fattening part and as I recall it's not that bad.
Reid
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873.14 | An Informal Recipe | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:32 | 35 |
| I buy the Sahadi tahini. Don't remember seeing the recipe on there,
but it is very, very easy.
I cup dry chick peas. Soak overnight, or at least 2-4 hrs.
Throw out the liquid they soaked in.
Put into a pan, cover with more water, and then boil for 2 hours. You
may have to add more water occasionally.
After the two hours, drain the chickpeas, but SAVE THE WATER. Using a
food processor or blender, grind the chick peas to a puree, using and
adding the water you boiled them in to make a smoother consistency.
Other ingredients to be added include: tahini - the sesame paste. To
Taste. Start with a few tablespoons. Do you like the taste? Add more
if you like the taste of sesame. Next add a fresh clove of garlic (I
had 2-3 large cloves!!! I *LOVE* garlic. Then add the juice of a fresh
lemon, some salt and pepper.
When I made fresh hummus 2 weeks ago, I just kept adding ingredients, a
little at a time, 'til I got the hummus consistency and taste to exactly
the way I wanted it... a little more salt, a little more garlic, a
little more lemon juice... Start out conservatively and then just keep
adding as you wish.
When you are ready to serve the hummus, you may garnish with a sprig of
parsley, a few black olives, and a little olive oil in the middle.
Some people sprinkle paprika on the top for color. The traditional
Arabic way to enjoy hummus is by scooping it onto little
"shovels/scoops" made by torn pieces of fresh syrian {pita} bread.
A friend of mine once offered me some of her hummos. She said she
followed my directions. When I tasted it I knew something was wrong!
She used canned chick peas, and I could definitely taste the
difference. It had the "taste of a can," if you know what I mean.
|
873.15 | | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Wed Mar 13 1991 06:14 | 16 |
| Graham Kerr just did amshow on hummus yesterday. He used 2 cans of
chick peas (for speed), but recommended soaking and boiling your own.
To that he added about 4 cloves of galric, a few tablespoons of lemon
juice, 1/4 cup tahini, some cayenne, parsley and cilantro. Not totally
authentic, but lower in calorie than the authentic variety, and the
herbs add some flavor to it in the absence of all the oil.
A side note: Tahini is roughly the same as oil in terms of caloric
content, i.e., about 100 calories per tablespoon. Most commercial
hummus is made with a generous amount of tahini, and olive oil is used
to get thede right texture. If you use cooking juices to get the
texture right, you'll save a lot of calories right there.
Also, if you eat hummus with whole wheat pita, the result is a complete
protien (like rice and beans, or peanut butter on whole wheat). A very
nutritious and healthy alternative to meat.
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873.16 | How hummous is served | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:31 | 16 |
| Hummous is traditionally served spread about about 1/2 inch thick on a
plate. Swirl the surface with a spatula, drizzle on some olive oil,
sprinkle with cayenne or other milder red pepper, garnish with chopped
parsley and black brine-cured olives, and serve with a basket of
quartered or torn pita bread for dipping. YUMM!
This is how it's served in Israel. It's served with either
Arabic-style pickled vegetables or a salad of chopped fresh vegetables.
Strong tea or espresso coffee goes well too. To be really extravagent,
grill shish-kebab skewers of lamb, tomato, pepper, and onion. Or serve
wedges of mild cheese - Israeli custom. Or feta cheese - Greek style.
A good dessert is fresh oranges. I've served quartered oranges, dates,
and almonds for a real mid-Eastern effect. My guests loved it.
|
873.17 | The BEST Hummus | WAGON::KRUEGER | | Mon Nov 02 1992 14:40 | 18 |
| My daughter makes the best hummus I've ever tasted and she got the
recipe from her father-in-law:
2 cans chick peas, one drained and one UNdrained
1/2 c. tahini paste
7 cloves garlic
1/4 c. olive oil
3 tbs. lemon juice
1/4 tsp. sesame oil
1 tbs. rice vinegar
1/2 tsp. cumin
1 tbs. soy sauce
couple dashes red-pepper sauce
optional: 1/4 c. shredded onion and/or sesame seeds (she didn't use
this option)
Serve with pita bread or bermuda onions .. the BEST!!!
|
873.18 | Blend the prev. note ingredients! | WAGON::KRUEGER | | Mon Nov 02 1992 14:59 | 3 |
| Oops, I should have told you to BLEND the ingredients in .17 ... my
daughter uses a regular blender.
|
873.19 | fresh! | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Nov 10 1992 12:48 | 12 |
| I have made hummous many, many times in my past (used to have lots of
friends from Saudi Arabia). Anyway... I've made it a few times with
canned chick peas, but most of the time with real fresh/dried chick
peas. I can definitely taste the difference.
Now when I make it I only use fresh ingredients. Even my lemon juice
is fresh.
This stuff is awesome and always goes fast!
Rgds,
marcia
|
873.20 | Try this!! | FABSIX::V_CHAGAIAN | | Sun May 05 1996 23:55 | 29 |
| Hi
I used to have a Middle Eastern restaurant in Worcester and was
told this recipe was one of the best. So here it is. ( I used to make
this in #10 can quantities which are big bulk size cans of chick peas.
This recipe is perportioned to the original recipe).
2 cans of Progresso 16 oz. chick peas
2 tb spoons of tahini
1 tea spoon of cumin (level)
1/2 tea spoon of salt
3/4 to 1 cup of consentrated lemon juice
1/2 cup of cold bottled water.
4 large cloves of garlic
First: drain 2 cans of chick peas. place in a blender or a food
processor, add 2 full tablespoons of tahini, add 1 teaspoon of cumin,
add 1/2 teaspoon of salt, add 1 cup of lemon juice 4 cloves of garlic.
run blender on high speed make sure all chick pease are blended.
add water until hummus is the consistancy of smooth icecream (not too
loose). if all water is used use more lemon juice. if consistancy is
too smooth add more drained chick peas ( and 1/2 teaspoon of tahini).
Cut pita bread in half to form a pocket. put some shredded lettuc,
sliced garden tom., sliced onions litely oil with olive oil and spread
hummus in pocket. Enjoy.
Vasken
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873.21 | a couple of questions. | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | | Tue May 28 1996 13:13 | 13 |
| Hi,
I have a question, or two. First you call out 'concentrated' lemon
juice. Do you mean reconsituted -- like the kind you buy in squeeze
lemon? I love fresh lemon juice over bottled -- so can I simply use
the same quantity of lemon juice?
Second question is the 'bottled water' -- just plain old bottled
spring water or do you mean a fizzing water?
The recipe looks wonderful. Thanks for entering it.
carel
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873.22 | Use fresh lemon juice if preferred | FABSIX::V_CHAGAIAN | | Tue Jun 25 1996 00:52 | 14 |
|
6/24/96
Hi
You can use fresh lemon juice , and the bottled water is just bottled
'spring water'. The only thing is if you use fresh lemon juice use half the
amount of water because fresh lemon juice is less concentrated then bottled
lemon juice.
Vasken
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873.23 | thanks - *great* recipe! | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | | Tue Jul 02 1996 12:55 | 9 |
| I've made your recipe 4 or 5 times already! WOW is it wonderful!!
I just came back from vacationing at the beach where we had your
hummus on bagels for breakfast, as a dip with pita crisps for a snack,
and as a spread on fresh pita bread in a sandwich.
The taste is 100% better than store bought!
Thanks,
Carel
|
873.24 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Tue Sep 03 1996 14:40 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 873.20 by FABSIX::V_CHAGAIAN >>>
> -< Try this!! >-
>
> Hi
> I used to have a Middle Eastern restaurant in Worcester and was
> told this recipe was one of the best. So here it is. ( I used to make
> this in #10 can quantities which are big bulk size cans of chick peas.
> This recipe is perportioned to the original recipe).
I also tried it....THANKS!
instead of the concentrated lemon juice, I put in one lemon...
does that seem right. a CUP of concentrated lemon juice seems
like a lot.
Could you put in the recipe that uses a #10 can of Chick Peas?
Thanks...its great
bob
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873.25 | Substitute for Tahini | SALES::SIMMONS | | Wed Sep 04 1996 17:43 | 7 |
| This looks like a great recipe ... unfortunately my son is allergic to
the Tahini (also milk, eggs, peanuts, nuts). This looks like a good
"dip" for him without the Tahini ... is there a substitute or would
just omitting it change the taste too much?
Joyce
|
873.26 | | APSMME::RAMSAY | | Thu Sep 05 1996 10:49 | 3 |
| Peanut butter can be substituted for tahini, but that doesn't help you,
unfortunately...
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873.27 | substitute flavors | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | | Thu Sep 05 1996 12:54 | 8 |
| In the grocery store they sell 5-6 different flavors of hummus ... only
a couple of which have tahini on the label. Usually it's the
'original' that has tahini actually listed.
I'd just try a plain batch w/o tahini -- then try adding other
flavorful ingredients. Perhaps not authentic, but good none-the-less.
Carel
|
873.28 | Lower fat without tahini | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Thu Sep 05 1996 12:55 | 4 |
| I omit the tahini sometimes, to lower the fat content. Doesn't taste
exactly the same, but if he has never had it WITH the tahini, he
certainly won't notice the difference : )
Sarah
|
873.29 | Where do you get tahini? | USDEV::GERACE | Cindy Gerace @297-3884 | Tue Sep 10 1996 15:24 | 7 |
| Where can you buy tahini? I'm assuming it's some kind of a paste?
We've looked in various grocery stores (Stop 'N Shop, Shaws), but
haven't been able to find it and we really want to try this recipe!
Thanks,
- Cindy
|
873.30 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Wed Sep 11 1996 00:52 | 4 |
| I get it at my local Supermarket, but before it started carrying
anything "exotic" I could pick tahini up and any healthfood store.
meg
|
873.31 | | STAR::64822::DKOSKO | Dancin' on a bubble full of trouble... | Wed Sep 11 1996 10:03 | 5 |
| I'm sure that I've bought Tahini at Shaw's in the recent past. It's also
carried by Shop and Save, Demoula's and Victory. Look in the imported, or
ethnic food section.
dave
|
873.32 | | USDEV::GERACE | Cindy Gerace @297-3884 | Wed Sep 11 1996 14:06 | 5 |
| Thanks, I thought I had looked in every aisle, but I'll try again. I
even tried searching for it in the computerized directory, but couldn't
find it.
- Cindy
|
873.33 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Wed Sep 11 1996 20:48 | 4 |
| Try looking where the unprocessed peanut and almond butters are. That
is where my market hids theirs.
meg
|
873.34 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Thu Sep 12 1996 21:42 | 6 |
873.35 | | CASDOC::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Sat Sep 14 1996 13:48 | 3 |
873.36 | ...small correction | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | | Mon Sep 16 1996 13:10 | 10 |
873.37 | making your own tahini | MPGS::MILLS | | Tue Sep 17 1996 11:06 | 3 |
873.38 | Freeze hummus? | USDEV1::GERACE | Cindy Gerace @297-3884 | Tue Apr 22 1997 23:10 | 8 |
| Can hummus be frozen? When I got to the trouble of making it, I like
to make a big batch, but we can't eat it that quickly. I'm going to
try to freeze some as a test, but I was curious if anyone had ever
tried it.
Thanks,
- Cindy
|