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Crispy spiced chickpeas with roasted peppers

Sat, 20 February, 2021

⯆ JUMP TO RECIPE
Red pepper boats with the cargo of crispy spiced chickpeas cooked on the hob is a dish full of protein and fibre goodness and marvellously satisfying.

crisp spiced chickpeas with peppers cuisinefiend.com

Vegan butter doesn’t brown – what to do?

For a vegan version of this dish, the three dairy ingredients from the list need to be replaced. The cheese is optional anyway so it isn’t a problem; and there are plenty of yoghurt alternatives to serve with the dish. Butter is more problematic. Can a vegan fat/spread/margarine really be used instead of butter with the result of turning chickpeas deep brown and crisp?

The answer is, sadly: no. What browns in butter, gives flavour to chickpeas and other stuff and tickles our tastebuds with the Maillard reaction is the milk protein in dairy butter. Plant based margarines do not contain protein so the result will not be great.

Instead, for the vegan version, the chickpeas will need to be allowed to crispen in the olive oil they started to cook with – popping like corn and jumping out of the frying pan – and for extra flavour we can add some more fresh olive oil at the end of the cooking process. Only a little though, nowhere near as much as the amount of butter the recipe calls for, and only at the very end, to toast the spices but not burn.

crisped chickpeas with roasted peppers cuisinefiend.com

Crispy chickpeas – a snack like peanuts

I found the recipe for crispy chickpeas in NY Times Cooking and appreciated its value as an easy snack, but immediately decided to build it into a proper dinner dish. Chickpeas, even spicy and crispy are all very well but you can’t just pick them one by one with your fingers at the dinner table.

You might as well have a bowlful of peanuts and call it main course. Which isn’t such a stupid comparison because chickpeas and peanuts are members of the same plant family: legumes.

Chickpeas, together with lentils, split peas, kidney and other beans are a subgroup of pulses. They are actually dried seeds of the respective plants so if anyone ever tells you that they bought fresh lentils and cooked them for supper, you’ll know they are a serious fantasist.

Legumes and pulses are a good source of protein as far as plants are concerned which is why they have a bit of a hippie reputation: vegetarians and vegans reach for legumes to make up the animal protein shortfall in their diets.

brown butter chickpeas with peppers cuisinefiend.com

Chickpeas and peppers are great together

This dish is an all-round pleaser then: vegetarians can add the butter to the cooking, vegans will stick to the olive oil and the dish either way is extremely filling and satisfying. If you crave more heat than the spice of fennel and chilli flakes, add a teaspoon ground chilli or cayenne pepper to the pan.

Chickpeas with peppers are a classic, it has been proved before in the chickpea salad. I like the red pepper halves, lightly roasted on a baking sheet, like little boats filled with chickpeas sat on the shallows of yoghurt.

If you prefer courgettes (but who on earth would?), carve them into long boats and roast like the peppers, just a shorter time. You can happily use large flat field mushrooms in the same way, or big tomatoes.



Crispy spiced chickpeas with roasted peppers

Servings: 2Time: 40 minutes

INGREDIENTS

  • 2 x 400g (14 oz.) tins of chickpeas
  • 3 large peppers
  • 3 tbsp. olive oil plus more for brushing peppers
  • 1 tsp fennel seeds
  • 1 tsp chilli flakes
  • 1 tsp yellow mustard seeds
  • 50g (3½ tbsp.) cold unsalted butter, cut into pieces (or 2 tbsp. extra olive oil)
  • salt and black pepper
  • 2 tbsp. fresh lemon juice
  • 3 tbsp. grated Cheddar (optional, skip for vegan)
  • Greek yogurt or Skyr, for serving (or plant based equivalent)


METHOD

1. Drain the chickpeas, rinse them with cold water and shake of moisture. Spread them on a tray lined with paper towels to dry as best as possible.

drying chickpeas cuisinefiend.com

2. Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/gas 6. Halve and core the peppers, brush both sides of each one with oil and place on a baking tray. Roast for 10-12 minutes, turn them over and roast for 10 minutes again so they are softened and lightly charred around the edges.

roasted peppers cuisinefiend.com

3. While the peppers are roasting heat the olive oil in a large sauté pan, 30cm or so, preferably with tall sides as the chickpeas will jump around manically. Add the chickpeas to hot oil over medium heat and fry, stirring often, to uniformly crispen. It will sound like popping corn, after about 15-18 minutes the sounds should abate and the chickpeas colour and crispen.

frying chickpeas cuisinefiend.com

4. While they cook, grind the fennel, mustard seeds and the chilli flakes in pestle and mortar.

5. When the chickpeas are crisp, turn up the heat, add the spices and the cold butter and stir vigorously as the chickpeas and butter brown and nearly burn. After 1-2 minutes turn off the heat, season generously with salt and pepper and stir in the lemon juice.

chickpeas in butter cuisinefiend.com

6. Smear a large blob of Greek yoghurt or Skyr on each plate and arrange the pepper halves on it. Place a spoonful of Cheddar on each pepper half, if using. Spoon the chickpeas into the pepper halves and serve immediately.


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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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