made this for dinner last night. my gf found the recipe online but i modified it bc it was written by mayos who only seasoned with salt, pepper, and celery seed. i also substituted diced celery with diced carrots since i like carrots, but my gf told me she would prefer celery so ill prob do half and half next time. i also didn’t add green onions bc i didn’t wanna go to the store, i will prob add them next time
ingredients (this makes a good amount, prob 6 sandwiches worth):
- 4.5 cup dry chickpeas (45 oz if using canned chickpeas)
- 2 large carrots
- 6 cloves garlic
- 6-8 tbsp vegan mayo or cashew cream (less if using canned chickpeas)
- 4 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 tbsp celery seed
- 1 tbsp thyme
- salt
- pepper
- cumin
- turmeric
- paprika
- soak dry chickpeas in lightly salted water for 12-24 hours
- you can get the skins off chickpeas after soaking them by rubbing them together w ur hands and decanting the water (skins will stay at the top of the water longer than the chickpeas). there are other methods of deskinning chickpeas, find something that works for you
- put chickpeas in pot of salted water, bring to rolling boil then bring heat down to a simmer and cook covered for 2 hours or until the chickpeas are soft. as soon as the water comes to a boil, you will notice foam. this is aquafaba, formed when loose starch mixes w the boiling water. you can just scoop the foam and discard it (or keep it as an egg substitute). once you scoop out all the foam from the first few minutes of boiling, it shouldnt form any more and you won’t have to worry abt boiling over.
- drain chickpeas and mash them. i just used my hands to squish them
- dice carrots into small chunks (under 1 cm) and finely dice garlic. add to chickpeas
- add vegan mayo/cashew cream, lemon juice, celery seed, and thyme. mix well
- salt and season to taste
i spread this between slices of toasted bread with onion and tomato slices. makes a great sandwich and is good by itself too!
Pro-tips:
You can add vegan "fishy" flavour to this dish by adding in minced nori, or even powdered kombu if you want to go all-out.
If you want to skip the step of removing the chickpea skins and you want to cut down the cooking time significantly, pick up a bag of channa dal (or split chickpeas) from your local indian grocer because they come pre-skinned and due to being split this decreases the overall cooking time while having no impact on the overall dish as you're going to mash them up anyway
yeah i need to find some nori for that. ill look into kombu too, never heard of it!
I throw a half sheet of kombu in a couple of my bean dishes while they cook (refried beans, BBQ baked beans, etc), adds a really nice depth almost like a super bay leaf.
I always do canned chickpeas or dry channa dal. Whole dry chickpeas take so long!
I've been using ume plum vinegar for "fishiness" but it's almost impossible to find and just ran out. Very interested to try Nori/kombu next time, thanks for the tip!