Kale Salad with Harissa-Roasted Chickpeas
COMMENTS
-
Susan Seeley on
Thanks for the delicious recipie.
This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.
Spend $50 more for FREE shippingFREE shipping will be applied at checkout
Spend $50 more for FREE shipping!FREE shipping will be applied at checkout
Sorry, looks like we don't have enough of this product.
By Erica Perez
Rated 5.0 stars by 1 users
Salad
4-6
On Sundays, if I have my act together, you'll find me prepping food for the week's lunches. And on winter Sundays, that means roasting....lots and lots of roasting. Lately, I've been putting together a lot of salads and grain bowl-type lunches. And the last few weeks I've been playing with roasted chickpeas.
Roasting chickpeas with salt, olive oil and spices gives them a crunchy nuttiness that makes them perfect as a little snack or as an add-in for salads, grain bowls or even in a burrito or a wrap. I love the flavor of Harissa on these chickpeas. The paprika-cayenne-cumin combination hits that Mediterranean note and matches up deliciously with this salad's dilly, zingy yogurt-tahini dressing.
But just about any one of our blends would be tasty with this recipe, such as Chili Powder or Za'atar.
When they're straight out of the oven, roasted chickpeas are crispy and especially snack-ready. Kept in the fridge for a few days, they'll turn a little chewier, but I like them that way too.
I tested out a couple different methods for seasoning roasted chickpeas: First, I tossed them with the olive oil, salt and Harissa before roasting. But I found that the spices tasted a little bitter, maybe because of the quantity of spice I used. Then, I tried roasting with just the oil and salt and tossing with the Harissa after roasting, while the chickpeas were still warm. This kept the flavor on point, while still allowing me to coat the chickpeas generously with spice.
This yogurt tahini salad dressing with dill is a favorite for drizzling over roasted vegetables and Mediterranean meatballs. I find that dried dill is one of the spices I reach for most often for dressings, dips and soups. We don't have dill in our garden, and when I buy it fresh, it tends to go bad before I can use it all. Plus, I think it's one of the tastiest versions of a green herb in dried form.
1 tablespoon Oaktown Spice Shop Harissa Powder
1 tablespoon dried dill weed
1 teaspoon granulated garlic
Thanks for the delicious recipie.
You’re welcome, Susan! Glad you are enjoying it!