Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Dried chickpeas provide better flavor than canned.
  • Cooking the chickpeas until they're very tender leads to a hummus with the best texture.

Several weeks ago, my wife brought home some dinner she'd picked up from a Middle Eastern restaurant on her way from work. I tore open one of the aluminum trays and took a spoonful of its contents, an unrecognizable mishmash of chickpeas in a custardy sauce.

"What's this?" I asked.

"I think it's hummus," she said.

Hrm, not hummus, I thought, before scarfing it up. Afterwards, I did a little Googling and found that, indeed, itwashummus—a variant calledmasabacha, ormsabbahaormusabbahaormusbacha, or probably a dozen other spellings depending on your chosen transliteration of the original Arabic and Hebrew words for "swimming." Swimming, because the chickpeas are left whole, bobbing in the creamy tahini sauce.

Luckily, I'd recently received a copy of Emily Kaiser Thelin's excellentUnforgettable, a book about cookbook author Paula Wolfert's life. In it, I found a recipe for masabacha, which Wolfert dubbed "Deconstructed Hummus." I can't think of a better way to describe it.

I've since found many more recipes for masabacha, and, while there are differences from one to the next, the basic idea is the same: Make hummus, but stop before blending all the chickpeas into the tahini sauce.

Wolfert assembles hers by first putting down a pile of seasoned chickpeas, then spooning the tahini sauce, plus lots of parsley, on top. Others stir the chickpeas and tahini sauce together, then spoon all of it onto the plate. Sometimes, a small quantity of chickpeas or hummus is blended into the tahini, with even more whole chickpeas added after that. The websiteHumus101.comdescribes renditions that are thicker and thinner, spicier and milder, some served warm and others not.

What's so fun about it is that it opens up so many more possibilities in the world of hummus, an entire spectrum of new textures, consistencies, flavorings, and presentations. It's also really easy to make. You can start with your favorite hummus recipe, but I beg you to use cooked-from-dried chickpeas if at all possible, not canned ones. I made the mistake of doing one round of testing on this recipe with canned chickpeas, just to speed things up, and there was almost nothing to like about the results. This is a dish in which success rises and falls with the quality and flavor of the chickpeas. While you can fake it by simmering canned chickpeas with aromatic vegetables and herbs, you might as well just go all the way and start from dried at that point, since the amount of effort you'll expend is nearly the same.

Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (1)

It's also critical to cook the chickpeas until they're as tender as they can be. Chickpeas are a strange legume in this regard—they canseemdone long before they truly are. Once you've cooled down a batch that you thought was soft enough, it's not uncommon to discover they've regained a firm and gritty texture. Take them further than you think they should go, because a melting, velvety bite is what you want. If some of the chickpeas fall to pieces in the process, so be it.

Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (2)

For my version, I started withKenji's hummus recipe here on Serious Eats, which, in turn, is partly based on the one from Chef Michael Solomonov in his cookbook,Zahav. Kenji had already done a ton of the heavy lifting of testing all the factors, from how to make the tahini sauce so that it's loaded with garlic flavor without being too pungent (answer: blend the whole garlic cloves in lemon juice, a trick picked up from Solomonov) to whether to use baking soda in the chickpeas' soaking and cooking water (answer: yes and yes) and how best to deal with the chickpea skins (answer: cook the crap out of them, which is good, because we want to do that for the masabacha anyway).

Really, most of the work I had to do was tinkering a little with the procedure to make it suitable for masabacha. The final process is as simple asmaking tahini sauce, blending it with a small portion of cooked chickpeas, then folding that with an even greater quantity of whole cooked chickpeas. Add a lot of parsley and some toppings—good olive oil at the minimum, paprika,za'atar, toasted pine nuts—and you're all set.

Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (3)

Of course, the funny thing about all of this is that I should have known I was looking at hummus from the moment I opened that to-go container: Allhummusreally means is "chickpeas" in Arabic. Exactly what you do with those chickpeas is up to you, which is precisely to point of hummus masabacha.

November 2017

Recipe Details

Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe

Active15 mins

Total10 hrs 15 mins

Serves8to 10 servings

Ingredients

  • 1/2 pound dried chickpeas (about 1 1/4 level cups; 225g)

  • 2 teaspoons (12g) baking soda, divided

  • Kosher salt

  • 1 small onion, split in half

  • 1 small stalk celery

  • 1 small carrot

  • 2 medium cloves garlic

  • 2 bay leaves

  • 1 sprig rosemary(optional)

  • 1 to 1 1/2 cups (235 to 350ml) tahini sauce with garlic and lemon

  • 1/3 cup (50g) minced flat-leaf parsley leaves and tender stems

  • Extra-virgin olive oil, for serving

  • Za'atar, paprika, toasted pine nuts, and/or chopped fresh parsley, for garnish (optional)

  • Warm pita bread, for serving

Directions

  1. Combine chickpeas, 1 teaspoon (6g) baking soda, and 2 tablespoons (24g) salt in a large bowl. Cover with 6 cups (1.4L) cold water. Stir to dissolve salt and baking soda. Let stand at room temperature overnight. Drain and rinse chickpeas thoroughly.

    Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (4)

  2. Place chickpeas in a large Dutch oven or saucepan. Add remaining baking soda, 1 tablespoon (12g) salt, onion, celery, carrot, garlic, bay leaves, and rosemary, if using. Add 6 cups (1.4L) water and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce to a simmer, cover with lid slightly cracked, and cook until chickpeas are completely tender and nearly falling apart, about 1 hour 30 minutes. Check on chickpeas occasionally and top up with more water if necessary; they should be completely submerged at all times. Let cool slightly.

    Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (5)

  3. Discard onion, garlic, celery, carrot, bay leaves, and rosemary. Drain chickpeas, reserving their cooking water.

  4. In a blender or food processor, combine 1 cup (235ml) tahini sauce with about one-quarter of the cooked chickpeas and blend until very smooth, with a thick but pourable milkshake-like consistency. Thin with a little of the reserved cooking liquid if necessary (but be careful not to thin too much at once; you can always thin more, but can't remove liquid once it's added). Season with salt.

    Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (6)

  5. In a mixing bowl, combine tahini mixture with remaining chickpeas and parsley. Stir until thoroughly mixed and chickpeas are coated in a creamy sauce. (If you prefer the sauce thinner, gently work in a little more of the reserved cooking liquid.) You can refrigerate the hummus at this point; it will become thicker in the refrigerator.

    Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (7)

  6. Spoon onto a serving dish, drizzle with olive oil, and top with garnishes of your choice. Serve with warm pita bread.

Special Equipment

High-powered blender or food processor

Hummus Masabacha (Hummus With Whole Chickpeas) Recipe (2024)
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