76°F
weather icon Clear

Divas on a Dime: Easy hummus recipe tastes better than store-bought

This recipe makes the creamiest, fluffiest and velvety hummus, ever. In my humble opinion, this tops any grocery store hummus. But because I cheat, you can make this, easily and inexpensively, anytime!

Hummus is an eons-old middle-eastern classic. Traditionally, hummus is made from chickpeas (AKA garbanzo beans), tahini, olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, and salt. That’s it and that’s all.

Tahini is a paste of ground sesame seeds and can be a little expensive. You can substitute other nut butters but it’s not the same. I paid $5 for 16 ounces of tahini, which will make eight batches of hummus at 62 cents per batch. Once you have tahini, the major expense to make hummus is a can of garbanzos.

Usually, to make creamy hummus you’d soak dried garbanzos overnight then boil them until they’re falling apart. I don’t have that kind of forethought, I want hummus now. You could also use canned beans, but the hummus texture comes out grainy.

Here’s the cheat – simmer canned beans to make them super tender so they whip up perfectly smooth.

Then let’s make garlic-infused olive oil for roast garlic flavor without having to roast the garlic. This is one time to break out the good olive oil.

EASY HUMMUS

This recipe can easily be doubled.

What You’ll Need:

1 (15.5 ounce) can garbanzos

1 garlic clove - minced

3 tablespoons good extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for serving

¼ cup lemon juice (1 large lemon)

¼ cup tahini - well-stirred

½ teaspoon ground cumin

Kosher salt to taste

2 to 3 tablespoons water

Optional garnish - Pinch of paprika or cumin, pine nuts, parsley

Serve with - pita bread, sweet peppers, cucumber, olives

Here’s How:

Drain and rinse garbanzos and place in a saucepan. Cover with water by one inch and heat to boiling. Reduce heat and simmer beans for 20 minutes. Meanwhile, mince the garlic and place in a small pan with olive oil. Let this warm gently until the garlic starts to bubble. Turn off heat and let rest while the beans simmer. Drain and cool the beans.

The order in which you process the ingredients is important. In the bowl of a food processor, cream together the tahini and lemon juice for 1 minute, then scrape the sides of the bowl and process another minute.

Add the olive oil with garlic, cumin and salt to the tahini and lemon. Process for 1 to 2 minutes, scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl occasionally until well blended.

Add half of the chickpeas and process for 2 minutes. Scrape sides and bottom of the bowl, then add remaining chickpeas and continue to process another 2 minutes until very smooth. To make this completely smooth; slowly add 2 to 3 tablespoons of ice water until you reach the perfect consistency.

Adjust seasonings as desired. Serve drizzled with olive oil and dash of paprika.

As I wrote this column, I made the recipe three times. It kept disappearing before I could get a photograph! Enjoy!

Lifestyle expert Patti Diamond is the recipe developer and food writer of the website “Divas On A Dime – Where Frugal, Meets Fabulous!” Visit Patti at www.divasonadime.com and join the conversation on Facebook at DivasOnADimeDotCom. Email Patti at divapatti@divasonadime.com

THE LATEST
Beatty Clinic gets tons of help with new a/c

BEATTY — The Beatty Foundation, an affiliate of AngloGold-Ashanti (AGA), did tons of good at the Beatty Clinic on March 22. Nine tons, exactly.

How an injured and abandoned dog in Pahrump overcame the odds

A stray dog that was homeless, hospitalized and facing euthanasia earlier this month is now on the mend thanks to several in the community who helped raise thousands for its life-saving care.

End of an era: 50-year-old Beatty business closing

Owner Jane Cottonwood, who made ribbons, trophies and awards for organizations all over the country, plans to retire and close her shop at the end of February.

PHOTOS: How Pahrump helped dozens facing homelessness

Every three months, the Community Crisis Intervention Committee puts together the Homeless Wraparound, quarterly happenings geared specifically toward serving those experiencing homelessness in Pahrump.

PHOTOS: Wild horses come home for the holidays

The wild horse herds that were removed from the Pahrump Valley earlier this year are finally home, and just in time for Christmas. Here’s how the community came together and made it happen.