This post contains affiliate links. Please see our disclosure policy.

Besan and Chickpea flour are Not the same. Besan or gram flour is a flour of chana dal or split brown chickpeas. Chickpea flour or garbanzo flour is ground up white chickpeas. Similar flavors, but not the same flour. Read below for differences and where to use which flour.

Chickpea flour and Besan in grey bowls for our post about the difference between besan and chickpea flour

What is besan?

Besan or gram flour is a flour of chana dal or split brown chickpeas.

What is Chickpea flour?

Chickpea flour or garbanzo flour is ground up white chickpeas or garbanzo beans. Both have similar flavor and behavior but enough difference that a substitution can sometimes mess up a recipe.

Pictured above, the top bowl has chickpea flour which is lighter, coarse and fluffy. Bottom bowl has Besan which is finer, smoother and hence more compact.

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BESAN AND CHICKPEA FLOUR?

Besan and chickpea flour are not the same. Indian Besan (Gram flour), is the flour of brown chickpeas or chana dal (split brown chickpeas), or sometimes a mix of split chickpeas and split peas. It is a flour of a type chickpeas, so it can be labeled as chickpea flour.

Can I use besan instead of chickpea flour and viceversa?

Chickpea flour (in the US) is the flour of white chickpeas and is labelled as chickpea flour or garbanzo flour.

Besan is usually much finer ground and needs much less water than chickpea flour.

White Chickpea flour is a coarse flour and usually will need more water to make same consistency batter. It also yields a dryer result on baking or other kind of use.

They taste slightly different. Sometimes, you have to take these differences into account, when substituting one for the other in a recipe. In some recipes, subs work out just fine, while others need adjusting. They both taste a bit bitter when raw, so they are not a good candidate in raw flour recipes such as edible cookie dough.

White Chickpeas and Brown Chickpeas

Indian Dal Names in Hindi and English. Glossary of Lentils, legumes, beans. | Vegan Richa

More Pictures of pulses, legumes and their names on this Page.

As you can see from the pictures, Chana Dal is basically brown chickpeas that have been split and skin removed. This chana dal is made into a flour for besan. When the besan is of brown chickpeas with the skin, then that kala chana besan has a darker hue and earthier flavor. This besan is not used as commonly as regular chana dal besan.

Recipes for Besan

Besan has a less bitter flavor profile than garbanzo flour. It works great in recipes where the flour might not always get fully cooked/roasted, or used for crispyness. For eg, crepes or thin pancakes like Chilla work best with besan. Steamed savory cakes (dhokla), fried fritters(bhajji/pakora), soups(kadhi).

For recipes like Burfi (chickpea flour and coconut fudge)  or Flan, where the flour is used as a thickener or in smaller amounts, either flour will work.

Besan also works better in baking where it is used for flavor and not volume. like cookies. But there are exceptions!

I prefer besan in my Gluten-free Baked Lemon donuts and in my Gluten-free Cinnamon Bread! Although both of these recipes need volume flour which would mean you opt for chickpea flour, that is generally not a good option. Chickpea flour in leavened gluten-free baking tends to dry out a lot more and not have enough baking time to cook out the flavor. While besan will make a more moist and more pleasant tasting result! Chickpea flour works in these baked recipes too. Just add additional icing for moisture.

More Besan Recipes

Vegan Gluten free Cinnamon Roll Bread - Yeast-free Gluten-free Grain-free Cinnamon bread Recipe. Soft, fluffy and amazing . Can be nut-free. | #vegan #glutenfree #cinnamonroll #veganricha

Recipes for Chickpea flour/garbanzo flour

For pies, quiches, frittatas or anywhere you want things to set more, or baking with thicker batter ie. it depends on volume, use chickpea flour. Eg Chickpea flour frittata, and baked fritters

Chickpea flour has more hold and works well to use in volume bakes such as fritters. Chickpea flour tofu (Burmese Tofu)made with chickpea flour is firmer and more sturdy than the one made with besan, which will be soft and more gel-ly.

For omelets, it depends on what you prefer, thinner, moist result or fluffier. For fluffier thicker omelets use chickpea flour. although it dries more, so you would need moist stuffing and some dressing.

Chickpea flour has a stronger flavor and is a dryer flour. the flavor takes longer to cook out into a nutty pleasing state. So recipes where the flour gets variable cooking times are not great with chickpea flour. Raw Chickpea flour tastes very bitter and the flavor will show easily. Use it in pies, baked fritters where volume and the mixture setting tot more solid state is important. Besan will be more souffle like while chickpea flour will set.

More Chickpea Flour Recipes

Chickpea flour Tofu. 10 min Non soy tofu made with Chickpea flour or Besan / gram flour. Easy Burmese tofu. Vegan Gluten-free Soy-free Nut-free Recipe.| VeganRicha.com #glutenfree #veganricha #vegan Chickpea Flour Frittata - Eggless Vegan Frittata Recipe. This Chickpea flour frittata is filling, easy and delicious. Use the batter to make pancakes, crepes, crustless quiche. #Vegan #Glutenfree #Soyfree #Nutfree #Recipe #veganrichaChickpea Flour Frittata - Eggless Vegan Frittata Recipe. This Chickpea flour frittata is filling, easy and delicious. Use the batter to make pancakes, crepes, crustless quiche. #Vegan #Glutenfree #Soyfree #Nutfree #Recipe #veganricha

Vegan Gluten free Naan Flatbread. Grain-free Naan Recipe. 6 Main Ingredients,  1 Bowl, and 20 Minutes. Serve with curries or slice and serve with dips or add to bowls. Soyfree Nutfree options #Vegan #Glutenfree #grainfree #Veganricha #glutenfreenaan #grainfreenaan #chickpeaflournaan Vegan Omelet with Chickpea flour #glutenfree #veganricha #vegan

Can I make Chickpea flour at home?

Yes! If you have a high speed blender, blend dry chickpeas until preferred fine consistency. Blend chana dal to make besan. It might not be as fine as store bought.

Can I use chickpea flour as a substitute for wheat flour?

Nope. Direct substitution for with-gluten flours like wheat or all purpose will rarely work.

Can I use chickpea flour or besan as a substitute for gluten-free flours in gf baking

It depends. For most baked recipes the flour will leave a raw bitter after taste. For some recipes, chickpea flour or besan can substitute a portion of the gluten-free flour blend. The recipe has to be adjusted and made especially for these flour for best results. The recipe will most likely have more flavor and sweetener and longer bake time to cook out the raw flavor from the flour.

The flavor is also a matter of getting used to. If you frequently try chickpea flour in various ways, you will most likely not find the flavor as bitter. Besan is not as bitter and might be a better substitute in some cases.

How to store chickpea flour and besan?

Like other types of flours, chickpea flour and besan should be stored in a sealed container to keep out moisture in a cool place. It stays fresh for upto 6 months,  and longer if refrigerated. Besan from Indian stores sometimes is already a few months old and has been stored in hot conditions. So I generally use it up within months or refrigerate.

I tried a recipe that called for Chickpea flour or Besan and it didn’t work?

This can easily happen for several reasons

  1. The recipe uses chickpea flour and since besan is not the same, it might need a bit of adjustment to work perfectly, like more besan or less liquid.
  2. Quite often non-Indian brands use both labels on the flours, so even though you have a flour labelled besan, it might actually be chickpea flour and vice versa.
  3. Similarly websites and blogs where it is assumed that the flours as the same, might use either in a recipe. So they might have used besan in a recipe but since it is labelled both, the reader wouldn’t know and when using chickpea flour the recipe might not work well.

Want more recipes? Check out my cookbooks!

What other questions do you have about these 2 flours! Leave me a comment below and I will try to add answers to the post.

Conclusion: Besan is Brown Chickpea flour, is finer and milder flavor. Garbanzo bean flour (white Chickpea flour) is coarse, dryer, more bitter flavored and needs more moisture. A generic Chickpea flour label can be used for either depending on your location(country), brand etc. Read the description if provided to check what chickpea is the flour of, as they both behave very differently.

About Richa

Hi, I'm Richa! I create flavorful plant based recipes that are inspired by my Indian upbringing, including many gluten-free, soy-free, and oil-free options.

You May Also Like

Leave a comment

If you Love the Recipe, Please consider rating it using stars in comments! It helps readers and helps more people find the recipe online and I love hearing from you all!

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

78 Comments

  1. Mary says:

    Hi:

    I am in Canada and I bought Desi Chickpea flour and Chickpea flour besan. Both PTI brand but the chickpea flour besan says 100% chickpea flour. HELP HUN. Is this garbanzo flour? When a recipe calls for it, can I use these.

    1. Vegan Richa Support says:

      Besan and chickpea flour are not the same. Indian Besan (Gram flour), is the flour of brown chickpeas or chana dal (split brown chickpeas), or sometimes a mix of split chickpeas and split peas. It is a flour of a type chickpeas, so it can be labeled as chickpea flour.

      Chickpea flour (in the US) is the flour of white chickpeas and is labelled as chickpea flour or garbanzo flour.

      garbanzo flour chickpea flour are the same though – so it depends on which recipe. you bought 2 different products.

    2. Richa says:

      The besan chickpea flour is besan(from the pti brand site) . The desi chickpea flour is flour of kala chana(brown chickpeas). If the brown Chickpeas haven’t been skinned then it will be darker. If they have been skinned then both are the same.

  2. Sarwat says:

    I have also noticed that a lot of Indian brands will translate besan as chickpea flour. I have also seen besan translated as gram flour but seems like chickpea flour is a very common translation for besan which can cause a LOT of confusion.

    1. Richa says:

      Yep. It is a chickpea flour. Just not the white chickpea flour but the brown chickpea flour. They are both chickpeas. 🙂

  3. Susan says:

    I just saw a chocolate chip cookie recipe on another site and it suggested baking the chickpea flour for 1-2 hours in the oven at 225 degrees F. that will release a gassy sort of smell from the flour. Let it cool before using it in your recipe and this should take most of the bitter taste out of it. what are your thoughts on this?

    1. Richa says:

      Chickpea flour is generally roasted before using in Indian sweet recipes too. So the oven roasting might work.

  4. Teri says:

    This is super helpful! One quick question – do you know if the chickpeas used in making besan flours from India have been subjected to glyphosate? I am trying to source a brand that is “clean.”

    1. Richa says:

      no idea there, you could write to one of the organic brands offering besan and ask them

  5. Seth Gordon says:

    Hello. Very interesting. Which would you recommend for frying? Either as a dry flour with egg wash, or to make a batter… I’m not vegan, so I’m imagining frying both fish fillets and/or vegetables like broccoli, zucchini and cauliflower. Thanks so much 😉

    1. Richa says:

      either will work for frying. chickpea flour batter will be thicker while besan will be thinner and crispier. Depends on the use

      1. Seth Gordon says:

        Great. I’m going to try to make English style Fish and Chips… I think I will try chickpea flour first… Thanks

  6. LNystrom says:

    I get the comparison with chickpea flour and the color differences between whole garbanzos and Chana Dal, howe, I have a bag of Chana Dal and the beans are the same beige color as larger garbanzo beans. There must be different kinds of Chans Dal

  7. Cassie Thuvan Tran says:

    Thank you so much for this clarification! I think some people view this differentiation similarly to whole wheat flour versus white whole wheat flour. One uses red spring wheat and the other uses white or yellow wheat flour. I would love to try making the chickpea tofu recipe you have, it looks absolutely marvelous!

  8. Vin says:

    Another valuable clarification from that brilliant mind and generous hearts of yours, Richa!
    Is there a general formula of how much water to increase in a recipe when switching from besan to the drier chickpea flour?

    1. Richa says:

      i’ll figure that out and add that to the post eventually:)

  9. Zanna says:

    I just tried it today and the flour quickly came out really fine and fresh-smelling and I made yummy chickpea tofu with it! The blender I have bought here is way better than any blender I’ve had in UK and it was a lot cheaper as well. It has 3 jars – the middle sized one has a blade that goes close to the sides for grinding dry spice mixtures. I use that jar for making rice flour and it worked for the chickpeas too.

    1. Richa says:

      Yes the Indian grinders, blenders if you get the right ones, are superior. Its hard to make a good Idli batter even in Blendtec which is a high powered blender here in the US. People end up buying a wet grinder specially for idli dosa batter!

      1. Zanna says:

        Yeah, I’m super grateful to Indian consumers for demanding blenders that actually work. I used to live in a flatshare that had a £600 blender and it was made of plastic and wouldn’t even puree spinach properly. I think UK blenders are designed just to make smooth soup (and I prefer mine chunky!) People here tell me they manage to use a blender for idli/dosa (I found it impossible in UK!) but I have bought a 2l wet grinder since I feel it does a better job (fluffier batter), is easier (press button, come back in 30 minutes, voila) and with the blender it’s hard to stop it heating up too much (killing off the microorganisms). It works better on soybeans etc too and it wasn’t expensive. It’s just cleaning it that’s a bit of a hassle! But I’m drifting from the topic here…

  10. Zanna says:

    OMG thank you so much for sharing this expertise!

    Especially for the tip that we can make chickpea flour by grinding at home. Here in Chennai I can’t find chickpea flour but can buy white chickpeas everywhere (and besan of course), so this post has unlocked a whole bunch of recipes for me 🙂 It’s so good when you realise the limits you perceived are not real!

    1. Richa says:

      🙂 you will need a good blender or a grain mill for a good flour

    2. Sue says:

      Richa, this was such a comprehensive post. I’ve asked for clarity in the Indian store before and they were nowhere near as helpful as you! Thank you. You and your review are truly the best! ❤️Sue

      1. Richa says:

        I think its a matter of not knowing. Indian store people might not have ever seen or used the garbanzo flour. I hadn’t seen it in India and used it only here. While Non-Indian people might have never heard of besan. So either of them might not have the answer.