Ingredients:
1-1.5 cup sprouted kala chana/brown chickpeas(1/2 cup dried kala chana, soaked and sprouted will yield a bit more than 1 cup)
2 teaspoons organic safflower or canola oil
1/8 teaspoon asafoetida (hing) omit to make gluten-free
1 teaspoon Cumin seeds (Jeera)
1 green chili/Serrano finely chopped or chili powder to taste
1 tablespoon chopped ginger
2 Tablespoons chopped garlic
2 teaspoons coriander powder (sukha dhania)
½ teaspoon turmeric (haldi)
1/2 medium onion chopped
2 medium tomatoes chopped
1 teaspoon salt or to taste
a few Tablespoons of chopped cilantro for garnish
Â
Method
To Sprout: Wash and soak the chickpeas in 2 cups of water overnight. Drain and rinse. You can use these soaked chickpeas to make the curry as well or proceed to sprout.
For Sprouting, sprinkle a little water on the rinsed chickpeas, cover with a damp thin kitchen towel, or damp paper towel and then keep a light lid. Drain and rinse every 6-8 hours for 1-2 days until sprouted.
For the curry: Heat oil in a pressure cooker over medium high heat.
Add cumin seeds and cook until they sizzle and get fragrant.  Add asafetida, onion, ginger, garlic and chili.
Cook for 5-7 minutes over medium heat stirring occasionally until onions are golden.
Add turmeric, coriander powder, garam masala and mix for a few seconds.
Add the tomatoes and cook for another 5-7 minutes until tomatoes aresaucy.
Add sprouted or soaked chickpeas, 3 cups of water, salt and cook on medium heat for 2 whistles and then on low-medium heat for another 2-3 whistles. (15-20 minutes after the pressure has reached). Let the pressure release naturally. Taste and adjust salt and spice.Â
Serve hot garnished with chopped cilantro with Rice or Roti flat bread.
Â
(Alternate method: Blend the onions, tomatoes, ginger, garlic and spices into a smooth puree with a little water if needed.
Add to pan once the cumin seeds crackle. Add the rest of the spices and puree and cook over low heat until the puree darkens, thickens and leaves the sides of the pan. 15-18 minutes depending on the water content.
Add chickpeas and pressure cook for 4 whistles as above.
Â
No Pressure Cooker: Add an extra cup of water and cook the sprouted chickpeas on low-medium heat, covered for 40-50 minutes.
Or add slow cooker cooked chickpeas, cook partially covered on low-medium for 20-25 minutes or until desired curry consistency.)
Â
Notes:
Sprouted chickpeas are softer and already more edible, so they can take less cooking time. You can also use slow cooker to cook the brown chickpeas and keep ready. As the brown chickpeas are hardy, they takes longer in any form to pick up the spices and flavors. Taste in between and adjust cooking time to your preference.
You can also use these chickpeas in your fave chana masala recipe. The end result will be a darker curry with nuttier chickpeas!
Â
Â
Beautiful dish and sounds very tasty! I’m with Caitlin – any tips for those of us without pressure cookers? 🙂
Cook in a partially covered pan. Add the water from the cooked beans an cook for 20 odd minutes until the curry thickens and picks up the color of the chickpeas.:)
i’ve never had black chickpeas, but they sound amazing! i really want to make this now! how would i make this if i don’t have a pressure cooker and was using cooked chickpeas?
they are amazing:) Cook in a partially covered pan. Add the water from the cooked beans an cook for 20 odd minutes until the curry thickens and picks up the color of the chickpeas.:)
wow very tempting chana masala,luks gr8!
Sounds wonderful, thanks.
BTW You are welcome to join in my monthly food blogger event THE SOUP KITCHEN, here for entry details and current theme. New theme each month. All bloggers are welcome, hope to see you participate soon.
wow!they look so yum…love the grams, gonna try them out soon. Great clicks!
Delicious, this is a frequent in my kitchen since its my hubby’s fav…great clicks
https://shwetainthekitchen.blogspot.com
Kala chana are so pretty! I don’t think I’ve ever seen them before, but I’ll keep an eye out the next time I’m in an international market.
I use cumin everyday. It’s such a useful spice and covers the gamut of cuisines. I never grind my own cumin powder, but after reading your take on it, now I think I should!
they are these really hard chickpeas and have a completely different flavor. i should grind cumin at home more often too. i just use it fairly quickly:)
I am amazed by all these legumes you show us that I never knew existed! I would love to try these, I must find myself an international market soon and snag some!
we eat too many legumes for sure:)
Looks lovely. I’m coming over for dinner, I hope that’s ok. 😉
sure!:)
I’m loving the set up for this shoot here! I like the patterns 🙂
& chickpeas rock, so this probably tastes awesome!
Thanks Kammie:) Chickpeas do rock,and these taste completely different!