Falafels

I know, its been weeks. Things have been busy. It’s May. My days consist of: sleeping when possible; drinking too much coffee; building lego castles; hiding in bedroom forts; doing mass mountains of laundry; running in the park; tee ball games; hanging upside-down from the monkey bars; pulling up crabgrass to enable pooper-scooper duty (dootie?); cooking a lot but forgetting to take photos until everything’s demolished; catching flies for our two newest family additions (pacific tree frogs); trying to answer every “Juuuuulie! I neeeed yoooou!” patiently, without sounding too worn out or grumpy. It has been fantastic. We’ve finally had some sunshine, which essentially means as much time outdoors as possible, and as little staring at the magic glow of a computer screen time as possible. I’ve tried to figure out where my days go, but it’s a lost cause. We had the 5½ year old for an extra week or so… which essentially means my hours of functionality are different from the weeks we don’t have kids in the house. 7AM to 9PM is full, which leaves 10 hours to fill with blog-things, dishes, hungry puppies, laundry mountains, much needed quiet time filled with NOTHING… and sleep. Blog things aren’t at the top of my list, apparently.

However, no matter how busy our schedules, we have to eat, right? Right. These falafels are pretty easy and very delicious. We ate them rolled up in flatbread, with tzatziki sauce, cucumber-tomato-mint salad, feta, romaine lettuce, tahini, and sirracha sauce. I could’ve easily forgone the bread and ate a bed of greens/salad with the falafel balls on top… along with the tzatziki, which is my new favorite sauce… ever.

There’s a spot in San Francisco that my Mister swears has the utmost to-die-for falafel you can order on the West Coast. A tiny hole-in-the-wall spot. Truly Mediterranean in the Mission (16th St. at Valencia). While I don’t remember too much about our falafel (except that I didn’t care for the eggplant that was added into it), I do remember the falafel balls themselves being remarkably delicious… and seeing a big bowl of bright green falafel balls ready to be fried into crispy goodness, behind the counter. At the time I didn’t realize the inside of a falafel ball that hasn’t been previously frozen or come from a mysterious boxed mix containing only light brown powder, is in fact green.

From that point on, I’ve had a very strange fascination with making homemade falafels containing these crisp, still tender, rounds… that when bitten into, are not dull brown, but a vibrant green screaming that there are delicious herbs hiding inside of them! (Seriously.)

Falafels

Ingredients:

2 cups dried garbanzo beans, soaked overnight
1 tbsp. olive oil
4 cloves garlic, chopped
2 green onions, chopped
3 tbsp. parsley, chopped
3 tbsp. fresh mint, chopped
3 tbsp. cilantro, chopped
1 tbsp. fresh lemon juice
1½ tsp. ground cumin
2 tsp. ground coriander
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. sea salt
1 tsp. ground pepper
sunflower / peanut / canola oil for frying

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 200ºF.

In the bowl of your food processor (or high-powered blender) fitted with a large cutting blade, combine all the ingredients except for the oil being used to fry the falafel balls.

Pulse the mixture until all the ingredients are well combined and come together like a sticky dough.

Using your hands, roll the dough out into 1” rounds (about the size of a golf ball).

Heat enough oil in a 9-inch frying pan over medium-high heat, so when the balls placed in the pan are almost completely submerged.

Fry until lightly browned, then turn over and brown the other side. Once browned, remove the falafel from the oil and allow it to drain on paper towels for a few minutes, to get rid of excess oil. Place the falafels into the oven while you cook the remaining balls.

Serve immediately after all the falafels are cooked, with tzatziki, cucumber salad, romaine lettuce, feta, hummus, flatbread, tahini, etc. (Whatever sounds good to YOU!)

* * Recipe for tzatziki sauce and cucumber-tomato-mint salad to follow soon.

About Julie Hashimoto-McCreery

28 year old food blogger and writer.
This entry was posted in Appetizer, Dinner, Lunch, Vegetarian and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Falafels

  1. This is something I have never tried, but I love everything here…they look great :)

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