Chana Dhal (Chickpeas) Fusion

Chana Dhal (Chickpeas) Fusion

Sometimes the tastebuds are craving for something hearty and fully flavoured yet quick and easy to whip on a spur, and impressive too. Here comes one of my favourite dhal dishes, chana dhal.

We are fortunate to live in such a culinary melting pot as our region is. Spices and veggies from South East Asia, Far East Asia and the Indian Subcontinent are readily available and as fresh as it gets. I call this dish dhal fusion because it is a composition of the flavours around our place that elevate these otherwise rather bland chickpeas to their highest heights.

The recipe is meant as main dish. If you'd like to use it as side dish the way it is traditionally served,  just use half the amount of chickpeas and tomatoes and cut a little down on the spices.

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High Fibre
Prep Time 12 hour Cook Time 20 min Difficulty: Intermediate Servings: 4

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Getting the chickpeas ready
    If you'd like to use some of the dry chickpeas in your pantry, soak about 400g over night. If you prefer canned chickpeas, drain the water, rinse and you are ready to start.
  2. Cut the onion, garlic, ginger and chilli. Bring the oil to medium heat and saute everyhting until the onion are soft and shiny golden.

    Add the cardamon, cinnamon, cloves, coriander, cumin, curry, fennel, pepper, and turmeric. Cook until the fragrance just emerges (keep an eye on it, avoid overcooking).

  3. Add the tomatoes and simmer for another 8-10 minutes.
  4. Rinse the chickpeas well, add to the tomatoes and cook for about 20 minutes. Stir occasionally. Add a few spoons of water if it becomes too dry. Serve with brown rice, couscous or polenta.

Note

I prefer to use fresh spices since they are all so easy at hand around here. This dish works very well too with all ready made ground spices.
Keywords: GF, organic, vegan

Mimi Mo

I love eating food with a well balanced and rich taste. And even more, I love to make it from scratch and treat it like a piece of art, culinary and visually. 

While you may have scoured zillions of recipe site and tried a handful of these beautifully presented creations, you may have noticed that some of them didn't work out that well or didn't look as they were 'supposed' to look.

In many cases this is because the ingredients used are very localised. The wheat used in one region, country or climate zone is quite different from one at another place. So are the spices, meats and vegetables. So, give yourself a little slack and don't take the ingredient measures here as absolute. Look at what you'd like to achieve and adjust to your taste and locale.

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