I’m usually not one to write more than a few sentences before a recipe, but this one warrants a little explanation.
I am not too familiar with making my own falafel patties. I’ve used a box mix before but that wasn’t worth writing about. The other day my sister told me she had the most delicious falafel at work and asked her coworker for the recipe. My sis came over last week with the recipe and ingredients, but we realized parts of the recipe were unclear so we had to make some guesses.
One thing was clear: you have to make falafel from dried chickpeas and not canned chickpeas. I didn’t know this having not grown up eating falafel. But soaking the chickpeas for 12-18 hours is the base ingredient for crispy, flavorful falafel that hold together perfectly. You don’t cook the chickpeas first. Frying the falafel cooks the chickpeas. If you use canned they will not hold together well and will be mushy.
Note: we soaked enough chickpeas for two batches of falafel. You can freeze the remaining soaked chickpeas for another time – it still comes out great!
Ok, four paragraphs wasn’t so bad! Here’s how we made the falafel. I included a recipe for a tomato cucumber salad as well.
Delicious Falafel Mix
1 batch makes about 25 falafel patties
Ingredients for the chickpeas (enough for 2 batches of falafel):
- 2 quarts water
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- 1 pound dry chickpeas
Ingredients for the falafel:
- ¼ of a leek, roughly chopped
- 1 pound of soaked chickpeas (NOT CANNED OR COOKED), fully drained
- ¼ cup fresh cilantro, roughly chopped
- ¼ cup fresh parsley, roughly chopped
- 1 celery stalk, roughly chopped
- ¼ cup chopped onion
- 2 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
- Squeeze of fresh lemon
- 1.5-2 teaspoons salt (or to taste)
- ½ teaspoon ground pepper
- 2 tablespoons ground coriander
- 1 tablespoon cumin
- A pinch of ground allspice
- 2-3 tablespoons chickpea flour
- ⅛ teaspoon baking powder
- ⅛ teaspoon baking soda
- Cooking oil, for frying
Directions:
The day before you want to make falafel, you’ll need to start soaking the chickpeas. Fill a pot with the water and add the baking soda. Add the chickpeas, cover, and soak them 12-18 hours. Drain and store in the fridge or freezer until ready to make your falafel.
On falafel day:
Soak the leek pieces in water to remove any grit. Put the leeks and chickpeas in a salad spinner and spin to remove as much water as possible.
Place the leeks, chickpeas, cilantro, parsley, celery, onion and garlic in a food processor and pulse it until it is paste-like, scraping down the sides with a rubber spatula often.
Place mixture in a bowl and add the lemon juice, salt, pepper, coriander, cumin, allspice, chickpea flour, baking powder and baking soda. Mix well and form into falafel patties. If mixture is too moist, add a little more chickpea flour. If too dry, add a little more lemon juice. The falafel should be sort of wet but should hold together without bits falling off.
Heat a half inch of oil in a cast iron skillet till about 350F. Fry 6-8 falafel at a time so as not to bring down the heat of the oil. Fry till crispy and dark brown, about 2-3 minutes on each side. Place on a paper towel-lined sheet pan. Serve with all the falafel fixins.
Tomato and cucumber salad
Ingredients:
- 2 roma tomatoes or 15 cherry tomatoes, diced
- Half an English cucumber, diced
- ¼ cups minced red onion
- 2 tablespoons chopped parsley
- 1 tablespoon garlic infused olive oil (or plain olive oil)
- Juice of half a lemon
- Salt and pepper to taste
Directions:
Combine all the ingredients and place in fridge until ready to serve.





