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Produce => Recipes => Topic started by: tim on April 03, 2009, 11:16:41

Title: Another lesson learned!
Post by: tim on April 03, 2009, 11:16:41
Out of Chickpea (Besan) flour - grind some Chickpeas, as I did once before? - just check - Kurma - Besan is NOT made from Chickpeas.

Live & learn!!

Better hurry up?
Title: Re: Another lesson learned!
Post by: tlc on April 03, 2009, 11:53:41
Is it made from the smaller reddish brown skinned chick peas?
Title: Re: Another lesson learned!
Post by: tim on April 03, 2009, 17:48:43
Kurma's answer.
Indian-style chick pea flour is actually made from chana dal, a smaller darker skinned cousin (not being politically correct here!) of the chickpea, and not from actual chickpeas.

So sometimes there is some confusion due to the alternative names for chickpea flour. It is also called chana flour, chana dal flour, gram flour, dal flour, gram dal flour, pea flour and besan flour. You may find it at that same store under any of those names.

Otherwise any Indian store in Sydney will definitely have it, under any of the above name, but most commonly as besan flour (pronounced similar to 'basin', as in sink).

Actual chickpea flour (made from actual chickpeas) is popular in Italian cuisine and so is available from well-stocked Italian shops and goes by the name farina di ceci.

Plain flour would work as a substitute, in fact many flours would work, but they will certainly not yield the unique nutty depth of flavour that chick peas flour gives.


And even his writing is ripped off as someone else's! http://offthespork.blogspot.com/2008/01/corn-and-chickpea-flour-fritters.html

Title: Re: Another lesson learned!
Post by: asbean on April 03, 2009, 21:07:34
yeah, ceci is italian for chick peas  :) :)
Title: Re: Another lesson learned!
Post by: PurpleHeather on April 05, 2009, 05:26:23
Now then, great discoveries have been made from 'mistakes'.