(chickpea mixture)
(moist but no tails) |
Here's the recipe:
Sprouted Chickpea vegetable burgers
adapted from Kiwi Feb/March issue
1 cup sprouted chickpeas
6-10 fresh basil leaves
1 large farm fresh egg
1 medium carrot, peeled and diced finely
1 stalk celery, diced finely
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 T flat leaf parsely, chopped
1/4 whole wheat breadcrumbs
1/2 tsp sea salt
Dash of ground black pepper
1 T olive oil
4 whole grain fresh buns
mayo, ketchup, lettuce, or any other burger toppings.
We had lettuce, tomato, and TJ's wasabi mayo.
Many of their recipes give hands-on directions for parents and children to do together. Great idea but I'm going to simplify that for space and time. Just know this is a great recipe to have little hands to help.
Fill a steamer pot with an inch of water and steam sprouted peas for 10 minutes or until tender. While the chickpeas steam carefully pull basil leaves off the stems and roughly chop the leaves. Place cooled chickpeas into food processor with egg. (after processing chickpea mixture I added another medium sized egg-it just seemed like it needed it for moisture). Use a spatula to scrape the mixture into a medium bowl. Add the basil, onion, garlic, carrot, celery, and parsley to the chickpea mixture. Then add breadcrumbs, salt, and pepper. Stir all ingredients until well-combined.
Take a palm-sized handful in your clean hands and work it into a flat, circular patty. Place it on a plate and repeat to make 3 more burgers. Pour olive oil (I used coconut oil) into skillet and place over medium heat. Add the patties, cooking about 5-6 minutes on each side. Carefully remove the patties and place on whole grain bun.
Sounds easy, right? Hmm maybe, except my burgers didn't not stay together very well in my skillet. It helped once they started cooking. While I know there are added health benefits from eating sprouted beans that step made the recipe too difficult. Next time I would cook the chickpeas making them softer to work with and more paste-like. And I would add sprouts to the table array of toppings.
What did my family think, you ask? Everyone liked them except Groovy Girl. She thought they tasted sour. She still wanted to eat the bun (carb girl) though but dad wouldn't let her; he ate her burger bun and all. She ended up making herself a grilled cheese with sprouts on it in the toaster oven. So she still ate something sprouted...win, win! We don't usually let them eat something else but this seemed like a reasonable trade-off and she was willing to make it herself.
(Our chili) |
I am headed down to my fancy basement yoga studio to get my Namaste on but then after that I am making these Smitten Kitchen brownies. I also made these brownies with this frosting last Sunday to serve at our teacher look-see for the book fair. I left a few at home for my treat-deprived kids and Teenage Boy had this to say after eating one; "While I was eating that brownie mom; I realized you found it, you really found it, the perfect brownie recipe!" Why thank you, son! What a great week. How about you?
7 comments:
Awwww don't you love it when the kids appreciate your baking? Although I like sprouts, I'm not sure I want to wait 2 weeks for them. :)
I think two weeks is a bit long, too. The burgers sounds yummy, though. I like your idea of using cooked chickpeas and adding sprouts as a topping. I hope to try these one day.
I like the brownie recipe in the King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion, but it seems very similar to the one you used to make the perfect brownie!
You are a very patient person to wit so long for your sprouts. I don't think that would work in my home. Your chili looks so delicious.
That's a long time to wait for the sprouts! But nice that your family liked them. Those brownies must have been good!
tails...I am not sure I want beans with tails...lol
I've never sprouted chick peas either, although have seen a few recipes for it. Two weeks is a long time to wait, good that most of the family liked them. Congratulations on the brownie recipe.
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