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    Home » recipes » dips and spreads » How to Make Hummus Without Tahini

    dips and spreads

    How to Make Hummus Without Tahini

    Most recipes for hummus include tahini, a Mediterranean or Middle Eastern roasted sesame paste. There is nothing inherently wrong with tahini except that I don't use it often enough, so when I buy even the smallest 12- or 16-ounce jar of tahini, I end up wasting a large volume of it after it expires. That would be okay if we were talking about say, $2 mayonnaise, but tahini, at least the good kind, is expensive, and last I checked, I can hardly afford a $700 billion bailout, let alone a jar of tahini.

    Jump to Recipe

    Why Make Hummus Without Tahini

    • no tahini available
    • sesame allergy
    • low oil, lowfat dietary restriction

    Depending on your reason, you could make adjustments to this Classic Hummus recipe to replace tahini,

    What the Tahini Does in Hummus

    What Ingredients You Need for Hummus Without Tahini

    Almost every recipe has the same few ingredients differing in proportions, and these are what you need for this recipe:

    • chickpeas
    • garlic
    • lemon/lemon juice
    • olive oil
    • salt
    • a not-so-secret ingredient!
    Print Recipe
    5 from 1 vote

    Hummus with No Tahini Recipe

    Makes about 2 cups. Can be multiplied. In multiples. Of numbers.
    Course: Appetizer, Snacks
    Cuisine: Mediterranean
    Keyword: hummus, mediterranean

    Ingredients

    • 1 can chickpeas/garbanzo beans you can soak and cook dried beans, use the method here
    • 1 clove garlic
    • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
    • juice from ½ lemon
    • ½ teaspoon salt plus more to taste
    • handful of chopped fresh parsley
    • paprika to taste optional

    Instructions

    • Drain bean juice from garbanzo beans. Just the idea of bean juice is gross enough, but now I've had to type it out. Twice. Gross.
    • Process garlic clove in a food processor until it looks finely chopped. It seems weird to waste all that small electrical appliance energy on a single clove of garlic when you could chop it more finely by hand, but you have to use the food processor eventually, and besides, you won't lose any garlic essence during transfer from cutting board via knife.
    • Add the can of garbanzo beans to the garlic clove in the food processor, sans bean juice (that's also sans can for any of the noobs in the back row) along with olive oil, lemon juice, and salt.
    • Process until the garbanzo beans are pureed to the consistency you want. For a smoother consistency, puree longer, and add (a little at a time) more lemon juice and/or olive oil. But be careful: oil is oil.
    • Add parsley at the end and pulse until parsley is just chopped, salt (if necessary) and paprika to taste.
    • Garnish with a drizzle of oilve oil, additional paprika, and serve with toasted pita wedges or chips (my choice).
    when you make this recipe, let us know!Mention @TheDelicious or tag #thedeliciousmademedoit!

    Food for Afterthoughts

    Relationships require maintenance. While levels of required attention and affection vary across types of relationships – a romantic relationship in the early stage requires much more attention than, say, an online flirtationship – the requirement is usually about the same within each type. Incidentally, marriage and/or (the slash, depending on your opinion of “marriage”) family require the relationship maintenance equivalent of a Toyota. And/or an Alfa Romeo.

    With friendships, though, maintenance needs vary almost as widely, if not more widely, than all the other relationships combined.

    On the one end, you have your BFF who expects you to call the minute you wake up, pix msg your day's outfit so the two of you don't clash, meet her for lunch, hold her hand during her botox appointment, filter through boys' profiles, mix her a cocktail, be her wingman, hold her hair back, and all the while you have actually been on the phone giving her the minute-by-minute, as-it-happens breakdown of your day. All nineteen waking hours of the day. Every day. That's a high maintenance friendship.

    I've had my fair share of high maintenance friendships over my lifetime. Saying "my fair share" makes it sound as if high maintenance friendships were a bad thing; not necessarily, though I have, on occasion, wondered how long I could maintain (wait, is this how guys feel about girls?).

    High maintenance, by definition, simply means that it requires a lot of constant, consistent work. You can't let it go. If a short period of time goes by without so much as a "hello," there will have to be the inevitable catch up over Asian chicken salad with dressing on the side for lunch. As life and work force you to reschedule then postpone then reschedule again, The Catch Up Lunch just looms larger and longer with a backlog of "stuff." You start to dread The Catch Up Lunch because it's going to also take coffee and dessert and three hours of shopping to get through 12 weeks' worth of every single teeny tiny little thing that has happened from getting the best massage evar at a spa in Monterey to the distastrophe of Memorial Day weekend, in chronological order.

    Of course, social media are making high maintenance relationships obsolete. Or far too easily frenetic. Can't tell which.
    Hummus and Store Bought Pita Chips
    On the other end of the friendship maintenance scale, you have your Ryan. My Ryan and I have been friends ever since I took his breath away at an ice cream social first semester of freshman year at Cal. Over the many, many, (goddamitweareold) many years we've been friends, we have never lived in the same city, spent more than half a day at a time together, or called each other on a regular, frequent basis. However, when Ryan and I do find the time for lunch or a cocktail or a late night phone call, it's easy. There is no long, drawn out Catch Up, no wasting time with mutual information exchange. We do get the obligatory "Married?" "No." "Kids?" "No, or at least none that I know of" out of the way, but then it's either simply conversation for the sake of the conversation that seems to perfectly pick up where last we left off 4 months ago or, as is more often the case as of late, my sobbing unintelligibly about my shattered heart. I know that if I needed to, I could speed (up the I-5 for 6 hours!) up to San Francisco to escape for a few days and Ryan would let me torture him with my post break-up hysterics and bloggers' hygiene.

    Ryan and I have a low maintenance friendship. It's not better than a high maintenance friendship, nor is it worse. Just different.

    Low maintenance relationship is sort of what I need right now. Come to my rescue in crisis. No need to explain where I've been, what I've been doing, who I've been doing (oops, did I blog that out loud?). No questions. Just jumping right back into the conversation, picking up, as it were, where we left off.

    So, let’s try this again, shall we? Our low maintenance, low pressure, stress-free blog relationship? It's been a while, so I'm just easing into it with a simple starter...
    Hummus Up Close

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      Candied Kumquats and Marmalade, the Best Recipes to Use Kumquats
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      Smoked Salmon Dip, the World Famous Recipe
    • garlic edamame
      Edamame Hummus, How to Add Variety to Your Protein
    • Avocado Hummus in serving bowl
      Easy Avocado Hummus, Creamy with No Tahini

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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Doo'ite says

      October 01, 2008 at 7:40 am

      Making the best of bland?

      Reply
    2. dave says

      October 01, 2008 at 8:59 am

      What a nice catch-up. Not too long or too loaded, and no guilt involved. Just a refreshing delicious moment once more.

      But then again, just like preparing hummus, I'm easy.

      Reply
    3. dave says

      October 01, 2008 at 8:59 am

      What a nice catch-up. Not too long or too loaded, and no guilt involved. Just a refreshing delicious moment once more.

      But then again, just like preparing hummus, I'm easy.

      Reply
    4. Ima Wurdibitsch says

      October 01, 2008 at 12:57 pm

      I love homemade hummus. I love spice, too, so I'll usually put a combination of some of the following in the food processor with the juiceless beans and other ingredients: jalepeno, roasted red pepper, cayenne, sriracha.

      Reply
    5. SunJun says

      October 01, 2008 at 1:33 pm

      As always, you inspire me to eat; this time, I've got to go down to the pita place in the lobby for some hummus. What a great way to ease back in.

      Reply
    6. LunaCafe says

      October 01, 2008 at 4:22 pm

      Sarah, bless your heart. So glad you are back.

      Reply
    7. Nila Rosa says

      October 01, 2008 at 9:34 pm

      Homemade hummus is the best.

      I've known some people to substitute in peanut butter for tahini. I personally can't get down with tahini. The taste is a bit bitter, the color is weird, and it's pretty pricey. 3 strikes and it's out.

      Reply
    8. FranMag says

      October 01, 2008 at 11:31 pm

      I'm sure @tastejudging was talking about someone else's hummus, because yours is quite photogenic!

      Reply
    9. FranMag says

      October 01, 2008 at 11:31 pm

      I'm sure @tastejudging was talking about someone else's hummus, because yours is quite photogenic!

      Reply
    10. H. C. says

      October 02, 2008 at 4:08 am

      Yeah, I would sub out tahini too only because I don't think I'll do anything with it asides from making hummus and baba ghanouj, and I don't like either *that* much.

      And welcome back :)

      Reply
    11. u says

      October 08, 2008 at 11:34 pm

      So, married since your last post? Any kids? ;)

      Reply
    12. katrina says

      October 09, 2008 at 10:21 pm

      Nice! All this time I've been waiting to remember to buy tahini and (smacks forehead), NOT ONCE did it remotely occur to me to make it without the tahini. You are brilliant!

      Reply
    13. katrina says

      October 09, 2008 at 10:21 pm

      Nice! All this time I've been waiting to remember to buy tahini and (smacks forehead), NOT ONCE did it remotely occur to me to make it without the tahini. You are brilliant!

      Reply
    14. Olga says

      December 17, 2008 at 6:55 pm

      I make my own hummus quite often! Love adding different things to it: roasted peppers, sundried tomatoes, roasted squash, etc, etc, etc: so much more creative and cheaper than store-bought.

      Reply
    15. Anna says

      January 12, 2009 at 3:30 pm

      I always wanted to try to make my own hummus and your recipe sounds so easy to do. Enjoyed Olga's comment about adding different things, like the roasted peppers. Definitely going to give this a try.

      Reply
    16. born says

      January 16, 2009 at 6:46 pm

      Haha don't i know it. That looks great, hummus is one of my all time favourite dips! :)

      Garden Solar

      Reply
    17. Anonymous says

      February 16, 2009 at 6:26 am

      Skip the parsley and try it with cilantro, stems and all, and some jalapenos (minus the seeds if you don't like hot) blended in.

      If you make it with tahini, just pour off some (most?) of that separated oil and use the solids. Might have to thin out the tahini with more lemon juice or (depending on lemon's tartness) a combo of juice & water.

      Reply
    18. Anonymous says

      February 16, 2009 at 6:26 am

      Skip the parsley and try it with cilantro, stems and all, and some jalapenos (minus the seeds if you don't like hot) blended in.

      If you make it with tahini, just pour off some (most?) of that separated oil and use the solids. Might have to thin out the tahini with more lemon juice or (depending on lemon's tartness) a combo of juice & water.

      Reply
    19. Sarah J. Gim says

      May 24, 2009 at 5:59 am

      i'll skip the cilantro but LOVE the idea of jalapenos in hummus

      Reply
    20. Cindy says

      August 04, 2009 at 9:41 am

      Another idea: since the tahini you are subbing out is sesame paste, use sesame oil instead of olive. Thanks for the tahini-less recipe. I have no patience for trying to find some to buy, and then watching the part I don't use get old in my fridge.

      Reply
    21. sheba says

      September 24, 2009 at 12:43 am

      This is great am making this tonight

      Reply
    22. Susan says

      November 19, 2009 at 10:57 am

      Been looking for a tahini-less hummus recipe. Sounds great! Thanks for posting this

      Reply
    23. Jodi says

      January 03, 2010 at 8:34 am

      I'm all a-twitter about trying this! I also think that, based merely on this post, I have just fallen in love with you. Alas!

      Reply
    24. A! says

      March 15, 2010 at 6:10 pm

      i've made this 3 times. thanx

      Reply
    25. Colleen says

      April 13, 2010 at 10:09 am

      You have a fun sense of humor thanks for the recipe and the laugh. :)

      Reply
    26. mirz123 says

      June 17, 2010 at 11:02 am

      I've been making hummus for years without tahini. Saw it on a cooking show for kids years ago. Thanks for reminding me I'm due to make a batch soon.

      Reply
    27. brightstarlit says

      November 06, 2010 at 12:46 am

      I've never made Hummus with Tahini because it's so expensive. I tried this recipe as well, it was ok, no offense. I even bought sesame oil which was $5 my rationale being I won't use tahini $9 for anything other than hummus, yet I could use sesame oil in many things.

      It still didn't taste right! Maybe I am the only crazy one here but no matter how much I try to fight it, I don't think hummus is the same or half as good without tahini! I guess I will have to bite the bullet and buy some :)

      Reply
    28. Vhitch says

      April 30, 2012 at 11:42 am

      Easy to make and very nice consistency...delish!

      Reply
    29. Anaalicia H says

      May 22, 2012 at 4:22 pm

      i made this recipe tonight. and it was awsome..... i didnt add the parsley... and i added a bit of cayenne pepper... yum :D recipe was also a fun read 

      Reply
    30. Patty Kennedy says

      July 24, 2012 at 2:31 pm

      Why dry garbanzo beans?  Much less expensive!  Not much work, especially with a pressure cooker.

      Reply
    31. Vivian Darkbloom says

      March 10, 2013 at 6:33 pm

      This was delicious! Thank you!

      Reply

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