I saw a video where they roasted the chickpeas first and then they grounded them. I think roasted them is smart because it deactivates the anti nutrients and makes grinding them easier.
I read that soaking the chickpeas removes more anti-nutrients than roasting them. Anti-nutrients are compounds which interfere with the absorption of essential nutrients in human body.
Great video and information I already use chickpeas in dishes at home but now gonna try making flour and substituting it for all purpose flour hopefully helping cut cost especially with the inflation in prices these days, thanks again!
I went to Vons here in Southern CA, they had all kinds of flour, but not chickpea flour, very surprised. Checked with staff too. So instead I bought a 16 oz bag of chickpeas ($ 2.99) at Vons and have now made my first batch of chickpea flour in our coffee grinder. Yay! 😍 I need about 3.5 oz of chickpea flour for vegetarian patties which I have made before (with my homemade Dijon mustard & mayo potato salad on the side). Lots of recipes online if you want to make veggie patties with chickpea flour. Note: The 3.5 oz of chickpeas that I have now ground in the coffegrinder yielded 3.5 oz of flour - how perfect is that?! 🤩
Try to find that product at an authentic Indian food store. I go to a place called "India food and spices" in Duarte. Been going there for 15 years, they have a restaurant and retail store in the same building. Wide selection and don't miss out on the Bangan Bharta, if it is on the menu.
@@cityofangels4874 Sure! You of course wash them very well first and let them soak overnight or at least for a couple of hours, then you let them drain, towel or air dry very well, now you can either use a dehydrator (machine), or lay them on a tray in a very low temperature oven or even let them sun dry outside for a few days. Now they are clean and dry, perfect for making your great chickpea flour :)
@@evecami1953 how long in the oven and any specific temperature? Do you just leave them in there until they harden again? I ask because I imagine you could do like 300°F to make it go by faster 🤣 but not sure if that defeats the purpose lol. I think that's low enough to not roast them but quick enough to watch and make sure they dont brown or cook, but not sure. I imagine the temperature doesnt matter too much as long as they arent burnt or wet before blending correct? I plan to keep the flour in the fridge anyways.
@@Honey-Bee-25 "very low temperature" as in as low as your oven can go, mine does 175° in baking mode, but I can set it to Dehydrate at 150° and so I do. Just imagine if you can dehydrate outside under the sun.. I hope it doesn't get to the 300°'s where you live! 😁 we are not trying to Roast or Cook so yes, it would defeat the flour-final purpose, even though you could end up with a delicious crunchy-healthy snack! 😋
Btw guys if you dont have protein powder this can be used as a subtitute meaning you can use this instead of protein powder in any recipe and protein dtinks
Chickpeas must be soaked a day before and after that dried and ground Which legumes must be soaked a day before to prevent gases and ease their digestion and to benefit the body with the nutrients contained in them. Not soaking them prevents the body from absorbing nutrients. This is what the doctors say and thank you ☺️
Thank you for sharing your advice I was thinking about this because I know usually when cooking chickpea you have to soak them a day before for they won’t cook easily
A-ha! Maybe that's what went wrong. I used kidney beans to make flour and used it to make a kind of roux to thicken a sauce. I found I felt a bit nauseous after eating it; and not at all good (have since used potato starch instead). Maybe I should try again with sprouted/dehydrated beans. 😊
Genius!! Thanks so much for making and sharing this video. I don't use regular flour for health reasons and appreciate any alternative flours. Currently using oats and coconut flour, now I'll have this to add to my list!! Thank again. Oh and I have liked and subscribed to your channel.
When using dry chickpea do you need to prep the chickpeas? Can I just buy a bag of dried chick peas, or do I need to soak and boil and roast the chickpeas before grinding them?
Thank you- I do use this method in my Vitamix. I was wondering if using as a pancake/ omelet gives the flour enough time to cook for lectin issues and gut health? (You know how beans need to be cooked for our bodies to process etc.)
Is it right the the chickpea flour can substitute half the flour such as cake flour, wholewheat flour except the coconut flour ? How about the almond flour, can replace half also? Can I use it based on that formula on angel food cake and chiffon cake? Thank you
I don't usually, but you certainly could wash them if you thoroughly dry them before grinding. You just don't want to introduce any moisture to the flour, so it's important to start with dry beans.
Thanks a million 💕 I want to make chickpea Tofu and make my own flour for freshness and better flavor. Please provide recipes for chickpea patties. May you be BLESSED ALWAYS 💐🌺💕
Chickpeas must be soaked a day before and after that dried and ground Which legumes must be soaked a day before to prevent gases and ease their digestion and to benefit the body with the nutrients contained in them. Not soaking them prevents the body from absorbing nutrients. This is what the doctors say and thank you ☺️
@@posymohamed7192 I've been making chickpea flour without soaking and it comes out just fine. There are more than one way to make almost any food item and lots of folks do not soak, so to each their own. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Great for a roux - thickening gravy, white sauce etc, but don't try and cook the butter/flour mix as it will burn, blend and go straight to adding liquid. Gives a much richer flavour, and more protein, especially good for Seniors.
I don't understand how it takes so long to cook Chickpeas, but when we turn them into flour, we can make recipes that only take like 10min to prepare 🤔
@@maha77 I have a dehydrator which I used for sprouted wheat. Haven't tried beans yet but put that on my to-do list. 😉 Moist beans almighty clogg up or even damage your mill; I wouldn't do it that way. My grain mill manual even said not to use it for sprouted grains. -- I think using the lowest setting of your oven might work; perhaps with the door a little open.
I made a lot of this flour from chickpeas I had and it went moldy!!! You can't keep it. Maybe it would have been OK if I refrigerated it. It was hard to get fine in my Blendtec.
The store bought flours I've seed don't have any other ingredients added. The main difference is that some store-bought flours can be ground VERY finely! But the texture is very similar if you use a coffee grinder or high-speed blender.
Makes THE BEST FRITTATAS or quiche . just season and add water and baking power then all the wonderful veggies. I’m still trying to figure out how she made 1 and a 1/2 from 1🤨but aye. 🤷🏻♀️🙌🏽
Wait, I thought you had to soak them 24 hours first, then re-dehydrate and THEN grind???!!? Is it possible to just grind into flour WITHOUT the first two steps??
It's definitely possible! This is how I use it all the time, because I don't have the patience to soak and then dehydrate the beans myself. I haven't noticed a difference in the final baked results, but I guess if you have super sensitive digestion, perhaps the soaking and re-dehydrating process might be worth it?
@@DetoxinistaRecipes I dunno, but lemme tell you I did the first two steps and then I boiled them a while and made my own home made garlic-lemon hummus -- topped it with olive oil, Aleppo pepper, olives, walnuts and cheese.... served with sourdough toast slices, celery and crackers... I NEVER had anything SO DELICIOUS 😋!!! MY husband wiped his plate clean!! So, for THAT it was worth it!! 😎 And I bought a two pound bag for a dollar!!
I could have sworn that as I was listening to you speak, you sound exactly like the lady from Downshiftology on RUclips. Are you related by any chance?
I don't, because then you'd need to dry them for quite a while before you could grind them into a flour. You don't want to introduce any added moisture, or the flour could spoil quickly.
I beg your pardon. Chickpea flour alone makes a lousy pancake. I make them thin and leave them in the pan for 10 minutes and STILL they are not done. Nothing remotely resembling a real pancake. Still mushy on the inside and will burn if you leave them cook longer. Faceplant fail.
So detox, you just doing the peas seeds or you going to all this rehydrate to dehydrate dirty flour Nonsense cause hate to say, today society cant get rid of dirt. I am hand milling so see no point in rehydrating to then dehydrate them again ..
Cereals are grains that come from a family of plants called Poaceae (true grasses). A legume is a plant from the family Fabaceae and are characterized by their symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the plant's roots
@@pratheepanyogendran7220 You are conflating CEREAL grains, a specific type, with all grains. Legumes are grains. Beans, peas, peanuts, lentils, soy, all grains. The seeds of both Poaceae and Fabaceae are grains.
@DetoxinistaRecipes Ice might be softening b/c the blades warm it up. What about dry chickpeas? If you blender can handle them I guess it depends on the blender. In my case they ruined the blades.
I just started cooking with chickpea 🧆 flour and I made cookies, just like the ones in your video, cool tutorial!
Thank you so much you just save me a lot of money , all this time I’ve just been buying it.
Exactly, a 1 lb. bag of chickpeas at WalMart about $1 and you know exactly what you've got when you make you flour, no additives.
Thank you so much for this! I dont know why I never thought that you could make chickpea flour at home.
You are so welcome! Hope you enjoy it!
You should soak and dry chickpeas before blending for digestibility and to remove the bitterness
I was wondering about this. But wouldn't the texture change? It would be dough, not flour.
I saw a video where they roasted the chickpeas first and then they grounded them. I think roasted them is smart because it deactivates the anti nutrients and makes grinding them easier.
What are anti nutrients, please?
Thank you
How do you roast them? Time? Temperature?
I read that soaking the chickpeas removes more anti-nutrients than roasting them. Anti-nutrients are compounds which interfere with the absorption of essential nutrients in human body.
Great video and information I already use chickpeas in dishes at home but now gonna try making flour and substituting it for all purpose flour hopefully helping cut cost especially with the inflation in prices these days, thanks again!
Just as we were wondering where to find chickpea flour to try it for a new falafel recipe! Thank you so much!
Me too
Thanks for sharing health care habits, God bless you and your family ⛪😊
I went to Vons here in Southern CA, they had all kinds of flour, but not chickpea flour, very surprised. Checked with staff too.
So instead I bought a 16 oz bag of chickpeas ($ 2.99) at Vons and have now made my first batch of chickpea flour in our coffee grinder. Yay! 😍
I need about 3.5 oz of chickpea flour for vegetarian patties which I have made before (with my homemade Dijon mustard & mayo potato salad on the side). Lots of recipes online if you want to make veggie patties with chickpea flour.
Note: The 3.5 oz of chickpeas that I have now ground in the coffegrinder yielded 3.5 oz of flour - how perfect is that?!
🤩
Try to find that product at an authentic Indian food store. I go to a place called "India food and spices" in Duarte. Been going there for 15 years, they have a restaurant and retail store in the same building. Wide selection and don't miss out on the Bangan Bharta, if it is on the menu.
Excellent
Wow thank you so much. I've made airfried cauliflower. It was delish with pinko crumbs
📍Chickpeas (like any other grain) MUST be washed and dehydrated prior to blending, otherwise all you have is DIRTY chickpea flour 📌
can you please explain how i dehydrate them?
@@cityofangels4874 Sure! You of course wash them very well first and let them soak overnight or at least for a couple of hours, then you let them drain, towel or air dry very well, now you can either use a dehydrator (machine), or lay them on a tray in a very low temperature oven or even let them sun dry outside for a few days. Now they are clean and dry, perfect for making your great chickpea flour :)
@@evecami1953 thank you so much for the detailed explanation!🙏
@@evecami1953 how long in the oven and any specific temperature? Do you just leave them in there until they harden again? I ask because I imagine you could do like 300°F to make it go by faster 🤣 but not sure if that defeats the purpose lol. I think that's low enough to not roast them but quick enough to watch and make sure they dont brown or cook, but not sure. I imagine the temperature doesnt matter too much as long as they arent burnt or wet before blending correct? I plan to keep the flour in the fridge anyways.
@@Honey-Bee-25 "very low temperature" as in as low as your oven can go, mine does 175° in baking mode, but I can set it to Dehydrate at 150° and so I do. Just imagine if you can dehydrate outside under the sun.. I hope it doesn't get to the 300°'s where you live! 😁 we are not trying to Roast or Cook so yes, it would defeat the flour-final purpose, even though you could end up with a delicious crunchy-healthy snack! 😋
Btw guys if you dont have protein powder this can be used as a subtitute meaning you can use this instead of protein powder in any recipe and protein dtinks
Way cool. I'll be givinf this a try. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for the great ideas😊👍👍
Chickpeas must be soaked a day before and after that dried and ground
Which legumes must be soaked a day before to prevent gases and ease their digestion and to benefit the body with the nutrients contained in them. Not soaking them prevents the body from absorbing nutrients. This is what the doctors say and thank you ☺️
Thank you for sharing your advice I was thinking about this because I know usually when cooking chickpea you have to soak them a day before for they won’t cook easily
Lotta work. Forget it.
Thanks! That makes sense and exactly what I wanted to know!
I was thinking the same. Thanks for saying it. 😁
A-ha! Maybe that's what went wrong. I used kidney beans to make flour and used it to make a kind of roux to thicken a sauce. I found I felt a bit nauseous after eating it; and not at all good (have since used potato starch instead). Maybe I should try again with sprouted/dehydrated beans. 😊
Can I use chickpea flour to coat chicken and pan fry and is it good for thickening soup?
Thank You...
Great tutorial! Thank you! Happy holidays!!!
Genius!! Thanks so much for making and sharing this video. I don't use regular flour for health reasons and appreciate any alternative flours. Currently using oats
and coconut flour, now I'll have this to add to my list!! Thank again. Oh and I have liked and subscribed to your channel.
Thanks! I hope you enjoy experimenting with chickpea flour!
When using dry chickpea do you need to prep the chickpeas? Can I just buy a bag of dried chick peas, or do I need to soak and boil and roast the chickpeas before grinding them?
Can you tell us please which kind of blinder do you have and where we can get it, the big one not the coffee grinder, thank you for sharing 😊
Very nice chef 👍👌👏. Thank you for your effort 🙏🌞😎. Grams is the best way for any recipe 🌻
Thanks for sharing
Great video I use only chickpea flour to make pasta. Thanks again
Thank you- I do use this method in my Vitamix. I was wondering if using as a pancake/ omelet gives the flour enough time to cook for lectin issues and gut health? (You know how beans need to be cooked for our bodies to process etc.)
Thank you ,i have little blender ❤make it the flour 😊
I buy chickpea pasta and want to make my own pasta. Would I have to use another flour with the chickpea flour?
When you say dry chickpeas are those right out of the bag?
I use a couple of tablespoons of it to thicken home-made curry sauce.
You’re an Angel! Thank you!!
Love it! Thank you very much.
Chickpeas are to hard almost broke my food processor …what can I do to make flour ?do I need a blender? Thanks for your advice
Do they have to be cooked?
Awesome in depth video, thanks!
Thank you!
Is it right the the chickpea flour can substitute half the flour such as cake flour, wholewheat flour except the coconut flour ? How about the almond flour, can replace half also? Can I use it based on that formula on angel food cake and chiffon cake? Thank you
Where do you get dried chickpeas?
Thank you.
can you use a food processor or magic bullet? Those are all I have.
Do we need to clean the dry chickpea first, dry and grind them after?
I don't usually, but you certainly could wash them if you thoroughly dry them before grinding. You just don't want to introduce any moisture to the flour, so it's important to start with dry beans.
@@DetoxinistaRecipes thx!
Can I use it with other nuts powder to make protein powder?
I’m not sure about the powder but drained canned chickpeas can be puréed and mixed with other nut butters. Like a peanut butter substitute.
Thank you
Awesome video
Thanks a million 💕 I want to make chickpea Tofu and make my own flour for freshness and better flavor. Please provide recipes for chickpea patties.
May you be BLESSED ALWAYS 💐🌺💕
Much love!
Thank you so much 🥰
great! thank you.
Yes!
What is the shelf life fir the flour?
Thanks for the easy to follow recipe without the need for soaking before hand.
Chickpeas must be soaked a day before and after that dried and ground
Which legumes must be soaked a day before to prevent gases and ease their digestion and to benefit the body with the nutrients contained in them. Not soaking them prevents the body from absorbing nutrients. This is what the doctors say and thank you ☺️
@@posymohamed7192 I've been making chickpea flour without soaking and it comes out just fine. There are more than one way to make almost any food item and lots of folks do not soak, so to each their own. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
what the other person said is try, they do contain antinutrients @@davidcobb7446
Great for a roux - thickening gravy, white sauce etc, but don't try and cook the butter/flour mix as it will burn, blend and go straight to adding liquid. Gives a much richer flavour, and more protein, especially good for Seniors.
I don't understand how it takes so long to cook Chickpeas, but when we turn them into flour, we can make recipes that only take like 10min to prepare 🤔
Surface area increases in flour form...so it cooks faster....
Do we need to wash it prior?
Your channel is amazing!
Thank you so much!
Could you tell me what model of the grinder you use, please?
Here's an affiliate link for the blender in this video: amzn.to/3LFJzGj
This is AWESOME
You should soak and dry them first before making the flour. It will not leave an after taste. I usually sprout mine.
How do you thoroughly dry them after soaking? Or can they be ground into a flour while slightly moist? I imagine in any event they need to be washed
For how long must I soak it for
@@tinypremlal6935 24 hours
Too much work.
@@maha77 I have a dehydrator which I used for sprouted wheat. Haven't tried beans yet but put that on my to-do list. 😉 Moist beans almighty clogg up or even damage your mill; I wouldn't do it that way. My grain mill manual even said not to use it for sprouted grains. -- I think using the lowest setting of your oven might work; perhaps with the door a little open.
Thx
Any specific blender recommendations? Mine is a cheap Walmart brand and doesn't work for this method
My favorite blender is the Vitamin 5200. But the KitchenAid K400 is also good.
I made a lot of this flour from chickpeas I had and it went moldy!!! You can't keep it. Maybe it would have been OK if I refrigerated it. It was hard to get fine in my Blendtec.
Validity period time?
Wow 😳. I didn’t know I could use my grinder to grind up chickpeas for flour. Mind blown 🤯. Thanks 😊
Can you use tinned chickpeas? Would you dry them in the oven first?
Because they are already cooked
How many grams of chickpeas makes 100 grams of flour?
Also studies show adding beans to your day evens your blood sugar levels.
Wonderfull
You're 😊great
Is the sold chickpea flour in stores made in same way or they add other ingredients?
The store bought flours I've seed don't have any other ingredients added. The main difference is that some store-bought flours can be ground VERY finely! But the texture is very similar if you use a coffee grinder or high-speed blender.
No need for soaking first?
Oh yeah, now I can make shiro wot
Did you soak them first ?
Yeah👏👏👏
AMMMAAAZZIINNGGGGGG
What blender are you using ?
It's a K400 Blender. Here's the affiliate link to the exact model: amzn.to/3RB4wD5
Chickpea flour empanadas 😊
Can I use chickpeas form a can? Let them sit out to dry ?
Hmmm... I don't think that would work unless you were to totally dehydrate them. You can't have any moisture in a flour like this.
Can you use chickpeas from the can by drying them before using my blender???
You can make Burmese tofu out of chickpea flour.
buying chickpea, rye, & oats in bulk now lol
MARRY MEEE
Makes THE BEST FRITTATAS or quiche .
just season and add water and baking power then all the wonderful veggies.
I’m still trying to figure out how she made
1 and a 1/2 from 1🤨but aye. 🤷🏻♀️🙌🏽
Weight is the same, volume increases.
Wait, I thought you had to soak them 24 hours first, then re-dehydrate and THEN grind???!!? Is it possible to just grind into flour WITHOUT the first two steps??
Interesting comment, which prompted me to research it - Bakerpedia says they are soaked then dried and finally milled to produce flour.
@@alisont4391 Thanks. Bakerpedia?? That's a new source name for me 🧓... So I can't just skip to the last step... 🙄 I figured.
It's definitely possible! This is how I use it all the time, because I don't have the patience to soak and then dehydrate the beans myself. I haven't noticed a difference in the final baked results, but I guess if you have super sensitive digestion, perhaps the soaking and re-dehydrating process might be worth it?
@@DetoxinistaRecipes I dunno, but lemme tell you I did the first two steps and then I boiled them a while and made my own home made garlic-lemon hummus -- topped it with olive oil, Aleppo pepper, olives, walnuts and cheese.... served with sourdough toast slices, celery and crackers... I NEVER had anything SO DELICIOUS 😋!!! MY husband wiped his plate clean!! So, for THAT it was worth it!! 😎 And I bought a two pound bag for a dollar!!
@@debrahurtado5491 nice!!!
I could have sworn that as I was listening to you speak, you sound exactly like the lady from Downshiftology on RUclips. Are you related by any chance?
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼❤️
I tried my coffee grinder. It broke....☹
You didn’t mention the carb and fiber count
I have the nutrition info per cup on my printable recipe: detoxinista.com/chickpea-flour/
can i use soaked chickpea ?of course after drying it
No need to wash them?
I don't, because then you'd need to dry them for quite a while before you could grind them into a flour. You don't want to introduce any added moisture, or the flour could spoil quickly.
Just like rice you need to give the chickpeas quick rinse
The flour makes me sneeze.
Is it Ketogenic Diet
No need for soaking first?
I never soak them first. I haven't noticed a difference in the final baked goods, and I use chickpea flour (store-bought, too) quite a bit!
Very good video…thanks for sharing. Just try not to whine when you talk…it’s not cute.
I beg your pardon. Chickpea flour alone makes a lousy pancake. I make them thin and leave them in the pan for 10 minutes and STILL they are not done. Nothing remotely resembling a real pancake. Still mushy on the inside and will burn if you leave them cook longer. Faceplant fail.
So detox, you just doing the peas seeds or you going to all this rehydrate to dehydrate dirty flour Nonsense cause hate to say, today society cant get rid of dirt. I am hand milling so see no point in rehydrating to then dehydrate them again ..
I can't find chick pea flour recipies that don't have blood wheat flour in them .
Disappointed
Here are some chickpea flour recipes to try: detoxinista.com/?s=chickpea+flour
Are you married? 🥰🥰🥰🥰
Chickpeas ARE a grain, you can't say it's grain free.
Cereals are grains that come from a family of plants called Poaceae (true grasses). A legume is a plant from the family Fabaceae and are characterized by their symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the plant's roots
@@pratheepanyogendran7220 You are conflating CEREAL grains, a specific type, with all grains. Legumes are grains. Beans, peas, peanuts, lentils, soy, all grains. The seeds of both Poaceae and Fabaceae are grains.
Dry chickpeas are stone hard. Aren't you going to damage the blender?
Ice is also very hard and I put that in my blender all the time, so it seems to handle it well!
@DetoxinistaRecipes Ice might be softening b/c the blades warm it up. What about dry chickpeas? If you blender can handle them I guess it depends on the blender. In my case they ruined the blades.
Chickpea is a very hardcore seed, doesn't it require a precooking process before converted into flour to be used??????
Thank you