Why chickpea flour is so chic

For the 85% of chickpeas that don’t get turned into hummus, a very different fate awaits

By Niki Segnit

Hummus has become so ubiquitous you’d think that every chickpea on Earth had been whipped into its service. Not so. The variety used in the dip is kabuli, a large, thin-skinned pulse that turns Armani-beige when dried. It accounts for only 15% of world chickpea production. Desi are smaller, more yellow than beige when dried, and perhaps most familiar in their split form, chana dal. Both breeds of chickpea – or garbanzo beans, as they’re known in America – are green on the stalk and nestle into their pods in pairs.

If spared the hummus treatment, both varieties may be ground into chickpea flour, which largely mills away their differences. Desi flour is called besan or gram. It’s typically packed in faded-yellow paper bags with designs that suggest old posters peeled from a wall in downtown Jodhpur. Besan is used extensively in Indian cooking. It can be whisked up with water and vegetables to make soup, extruded into the crunchy noodles found in Bombay mix and beaten with chilli and spice into a batter for pakoras and bhajis.

More from 1843 magazine

1843 magazine | “It’s been a very long two weeks”: how the Gaza protests changed Columbia

The camp has been cleared. But the faculty of the Ivy League university remains deeply divided

1843 magazine | Rahul Gandhi is on the march. But where is he heading?

He wants to be the champion of Indian liberalism. First he needs to save his party from irrelevance


1843 magazine | It began as a rewilding experiment. Now a bear is on trial for murder

The death of a jogger in the Italian Alps has sparked a furious debate about the relationship between humans and nature