Fattet Hummus
- 3/4 cup chickpeas, soaked in cold water overnight
- Salt
- 22 1/2 cups Greek-style thick drained yogurt or plain whole-milk yogurt
- 3 cloves garlic, crushed
- Pepper
- 2 pita breads
- 12 tablespoons dried mint leaves
- 34 tablespoons pine nuts
- 1 tablespoon butter or vegetable oil
- Good pinch of ground chili pepper or flakes (optional)
- Drain the chickpeas and simmer in fresh water to cover until they are really very soft, usually well over an hour, adding salt only when they are nearly done.
- Beat the yogurt with the garlic and pepper.
- Open out the pita breads and leave them for a few minutes in a very hot oven, or turn them under the broiler until they are crisp and very lightly browned.
- Then break them up with your hands into the bottom of a serving dish.
- Pour the chickpeas and some of their cooking water over the bread, soaking it thoroughly, keeping out a few chickpeas to decorate the dish.
- Pour the yogurt mixture over the chickpeas.
- To garnish, crush the mint leaves over the top.
- Fry the pine nuts in the butter or oil until they are a light brown.
- Sprinkle these and the extra chickpeas over the yogurt.
- Some people like to sprinkle on hot ground chili pepper or chili flakes.
- Serve at once, while the chickpeas are hot and the rest is lukewarm.
- A Damascus version called tasseia has the chickpeas crushed with a pestle and mortar and mixed with 23 tablespoons tahina, the juice of 1/2 lemon, and 1 crushed garlic clove.
- You can put this in a blender with a little of the cooking liquor.
- Squeeze a little lemon juice in the chickpea water before sprinkling over the bread, spread the mashed chickpea cream over the top, and cover with yogurt, then garnish as before.
- Instead of toasting the bread, some people like to cut it into triangles and deep-fry them in hot oil, then drain the pieces on paper towels and carry on as above.
- An old version of this dish is made with lambs trotters, which give a deliciously rich flavor and texture to the stock.
chickpeas, salt, milk, garlic, pepper, pita breads, mint leaves, pine nuts, butter, ground chili pepper
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/fattet-hummus-373508 (may not work)