Here is an easy and delicious falafel recipe with canned or cooked chickpeas. Delicious crispy yet melt-in-mouth falafels loaded with flavors of dill and parsley. Check all the three versions – deep-fried, baked, and air-fryer falafel recipe with step-wise pictures. Vegan & gluten-free homemade falafel recipe!
What is falafel
Falafel is quite famous worldwide these days, we all know what it is. But let me add it one more time. Falafels are deep-fried balls made with soaked and ground chickpeas. When we westernize Indian dishes, why can’t we do the other way round? Falafels are more like our paruppu vadai (Tamil Nadu style lentil fritters) just in the ball shape.
I started making falafels with canned or cooked beans so that I can bake them easily. During my initial days of savory baking, I found cooked chickpeas to work better. I have come a long way in both sweet and savory baking. I will soon share the traditional falafel recipes loaded with parsley just how I get here in the local joints.
Ingredients
Apart from the main ingredient, garbanzo beans/chickpeas, we also need spices like ground cumin, ground coriander, red chili powder and salt. For added flavor, I usually add some garlic cloves, onion, and fresh herbs – parsley and dill.
We also need some water and oil to deep-fry.
You can deep fry falafels with the canned chickpeas, but you need to add extra flour to bind the dough. That’s about it. Here is the closer look of deep-fried falafel balls.
Here is the Mediterranean rice bowl spread that I made and recipe links.
- Shorbat adas with parsley (the blog version doesn’t contain parsley)
- Sumac cauliflower
- Eggplant ragout
- Tzatziki sauce
- Hummus
- Turmeric rice and
- Falafels
You can add falafels to your salads or tabbouleh or serve them with pita pockets or Za’atar bread.
Without any further ado, let me share the easy falafel recipe.
How to make falafel
Prep-Work-
- If you are using canned chickpeas, drain the liquid from the can, and rinse the chickpeas thoroughly.
- If using dried chickpeas, then follow these steps below.
- Soak 1 cup of dried chickpeas 6 to 8 hours or overnight. Drain the water and cook by adding 3 cups of water either in Instant Pot for 30 minutes or in the stove-top pressure cooker for four whistles.
- Let the pressure release naturally and drain the water from the chickpeas and let it cool.
Prepare the falafel mix-
- In a blender or food processor, add the cooked/canned chickpeas, garlic cloves, salt, ground coriander, cumin, and red chili powder.
- Blend it nicely—no need to add any extra water.
- Now add the chopped parsley, dill, and onion. Just pulse it.
- Note– As we use cooked/canned chickpeas, they are very soft and disintegrate when we deep-fry. So we add rice flour, which acts as a binding agent. You can use APF as well, but I wanted to keep it gluten-free.
- Add the rice flour and mix the dough. The falafel mix is now ready.
- I split the batter into three portions—one for deep-frying, one for baking and one for air-frying. You can follow either one of the methods.
Deep-Frying falafel
- Heat the oil for frying. Meanwhile, take a small portion of the dough and roll into small balls (small gooseberry size would do). Similarly, roll the balls with the remaining mixture and keep it ready for frying.
- When the oil is hot, slowly drop the falafels in batches and fry in medium heat till they turn golden brown and crisp.
- Note- If they disintegrate, add more rice flour or all-purpose flour.
- Place the fried falafels on a tissue paper to drain the excess oil.
Baking the falafels-
- Preheat the oven to 400 deg F. Line an aluminium foil or parchment paper in a baking tray and set it aside. If using aluminium foil, grease it with oil.
- Now take a small portion of the dough and flatten into small patties. To differentiate the three versions, I flattened this one. You can roll them into small balls also. But for baking, I prefer flattened patties.
- Place the patties on the baking tray and spread some oil on the falafel patties.
- Bake for 15 minutes at 400 deg F. Now take the falafels out and flip them. Spread some more oil.
- Bake for 15 minutes at 400 deg F. Basically, we are baking for 30 minutes flipping half-way through.
- That’s it; let it cool, and baked falafels are ready.
Air-frying falafel
- I usually don’t preheat my air-fryer. But your air-fryer requires preheating then do it accordingly.
- Take a small portion of the dough and shape it into small ovals/oblong falafel. You can flatten it as well.
- Place this in the air-fryer/basket and spread some oil.
- Set the temperature to 380 degrees F, set the timer for 8 minutes, and turn the air fryer.
- After eight mts, when the air fryer beeps, remove the basket and flip the falafels. Spread some more oil and air-fry it again at 380 deg F for eight more minutes. We are air-frying for 16 minutes at 380 deg F, flipping half-way through.
Serve it hot with hummus or sauce of your choice. Or serve it with pita bread and other condiments for a complete meal.
Recipe Notes-
- You can use more parsley for this measure. You can add up to ½ cup. Also, dill is optional.
- Adjust the salt and spice as per your taste.
- When deep-frying the falafels, if they disintegrate, add more flour.
📖 Recipe
Falafel with Cooked or Canned Chickpeas | Fried & Baked and Air-Fried Version
Ingredients
- 1 cup dried garbanzo beans or you can use 2.5 to 3 cups of cooked beans which is approx one and a half 15oz can
- water to soak and cook the beans
- 1 tsp ground cumin
- 1 tsp ground coriander
- 1 tsp red chili powder
- ½ tsp salt
- 2 garlic cloves
- ½ cup onion chopped
- ¼ cup parsley finely chopped
- 1 tsp dill finely chopped
- ¼ cup rice flour or all-purpose flour
- 1.5 cups oil to deep-fry
Measurement Details: 1cup=240ml; 1tbsp=15ml; 1tsp=5ml;
Instructions
Prep-Work-
- If you are using canned chickpeas, drain the liquid from the can, and rinse the chickpeas thoroughly.
- If using dried chickpeas, then follow these steps below.
- Soak 1 cup of dried chickpeas 6 to 8 hours or overnight. Drain the water and cook by adding 3 cups of water either in Instant Pot for 30 minutes or in the stove-top pressure cooker for four whistles.
- Let the pressure release naturally and drain the water from the chickpeas and let it cool.
Prepare the falafel mix-
- In a blender, add the cooked/canned chickpeas, garlic cloves, salt, ground coriander, cumin, and red chili powder.
- Blend it nicely—no need to add any extra water.
- Now add the chopped parsley, dill, and onion. Just pulse it.
- Note- As we use cooked/canned chickpeas, they are very soft and disintegrate when we deep-fry. So we add rice flour, which acts as a binding agent. You can use APF as well, but I wanted to keep it gluten-free.
- Add the rice flour and mix the dough. The falafel mix is now ready.
- I split the batter into three portions—one for deep-frying, one for baking and one for air-frying. You can follow either one of the methods.
Deep-Frying the falafels-
- Heat the oil for frying. Meanwhile, take a small portion of the dough and roll into small balls (small gooseberry size would do). Similarly, roll the balls with the remaining mixture and keep it ready for frying.
- When the oil is hot, slowly drop the falafels in batches and fry in medium heat till they turn golden brown and crisp.
- Note- If they disintegrate, add more rice flour or all-purpose flour.
- Place the fried falafels on a tissue paper to drain the excess oil.
Baking the falafels-
- Preheat the oven to 400 deg F. Line an aluminium foil or parchment paper in a baking tray and set it aside. If using aluminium foil, grease it with oil.
- Now take a small portion of the dough and flatten into small patties. To differentiate the three versions, I flattened this one. You can roll them into small balls also. But for baking, I prefer flattened patties.
- Place the patties on the baking tray and spread some oil on the falafel patties.
- Bake for 15 minutes at 400 deg F. Now take the falafels out and flip them. Spread some more oil and bake for 15 minutes at 400 deg F. Basically, we are baking for 30 minutes flipping half-way through.
- That’s it; let it cool, and baked falafels are ready.
Air-Frying the falafels-
- I usually don’t preheat my air-fryer. But your air-fryer requires preheating then do it accordingly.
- Take a small portion of the dough and shape it into small ovals/oblong falafel. You can flatten it as well.
- Place this in the air-fryer/basket and spread some oil.
- Set the temperature to 380 degrees F, set the timer for 8 minutes, and turn the air fryer.
- After eight mts, when the air fryer beeps, remove the basket and flip the falafels. Spread some more oil and air-fry it again at 380 deg F for eight more minutes. We are air-frying for 16 minutes at 380 deg F, flipping half-way through.
- Serve it hot with hummus or sauce of your choice.
Notes
- You can use more parsley for this measure. You can add up to ½ cup. Also, dill is optional.
- Adjust the salt and spice as per your taste.
- When deep-frying the falafels, if they disintegrate, add more flour.
Nutrition
I am not a nutritionist. The nutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. It varies depending upon the product types or brands.
Bell says
I tried this recipe with cooked chick peas and baked them. The falafels were very dry. Looking at other recipes, the key seems to use dry peas ( soaked overnight), refrigerate the mix for a least 1 hour, and fry them, not bake.
Srividhya G says
Sorry it turned out dry for you. I have been doing both ways and it has worked out for me.
PeterOPeter says
Your bake times and temp were WAY off for me. I needed 10+ minutes at 350.
Srividhya G says
Sorry about that. It worked for me but will test it again. Thanks.
Srividhya G says
I baked it at 400deg F for 30 minutes. If the falafels are too thick, the baking time might vary. But I will test it again.