A few weeks ago I shared the game-changer that is chickpea tofu.
Today, I want to share one of my favorite ways to eat chickpea tofu—pan-fried and loaded into a wrap with a quick and easy garlic-tahini sauce, a little red onion, seared kale, and fresh lemon. If you have some Sriracha or harissa, sprinkle some of that magic on there too for good measure.
Prep Time | 10 minutes |
Cook Time | 10 minutes |
Servings |
|
Ingredients
- 2 of your favorite gluten-free tortillas/wraps
- 7-10 leaves kale, stems removed and chopped
- Handful of red onion, sliced thinly or diced
- Fine-ground sea salt to taste
- Grapeseed oil, avocado oil, or unrefined coconut oil for greasing pan
- Fresh-cracked black pepper to taste (optional)
- fresh lemon juice (optional)
- Harissa or Sriracha (optional)
- 2 cups Chickpea Tofu* (or store-bought non-GMO, soy tofu), cut into cubes or strips
Garlic-Tahini Sauce
- ½ cup tahini
- 1/2 cup water
- 2 tsp fresh lemon juice
- 5 cloves garlic, sautéed or roasted
- 1/4 tsp sea salt, plus more to taste
Ingredients
Garlic-Tahini Sauce
|
|
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F and place garlic cloves (in their skins) on a parchment-lined baking sheet to roast for 7 minutes. Peel and toss into the blender with remaining Garlic-Tahini Sauce ingredients—blend until smooth and set aside.
- Heat a frying pan to medium and add 1–2 tablespoons of oil. Cook chickpea tofu about 1 minute on each side, rotating to cook as many sides as possible. Once starting to brown, push to the edges of the skillet and place chopped kale in the center clearing to sear for 2–3 minutes. Sprinkle with a tiny pinch of sea salt and a few grinds of pepper if using.
- If you have a gas range, quick char the tortillas directly over a low flame for 10–30 seconds to soften. You could also steam your tortilla for 10–30 seconds on each side. Once warmed and soft, lay on a plate to fill up.
- Now load up your wrap with chickpea tofu, onion, kale, Garlic-Tahini Sauce, hot sauce and lemon juice if using, leaving about 2" on all sides. Fold up bottom edge, then fold over top edge, then fold over right edge and use hand to tighten it all together, then roll left to close.
Recipe Notes
* See chickpea tofu recipe here
Share this Recipe
Have you tried chickpea tofu yet? What do YU think? Tell us with a comment below.
Visit us at our new home: Good Food Cooking School
This looks like the perfect lunch! Love that you came up with a soy free tofu! Can’t wait to make this very soon! Do you think its best served warm or cold? Thanks for sharing! Happy Holidays Heather! 🙂
-Kayla
You can enjoy it however you’d eat tofu, Kayla 🙂 Stir fry it, bake it with a marinade, slice it chilled into a salad… My fave is warm though!
I have been using Basan flour ( mixed as your recipe for Tofu ) as the base for savory toppings, Fried tomatoes, onions, sweet peppers garlic and sometimes a teaspoon of Cumin powder, lemon juice. Or Mushrooms gently fried with a creamy sauce ( Basan flour, Soy/ coconut milk seasoned ) with a scoop of garlic soy cream cheese.
So easy to make and tasty
So glad you are enjoying it! Besan works just great as it’s chickpea—YUM. 😀