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Posted by Sunset, July 13, 2009 in Team Garden , Team Kitchen

By Margo True, Sunset Food Editor


Two summers ago, when we started this one-block diet, I dreamed of growing something I'd had from a street vendor in Turkey: fresh chickpeas. He sold them off the back of a little wagon, a huge bundle festooned with pods. I sat and popped them open, one by one, gobbling the sweet, almost peanut-like morsels inside.

So we tried. Dismal failure

And then this summer, we tried again. Success! Why? Because this time, we planted them in spring, before scorching weather set in. 

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Team Kitchen harvested a few and tried them (that's Stephanie Dean, our test kitchen coordinator on the left, and Amy Machnak, our recipe editor, on the right). 

Trying chickpea








We didn't have many, but they tasted nearly as sweet and fresh as I remembered. 








However, I don't remember them looking like tiny green brains (see below). Maybe I'd been eating them too fast.

Chickpeahand


















If you're curious and would like to try these little nuggets, look for them at Mexican and Indian markets starting in early summer. Or grow them yourself! As long as you plant them early, they're really not so hard to get going.
Comments

You can overwinter chickpeas here in NorCal. Plant in late October and they will survive and set beans in March. If it goes below 30 protect them, though!

Posted by:Hank | July 14, 2009 at 04:02 PM

Thank you, Hank! Makes total sense. And also yet again makes me feel lucky that I live in N. California.

Posted by:Margo True | July 15, 2009 at 06:19 AM
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