This is an appetizer that people from Aden serve during Ramadhan. It is made out of chick pea flour (also known as Garam Flour). You may have had them at some Indian restaurants–they list them in their menu as Pakora.
Ingredients:
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1 cup of chick peas
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1/2 medium onion finely chopped
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1 jalapeno finely chopped (less if too spicy for you)
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2 tblsp of finely chopped cilantro
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1 patatoes grated (squeeze water out)
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1 carrot grated
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1 clove finely crushed
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salt to taste
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1/2 tsp of ground cumin
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1/2 tsp of ground coriander
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1/8 tsp of tumeric
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pinch of baking soda
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1/8 tsp chillie powder
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1/2 cup of water (give or take)
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Oil for frying
Place all the ingredients in a boil, except for the water. Mix them all well and then pour in the water gradually, and knead with your hand. Add water as needed. You want the mixture to be thick and not runny (a runny mixture wil yield you OIL SOAKED Farolee’s). It is rather like a thick paste like mixture that you want to achieve.
You sure its not Floree rather than Farolee?
We call it Farolee in Aden/Yemen–but you might call it something else where you come from. Don’t know! It must be the same recipe, but under a different name. The Adenis in Yemen learned it from the Indian community that settled in Aden.
can the chick peas be the canned/cooked chick peas? shukran
For this dish you have to have the powdered chick peas–or ground chick peas. Also called Besan in the South Asian [Indian] stores.
Lamya