
Courtesy of Cooking Light at www.myrecipes.com
When I lived in New York City, I lived only a couple blocks away from what could arguable be the best and most famous falafel shop, Mamoun’s. Every day there would be a line out the door, but service was quick as they slapped their still-hot chickpea falafel patty into a fresh pita, topped with cucumbers, tomatoes and tzatziki (a salty, cucumber yogurt) sauce. One need not be vegetarian to crave this favorite at this whole-in-the-wall. And, well, you’ve already heard me talk about my love of middle-eastern food. It took fierce willpower not to go every day, but sheesh, for 2 bucks, it hardly was a dent in the wallet.
Now I’ve made falafels on my own before which always turned out decent, though not like Mamoun’s. However, this caught my attention as it was listed as a Latin-inspired type of falafel and I was intrigued. It was also listed as a winner for best vegetarian entree so it’s gotta be good, right?
http://find.myrecipes.com/recipes/recipefinder.dyn?action=displayRecipe&recipe_id=1654699
Ann Taylor Pittman, Cooking Light, SEPTEMBER 2007
Yield:
4 servings (serving size: 1 stuffed pita half)
Ingredients
Patties:
- 1 (15-ounce) can pinto beans, rinsed and drained
- 1/2 cup (2 ounces) shredded Monterey Jack cheese
- 1/4 cup finely crushed baked tortilla chips (about 3/4 ounce)
- 2 tablespoons finely chopped green onions
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped cilantro
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 large egg white
- 1 1/2 teaspoons canola oil
Spread:
- 1/4 cup mashed peeled avocado
- 2 tablespoons finely chopped tomato
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped red onion
- 2 tablespoons fat-free sour cream
- 1 teaspoon fresh lime juice
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
Remaining ingredients:
- 2 (6-inch) pitas, each cut in half crosswise
- 4 thin red onion slices, separated into rings
- Microgreens
Preparation
To prepare patties, place pinto beans in a medium bowl; partially mash with a fork. Add cheese and next 5 ingredients (through egg white); stir until well combined. Shape bean mixture into 4 (1/2-inch-thick) oval patties.
Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add patties to pan; cook 3 minutes on each side or until patties are browned and thoroughly heated.
To prepare spread, combine avocado and next 5 ingredients (through salt), stirring well. Place 1 patty in each pita half. Spread about 2 tablespoons avocado spread over patty in each pita half; top with onions and greens.
Nutritional Information
- Calories:281 (30% from fat)
- Fat:9.5g (sat 3.4g,mono 3.9g,poly 1.5g)
- Protein:12.2g
- Carbohydrate:37.4g
- Fiber:5.9g
- Cholesterol:13mg
- Iron:2.4mg
- Sodium:625mg
- Calcium:188mg
Notes:
Sheesh, I ran into a lot of issues with this recipe – it was a true labour of love – but mostly due to my own errors, not because of the recipe. First, I decided to make a lot of my own ingredients. For example, I made my own pitas, which turned out great and I was feeling proud to have made something I thought would be very difficult – only to burn my fingers as mentioned earlier in the week, blisters and all.

Now for whatever reason, I made these pitas last weekend, yet decided to make these falafels tonight (and we all know what happens with pitas in just a matter of days…). Needless to say, my pitas were no longer pliable and fell apart by the time I used them today, so I highly recommend that whether you make your own or buy them to make this recipe within a day!
The recipe also called for beans, which I now soak overnight in lieu of cans, so that could be the reason I kept putting this recipe off – I kept forgetting to soak the beans at night! So here’s where problem #2 comes in. As I drained them after their overnight soak, I soon realized that I soaked too many beans to equal what a 15 oz. can would yield even though I googled the equation. I quickly forgot this and two hours later after they boiled down, I ended up putting the whole batch (probably 2 1/2 cans worth!), with all the accompanying ingredients together. It wasn’t until I formed the patties and thinking, “damn…these suckers are huge!” did the lightbulb go off. It was too late, but I cooked them anyways and crossed my fingers.

Finally, I bought radish sprouts last week when I went grocery shopping and yup, they spoiled before I could use them (what was I thinking?) as did the tomatoes, so I didn’t have either of those as garnish. And then there was the CL-way of oil-usage…clearly not enough (only a tsp. and a 1/2?) Come ON! Needless to say, my patties were cementing to my skillet, so I just upended the bottle of oil at that point and added about 2 tablespoons more (ah, what the hell, I was already botching up this recipe bigtime, right?).
I also made my own tortilla chips from homemade tortillas I made this morning (see my other blog soon for more on that recipe), although you could easily use store chips or make your own by slicing up store-bought corn tortillas – the way I used to do it before I finally took the leap today and made tortillas using masa flour. Luckily these turned out just fine.
Verdict:
Even with all the problems I incurred, these were fantastic! Even with the disproportionate amount of beans to other ingredients, they were still tasty, although I’m sure would be even more flavorful if I did the ratio right. The avocado cream was downright addictive. My husband polished off 3 huge patties and still looked for more. I will definitely be making again – I can image these will be great, patties alone on a plate, topped with avocado cream and joined by a side of baba ganouj, hummus, greek salad and fresh pita…oh yeah, my kind of meal!
P.S. I didn’t take a picture because of all my mess ups, so I’m just leaving you the CL picture at top – I’m sure it could look that pretty!