Looking for a new recipe for Meatless Monday? Look no further, today I am sharing delicious quinoa, cauliflower and chickpea vegetarian meatballs with tahini sauce. I have to admit that I cannot say that without my mouth watering a little bit...
From what appears to be a long list of ingredients, this recipe is quite simple and requires only a few main ingredients along with an assortment of spices and herbs. You will need: cooked quinoa, cauliflower, canned chickpeas, breadcrumbs, eggs and a handful of spices and herbs. You will first need to cook the cauliflower. But keep in mind that this recipe calls for cooked quinoa and if you don't have any cooked on hand, no need to panic. I have laid out the basic steps on how to easily make quinoa, below.
How to Make Quinoa
- In a medium bowl, rinse 1 cup of quinoa a few times (1 cup of uncooked quinoa will yield 3 cups cooked quinoa).
- In a medium saucepan, boil 2 cups of water. Add the quinoa and continue to boil for about 15 minutes until the quinoa is tender and has absorbed most of the water.
- Drain the quinoa and let it cool.
As you are gathering your ingredients, dump them straight into your food processor. That's right, everything (apart from the eggs) is going to be processed together. Man, I love this machine! It was seriously the best wedding gift that we received!
Once processed, scoop out your mixture into a large bowl and add the eggs. Stir well to combine. Roll your mixture into little balls and place on a lined baking tray. If the mixture is too sticky to handle, let it sit for 5-10 minutes. It may be too warm because of the freshly cooked cauliflower. If that doesn't make it easier to work with, add a little bit more breadcrumbs. Note that the mixture is supposed to be on the sticky side. As long as you get it into a ball shape, you are good. I find that it helps quite a lot if I rinse and dry my hands after rolling 5-6 balls.
These little bites take only 30 minutes to bake in the oven. But to make this in even less time, you can opt to pan-fry the meatballs on your stove top instead. Heat up some oil over medium high and cook each side for about 3-4 minutes. However, be very careful when you are flipping the meatballs over because they are very soft and hard to handle. Which is why I opt for the oven. Plus, using the oven gives you time to make the tahini sauce, instead of having to watch over and monitor the frying pan. But it's your call 🙂
Once baked, let the meatballs cool for about 5 minutes and serve warm with a drizzle of tahini sauce. Serving with tahini sauce is my favourite way to eat these meatballs. I like them on their own or wrapped in a pita. I even like extra sauce on the side for dipping. But you can serve these meatballs in many different ways. For example, try it soaked in your favourite marinara pasta sauce or creamy rosé sauce served over pasta.
Since this recipe yields around 40 meatballs, get creative over the next day or 2 on how to eat them! Luckily these freeze well so you can also just freeze the left overs for another day.
Tahini Sauce
I have to say that I do love these meatballs but they would be nothing without the tahini sauce. I love this stuff.
This recipe yields about 1 and ½ cup of tahini sauce. It is very likely that you will use this all up for the 40 meatballs that you make but if you happen to have some left over or made an extra batch, keep it refrigerated in an airtight container . There are plenty of other ways to use this delicious sauce in your meals over the next few days
- Add some chickpeas and make hummus out of it
- Add sautéed eggplant and make an eggplant spread
- Use it as salad dressing and drizzle it over a mixed greens salad
- Drizzle some sauce over grilled chicken breast or roast chicken
Recipe
Quinoa, Cauliflower and Chickpea Vegetarian Meatballs with Tahini Sauce
- Total Time: 40 minutes
- Yield: 40 meatballs
- Diet: Vegetarian
Description
Vegetarian meatballs are easy to make with a combination of quinoa, cauliflower, chickpeas and an assortment of spices and herbs, drizzled with a homemade tahini sauce.
Ingredients
- 2 cups cauliflower florets (about half a head of cauliflower)
- 3 cups cooked quinoa
- 1 cup canned chickpeas, drained and rinsed
- 1 cup breadcrumbs
- 2 cloves of garlic
- 1 tablespoon fresh cilantro, chopped
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- ½ tablespoon italian seasoning blend
- ½ tablespoon paprika
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon ground black pepper
- 2 eggs
For the tahini sauce:
- ½ cup tahini paste
- ¼ cup fresh lemon juice
- ⅓ cup lukewarm water
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 cloves of garlic
- ⅛ teaspoon ground cumin
- ½ teaspoon sea salt
- 1 + ½ tablespoons fresh parsley
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375 F.
- Bring a medium pot of water to boil and cook the cauliflower for 5 minutes. Drain and place the cooked cauliflower into your food processor.
- Add the cooked quinoa, chickpeas, breadcrumbs, garlic, cilantro, onion powder, italian seasoning blend, paprika, salt and pepper and puree on high until combined.
- Scoop the mixture out into a large bowl and add the eggs. Mix well until the eggs are fully incorporated.
- Let the mixture sit for 5 minutes. Roll out into small 1 inch thick balls and place onto a lined baking tray.
- Bake for 30-35 minutes until the balls are golden brown and firm on the outside, yet soft inside.
- Make the tahini sauce: While the "meatballs" are baking, make your tahini sauce. Combine all ingredients, except for the parsley, into a blender and puree until smooth. Pour into a small bowl and add the parsley. Stir to combine.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Category: Appetizers
- Method: Bake
- Cuisine: Mediterranean
Pakistani Food Recipes says
everything looks great with tahini sauce. Tahini sauce adds flavor to the recipe. The vegetables and the stuffed chicken looks delicious. I really enjoyed the recipe
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anna @ annamayeveryda says
Those look really good, such tempting photographs!
Emily says
Looks lovely! Am going to try this very soon and perhaps use a cookie dough scoop instead of rolling with my hands (Have a particular adversity to getting my hands dirty, so I hope this works!)
Thank you for the recipe!
Sam | Ahead of Thyme says
Great idea! Let me know it turns out with the cookie scoop.
Jewels says
Looks great, I can't wait to try it and show you my pictures.?
Sam | Ahead of Thyme says
Great, I can't wait to see 🙂
Han says
This was an amazingly messy recipe to make, and made an enormous amount, but they're delicious. We cooked some in a frying pan like falafel and some in the oven like the recipe and both were tasty. Eating bits off the spoon as I was making the balls was like snacking on savoury cookie dough. We skipped the eggs as the mixture was very sticky and holding together.
Sam | Ahead of Thyme says
Thanks, Han! I am glad you liked them 🙂 And I agree, it is a very messy recipe! I suggested in my post that I find that it helps if I rinse and dry my hands after rolling 5-6 balls, because my hands just get wayy to sticky. I should try it without the eggs, thanks for the tip! 🙂