Thick Tahini Sauce
Editor's note: Use this recipe to make Rawia Bishara's Brussels Sprouts with Panko .
Tahini sauce, a smooth blend of toasted sesame paste, lemon juice, garlic and olive oil, is ubiquitous in Middle Eastern kitchens. It is the condiment. There is hardly a dish that isn't enhanced by it—drizzled on Falafel sandwiches and over Brussels Sprouts with Panko; blended with pureed chickpeas for Hummus and with charred eggplant for Baba Ghanouj. My favorite Whole Fried Fish is served with this sauce mixed with parsley. At Tanoreen, I mix it into salad dressings and drizzle it into cauliflower casseroles. My daughter? She dips French fries into it! Learn to make this and you will have a simple, delicious, versatile sauce to add to your repertoire.
Spicy Tahini Sauce
Add 1/4 cup pomegranate molasses and 2 tablespoons chile paste to the bowl of the food processor and pulse until thoroughly incorporated.
Sandwich Sauce
To make a thinner version for drizzling on falafel, kafta or cauliflower tagine, add water to the mixture and pulse to thin to desired consistency.
Fetti Sauce
Combine 1 cup of the tahini sauce with 1 cup of plain yogurt in the bowl of a food processor and pulse until smooth to make a wonderful, simple sauce for Chicken Fetti.
Recipe information
Yield
Makes 2 1/2 cups
Ingredients
Preparation
Step 1
In the bowl of a food processor, combine the tahini, garlic, lemon juice and salt and process on low speed for 2 minutes or until thoroughly incorporated. Turn the speed to high and blend until the tahini mixture begins to whiten. Gradually add up to 1/2 cup water until the mixture reaches the desired consistency.
Step 2
Transfer the sauce to a serving bowl and garnish with the parsley. Leftover tahini sauce can be stored, tightly covered in the refrigerator, for up to 2 weeks.