I love this recipe for pumpkin hummus. It's perfect for Thanksgiving.* It's easy. It's tasty. It is always well received. I've included it in recipe demos, I shared it in my j weekly column and here in Blog Appetit.
Despite how much I love this recipe, I couldn't resist tinkering. First I thought it would do very well in a pumpkin. Which it did -- just look at the beauty above. Then I amped the taste by adding about 1 tsp. of smoked paprika to the hummus when I added the pumpkin puree.
Other changes: I made sure the za'atar mix had plenty of time to soften in the olive oil before blending half into the pumpkin hummus. I drizzled about a third of what was left over the top of the dip and drizzled the rest in batches as the top layers of the dip were consumed.
I also garnished the spread with roasted pumpkin seeds saved from when I cleaned the squash out to make the dip container. I cleaned, rinsed and dried the seeds and then roasted with lots of sea salt and smoked paprika on a well oiled tray in 325 degree oven, turning occasionally to make sure seeds were coated on both sides, for about 20-25 minutes.
Here's the original recipe including the smoked paprika addition above. The version shown in the pumpkin is a double recipe which I served with jicama sticks and thin, toasted slices of a pretzel baguette.
Pumpkin Hummus with Za’atar Drizzle Makes 8 appetizer servings
7-8 oz. container of unflavored hummus
1 cup canned or fresh pumpkin puree (do not use canned pumpkin pie filling)
1 tsp. smoke paprika
2 Tbs. za’atar seasoning mix (or use 5 tsp. ground oregano, 1⁄4 tsp. of cumin and 1 tsp. sesame seeds)
1/4 cup olive oil
6-8 flatbreads or pita breads
Mix hummus with pumpkin puree and paprika. In a separate bowl, combine za’atar with olive oil and stir well. Heat flatbreads or pitas in dry fry pan or griddle until warm and toasted. Either serve as a topped flatbread or dip. To serve as a flatbread, spread the pumpkin hummus on the bread, drizzle with za’atar mix and cut into triangles. To serve as a dip, stir half of the za’atar into the hummus until just combined and you can still see “streaks” of the herb oil mixture. Drizzle the remainder on top of the pumpkin hummus. Cut the warmed breads into triangles and serve with dip.
*It's also lovely for Halloween or Day of the Dead parties, or really any time!
1 comment:
I love this recipe for pumpkin hummus. It's perfect for Thanksgiving. It's easy. It's tasty. It is always well received. I've included it in recipe demos, I shared it in my j weekly column and here in Blog Appetit.
Despite how much I love this recipe, I couldn't resist tinkering. First I thought it would do very well in a pumpkin. Which it did -- just look at the beauty above. Then I amped the taste by adding about 1 tsp. of smoked paprika to the hummus when I added the pumpkin puree.
Post a Comment