Chile-Crisp Chickpea Rice Bowls
Published Aug. 23, 2022

- Total Time
- 35 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups sushi rice (short-grain white rice), rinsed until water runs clear
- Kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
- ¼cup store-bought or homemade chile crisp, plus more for serving
- Neutral oil (such as grapeseed), as needed
- 3cups cooked, rinsed chickpeas (homemade or from two 15-ounce cans)
- Granulated sugar, to taste
- 1pint (8 to 10 ounces) cherry or other small tomatoes, halved
- 4celery stalks, coarsely chopped, plus any leaves
- ¼cup coarsely chopped cilantro leaves and stems
- 2tablespoons soy sauce
Preparation
- Step 1
In a medium saucepan, combine the rice, 1 teaspoon salt and 2 cups water. Bring to a boil over high, then cover and reduce heat to low. Cook until rice is tender and most of the liquid is absorbed, about 20 minutes. Turn off the heat and let rice rest, covered, until ready to eat. (Alternatively, cook rice in a rice cooker or however you like to cook rice.)
- Step 2
While the rice cooks, make the chickpeas: Add the chile crisp to a large (12-inch), nonstick skillet and heat over medium. (Make sure there is enough oil — not just solids — covering the bottom of the skillet. If your chile oil is mostly solids, add a little neutral oil to cover to skillet.)
- Step 3
Add the chickpeas and a pinch of sugar, stir to coat in the oil, then spread into an even layer. Cook until the chickpeas start to sizzle, 2 to 3 minutes. Cook, stirring occasionally, until browned and crisp all over, 7 to 10 minutes more. If the pan looks dry at any point, add a drizzle of neutral oil (or more chile crisp if you want it really, really spicy).
- Step 4
While the chickpeas and rice cook, stir together the tomatoes, celery, celery leaves, cilantro, soy sauce and a pinch of sugar in a medium bowl.
- Step 5
When the rice and chickpeas are ready, divide the rice among plates or bowls. Pour some of the liquid from the bowl of tomatoes over the rice, then top with the tomatoes and celery, the chickpeas and more chile crisp, if desired.
Private Notes
Comments
I happened to have all the ingredients on had so gave it a try! It was pleasant enough but has a definite “cleaning out the fridge” vibe. I wouldn’t make a special effort to get ingredients for it, but if you have them it’s worth a try! I would crisp the chickpeas in a neutral oil first and mix in the chile crisp later—it got a little burnt before the chickpeas got crisp.
A squeeze of lemon at the end and a dollop of Greek yogurt were excellent additions.
Good flavors and cheap! A little dry for me. Improved with a squeeze of lime at the end (fish sauce would also work well I think).
I made according to recipe except for avoiding burning the chili crisp by using neutral oil. Although it was ‘tasty enough,’ and was easy, it did not knock my socks off. Prob will not make again.
Quick, easy and delicious. Family requested this go in the regular rotation. Fried beans in veggie oil and then added chili crisp (Lao Gan Ma - the OG CC). Added lime juice to the tomatoes. Next time will try rice wine vinegar instead. Very salty so will cut down the soy sauce a bit too.
Not sure if anyone still reads this, but I could not get the chickpeas to be crispy. Maybe I should only put one can in the oil instead of two, but even after 10 extra minutes of stirring and waiting, they just came out warm and slightly dry.
@Ryan haha, I’ve never gotten chickpeas ‘crispy’ on stove, only in oven. However, always still tasty. Will be trying this recipe tomorrow!
