Snack Easy Middle Eastern

Classic hummus

A silky, ultra-creamy hummus with tahini, lemon, garlic, and cumin — better than any grocery version, ready in 10 minutes with canned or from-scratch chickpeas.

A shallow bowl of creamy beige hummus topped with a pool of olive oil, a dusting of paprika, and fresh parsley.
Prep
10 min
Cook
1 min
Total
10 min
Serves
8

Hummus is the recipe that makes you wonder why you ever bought the tub version. Ten minutes in a food processor, real tahini, a proper amount of lemon, and a long blend time get you a bowl of silky Middle Eastern magic that's fresher, richer, and cheaper than anything in a grocery store. Once you've made it at home, the deli versions taste flat forever. A jar in the fridge turns sandwiches, salads, vegetable plates, and any leftover dinner into something worth repeating.

Classic hummus

Makes About 2 cups

Serves 8

Ingredients (15)

To finish

You'll need

  • Food processor or high-powered blender (Vitamix ideal)
  • Rubber spatula
  • Glass jar or serving bowl
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1/4 cup
180 Calories
5 g Protein
12 g Carbs
13 g Fat
3 g Fiber
2 g Sugar
260 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Garbanzos (chickpeas) — Kabuli variety is the standard; creamy and mild
  • Dried chickpeas (soaked + cooked) — creamiest possible result; 24-hour process
  • Canned chickpeas (Bush's, S&W, Goya) — reliable weeknight choice
  • Spanish chickpeas (garbanzos) — often larger and creamier

Ripeness

For canned: check the date and avoid swollen or dented cans. For dried: beans should look whole, beige, and uniform — not split or dusty. Chickpeas packed in water without additives are ideal; no-salt-added is nice if you want control.

Imperfections are fine

Occasional broken chickpeas or slight color variation in dried beans is fine. Any black or green spots = discard. Canned chickpeas that smell "off" when opened should also be discarded.

Good substitutions

  • White beans (cannellini) for a cannellini-tahini spread
  • Black beans for a black-bean "hummus" (Mexican twist)
  • Edamame for a green pea hummus
  • Butternut squash (roasted) + chickpeas for sweet variation

In season

Chickpeas are a pantry staple year-round. Fresh chickpeas (green pods) appear briefly in late spring — they're rare but worth seeking at farmers markets for a seasonal hummus.

How much to buy

1 (15 oz / 425 g) can chickpeas, or 3/4 cup dried (yields 2 cups cooked).

From a grower near you

Find your garlic and lemon growers on CollectiveCrop

Chickpeas are a pantry staple — no way to source locally unless you live near a dried-bean farm — but the rest of the recipe earns local sourcing. A fresh garlic head from a grower near you is sharp and complex where supermarket garlic is dull. Lemons picked from a California coastal tree in winter are floral where waxed supermarket lemons are flat. CollectiveCrop is where both become reachable. For a dip this minimal, those small upgrades are what make it taste homemade instead of grocery-store.

  • In season Year-round
  • For this recipe 2 lemons + 2 garlic cloves
  • Freshness Picked within this week
  • Diet-friendly vegan · gluten-free · dairy-free
  • While you're there Good tahini · High-quality olive oil · Fresh lemons · Fresh garlic · Warm pita · Raw vegetables for dipping

At the market

1 (15 oz / 425 g) can chickpeas, or 3/4 cup dried (yields 2 cups cooked).

Best varieties

  • Garbanzos (chickpeas) Kabuli variety is the standard; creamy and mild
  • Dried chickpeas (soaked + cooked) creamiest possible result; 24-hour process
  • Canned chickpeas (Bush's, S&W, Goya) reliable weeknight choice

Good to know

Tips

  • Start with good tahini. The difference between cheap and good tahini is enormous — like the difference between cheap and good olive oil.
  • Blend for the full 5 minutes. Most home cooks stop too early. The texture genuinely transforms in minutes 4 and 5.
  • Add ice water, not warm. Ice water preserves the emulsion and gives the hummus a creamy mouthfeel.
  • Peeling chickpeas takes 5 to 10 minutes but is the single biggest upgrade for silky hummus.
  • Drizzle more olive oil than feels reasonable — the oil pool on top is part of the experience.
  • Use the reserved aquafaba (chickpea liquid) instead of water for even more creaminess.
  • For a restaurant-style presentation, swoosh the hummus into a shallow bowl, pool olive oil in the swirl, and dust with paprika.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: 5 to 7 days in a sealed container with olive oil on top.
  • Freezer: 3 months in small containers; thaw overnight and stir.
  • Room temperature: 2 hours (for serving); refrigerate after.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served at room temperature.
  • For serving: let chilled hummus sit out 20 minutes before serving for optimal flavor and spreadability.

Make ahead

  • Make up to 4 days ahead; flavor peaks on day 2.
  • Store in a jar with olive oil sealing the top.
  • Freeze extra in small containers.
  • Peel chickpeas up to 1 day ahead (store refrigerated in water).

Variations

  • Roasted red pepper hummus: add 1/2 cup drained jarred roasted red peppers.
  • Beet hummus: add 1 roasted peeled beet — striking pink color.
  • Spicy hummus: add 1 tbsp harissa or 1/2 tsp chipotle powder.
  • Roasted garlic hummus: swap raw garlic for 1 full head of roasted garlic.
  • Herb hummus: blend in 1/4 cup mixed fresh herbs (basil, parsley, cilantro, mint).
  • Avocado hummus: add 1/2 avocado for extra creaminess and green color.
  • Lemon-preserved hummus: add 1 tablespoon preserved lemon peel for salty-sour depth.
  • Black garlic hummus: swap raw garlic for 6 cloves black garlic — deep, almost sweet.
  • Pumpkin hummus: add 1/2 cup roasted pumpkin puree and a pinch of nutmeg.

Swaps

  • No tahini: use 1/2 cup unsweetened sunflower seed butter or Greek yogurt (not traditional but works).
  • Nut-free (sesame allergy): sub 1/2 cup unsweetened sunflower seed butter for the tahini.
  • Dried chickpeas: soak 8 hours, cook with 1 tsp baking soda for 45 min until falling apart.
  • Fresh chickpeas (rare): shell and cook briefly for a seasonal spring hummus.
  • Less fat: reduce tahini to 1/3 cup and olive oil to 2 tbsp; texture will be lighter.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my hummus grainy?

Two fixes: blend longer (5 full minutes for restaurant-level silkiness) and use enough liquid (ice water, lemon juice, tahini). Also try peeling the chickpeas — the skins are the #1 cause of gritty texture. It's tedious but transforms homemade hummus into restaurant hummus.

Do I really need to peel the chickpeas?

For the silkiest possible hummus, yes. It adds 10 minutes but results in noticeably smoother texture. Rub drained chickpeas between your palms or pulse briefly with 1 tsp baking soda in warm water — skins float up and rinse off. For quick weeknight hummus, skip it.

Canned vs dried chickpeas — which is better?

Dried (soaked overnight + cooked 45 min with baking soda) makes the creamiest hummus. Canned is a 10-minute recipe vs. a 24-hour one. Both are excellent. For this recipe, canned is fine — quality brands (Bush's, S&W, or Spanish garbanzos) work great.

What makes Israeli hummus different?

Israeli hummus is exceptionally creamy, almost fluffy. The tricks: cook dried chickpeas with baking soda until falling apart, peel them, use LOTS of high-quality tahini (often 50%+ of the recipe), add ice water for lift, and blend for 5+ minutes. This recipe gets you 80% of the way there.

What tahini should I use?

Good tahini matters enormously. Look for runny, pourable tahini with a nutty fragrance. Seed + Mill, Soom, or Al Wadi are excellent. Avoid Kroger/store-brand tahini, which is often stiff, gritty, and bitter. The #1 difference between great and mediocre homemade hummus is the tahini.

Can I make hummus without tahini?

You can, but it's not really hummus at that point — it's a chickpea spread. Tahini is what makes hummus taste like hummus. Substitutes: peanut butter (weird), sunflower seed butter (works surprisingly well), or just use more olive oil (decent).

How long does hummus last?

5 to 7 days refrigerated in a sealed container. Top with a layer of olive oil to seal out air and extend freshness. The flavors deepen beautifully overnight.

Can I freeze hummus?

Yes, up to 3 months. Freeze in small containers, leaving 1/2 inch headspace. Thaw in the fridge overnight; stir vigorously with a splash of olive oil to rehomogenize.

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