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Sides, Salads, SoupVegetarian

The Best Tahini

By June 15, 2018September 18th, 2022170 Comments


One of the things I love
about my โ€œjobโ€ as a food writer is that people email me all the time with questions, mistaking me for some kind of expert. Where do you eat when youโ€™re in Nashville? They ask. Or Can you recommend a good food mill? I see you have marble countertops, do you worry about stains? I plan to make your Vongole for friends next week, what should Iย serveย with it?ย The speediness of my response to these emails is in direct proportion to my knowledge of the topic. If I know the answer or have a strong opinion about something, I will usually write back right away. If notโ€ฆwell maybeย some of you out there are still waiting for replies from 2013. (Ugh, sorry.) Youโ€™d think by now, after two decades working in and around the food world, that I wouldnโ€™t be stumped quite as often as I am. Youโ€™d think that after writing four cookbooks, Iโ€™d know the exact teaspoon measurement of โ€œjuice from a half a limeโ€ or that I wouldnโ€™t have to look up the correct spelling of chili with an โ€˜iโ€™ and chile with an โ€œe.โ€ Or that I would know how long that pasta/sauce/casserole lasts in the freezer. Youโ€™d also think Iโ€™d have an arsenal of brand loyalties โ€” that Iโ€™d always buy the same grainy mustard or the same barbecue sauce or the same tahini.

Tahini!

I canโ€™t believe how many different brands of tahini Iโ€™ve bought over the years. While the rest of the internet was falling in love with the ingredient over the past decade, I kept stalling out on my enthusiasm for it. All the jars Iโ€™d bring home seemed to have strange aftertastes or too-thick consistencies. My homemade hummus, while usually better than store-bought, still seemed to be not quite reaching its full potential. Itโ€™s not like this kept me up at night or anything, but I will say that ever since Phoebe started only selectively eating dairy, Iโ€™ve felt a new urgency to find a go-to, especially since tahini lends a creaminess to dressings and dishes that you can only usually get from (now verboten) milk or butter.

So I finally did what you guys do โ€” I asked a food blogger. And not just any food blogger โ€” superstar Molly Yeh, who, for a while there, was using so much tahini (inย milkshakes,ย chocolate chip cookies, onย glazed chicken ) I thought that maybe she had some investments in the sesame seed sector. Because sheโ€™s Molly, she wrote back almost immediately (ahem, @dinneralovestory). She said she pretty much only uses Soom, and I could find it at Whole Foods or Amazon. I followed her marching orders and bought a jar.

.
The first thing I did was make a whipped sweet potato dip (pictured above) that Iโ€™d eat on the regs in the 90s thanks to Josieโ€™s on the Upper West Side, where they served it alongside the starter bread basket. Since sweet potatoes can sometimes be a hard sell in my house, Iโ€™ve been looking for interesting ways to prepare them, and this one seemed perfect. What I noticed first about Soomโ€™s tahini was the smooth, creamy consistency โ€” there was none of the greasy graininess that I was so used to โ€” and I whirled it into the potatoes with some spices and warm water, then served with a few dipping options to snack on before dinner. It had just the right hint of nuttiness โ€” no bitterness, no aftertaste โ€” and went fast. A few days later, I made the spicy tahini dressing from Saladish,ย drizzled it over baked sweet potatoes, and showered the whole thing with chives. Letโ€™s just say we did not miss the sour cream. Iโ€™ve made tahini dressing many times before, but I knew almost instantly that this recipe, with this tahini, was the one forevermore. Now there is always a jar of it in our refrigerator, not only because Phoebe loves it for veggie-dipping, but because it wakes up almost anything on the grill, from chicken to bok choy to kale.

As if the news of discovering my go-to tahini was not exciting enough, the nice folks at Soom have decided to offer a free Soom two-pack (a jar of Sesame Premium Tahini, a jar ofย Chocolate Sweet Tahini Halva Spread) and a Soom onesie (size 6-12 months) to one lucky DALS reader. Comment below before noon (ET) on Monday, June 18 to be eligible. (Special attention paid to tahini-related comments!) Thanks Soom! Thanks Molly! Have a great weekend, everybody. Update: The winner has been notified. Congrats Anu!

Spicy Tahini Dressing
Excerpted (and slightly adapted) fromย Saladish by Ilene Rosen (Artisan Books). Copyright ยฉ 2018
Makes 1ยพ cups

1 cup tahini, at room temperature
Grated zest and juice of 1 lemon
1 small garlic clove (optional)
3โ„4 cup water
1 teaspoon harissa, or to taste (brands vary in concentration and spiciness)
1โ„4 teaspoon kosher salt, or to taste

Combine the tahini, lemon zest and juice, garlic, if using, and water in the bowl of a food processor or in a blender and process to combine. Check the consistencyโ€”it should be thin enough to toss with leaves or drizzle on top of potatoes; add another tablespoon or two of water if needed. Add the harissa and salt and process until smooth. The dressing keeps for several days in a covered container in the refrigerator.

Sweet Potato Tahini Dip
Inspired by Josieโ€™s (RIP!)

1 1/4 cups baked sweet potatoes, usually 2 small potatoes or 1 large
2 tablespoons tahini
pinch cumin
1/2 teaspoon curry
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons warm water

Blend everything together in a food processor (I use a mini food processor), adding water one tablespoon at a time until it reaches desired consistency.

P.S. Mollyโ€™s TV show, Girl Meets Farm premieres on the Food Network on June 24, 11 am ET/ 10 am CT/ 11 am PT.

Looking for tahini baking ideas? Try Chocolate-Tahini Brownies from Bon Appetit;ย Carrot Tahini Muffins from Smitten Kitchen;ย Maple Tahini Cupcakesย from Molly; Tahini Cookiesย fromย Uri Scheft.

170 Comments

  • Laura says:

    Oh goodness. Iโ€™ve never used tahini, so I donโ€™t have a go-to recipe. I guess Iโ€™d start with hummus!

  • Avatar S says:

    I like to make fresh hummus!

  • Avatar Jessica Mischna says:

    I mean, DO you have any dining recommendations for Nashville?

  • Avatar Karen M says:

    I love this recipe, works great with carrots and sweet potatoes too!
    Roasted Butternut Squash and Red Onion with Tahini and Zaโ€™atar in Jerusalem: A Cookbook,

  • Ronda says:

    Iโ€™m going to make your sweet potato dip as that looks so good. I like to use tahini in most of my dips โ€“ hummus of all kinds mainly.

  • Avatar Hillary says:

    This is so exciting! We always have tahini in the house. Iโ€™ve been making up a sauce to use on salad, with falafel, on roasted veg, etc. It is basically tahini, lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, salt, and a little water to loosen it. I just keep it in the fridge all week to liven things up.

    I recently saw a recipe for tahini fudge so that is next on the list!

  • Avatar Elizabeth says:

    Wow! I think I live under a rock โ€“ Idk that Iโ€™ve ever had tahini! And def had no clue it was sesame seedsโ€ฆ which is all great news b/c Iโ€™m definitely going to try that dressing asap.

  • Avatar Michelle says:

    After getting very sick when he was two years old, hummus was one of the only things I could get my son to eat. It is still his favourite food and he is now nine. We go through a LOT of hummus! Thanks for the giveaway!

  • Avatar Megan says:

    Thank-you!!! I thought I was the only person who had trouble with Tahini. I love sesame seeds/oil, but every attempt at homemade babaganoush had a weird after taste. Eggplants will be in season at my CSA soon and I canโ€™t wait to try again using Soom!

  • Avatar Bria Silbert says:

    I love tahini and I know I will love THIS tahini because it is in a screw top jar. The last time I tried to open the can of tahini I purchased, the can opener would not easily open the can and it was not a pretty sight. Plus the tahini within was so hard and crusty and difficult to mix. This one looks delicious and spreadable!

  • Avatar coral sayer says:

    we made a chicken sharwama-ish / sheet pan dinner thing with carrots and onions and a tahini lemon dressing quite a bit this past winter! Easy and family friendly!

  • Avatar Kathy says:

    Another great tahini inspired recipe from Smitten Kitchen: https://smittenkitchen.com/2013/10/miso-sweet-potato-and-broccoli-bowl/ Itโ€™s a week night go to in our house!

  • Matilda says:

    Love this! Safe to say that Molly Yehโ€™s tahini chocolate chip cookies are our house cookie now.

  • Avatar Hilary says:

    My husband makes a delicious sweet potato burger with tahini, white beans, a sweet potato, chipotle seasoning, garlic powder, finely diced white onionโ€“all mixed up and formed into pattiesโ€“and Panko crumbs for a crispy โ€œburger exterior.โ€ We serve it with sliced avocado, greens, and tomato, and I like a nice squirt of dijon mustard on mine! Iโ€™ll give Soom a try. I do hate the graininess of some tahini. Thanks for the rec!

  • Avatar Julie K says:

    How cute is a Soom Onesie! I was googling meal prep ideas the other day and I found a recipe for a sweet potato grain bowl with Green Tahini sauce. I didnโ€™t have tahini so used some sesame oil in the dressing. Would love to try it with the real thing and compare. The chocolate Tahini is intriguing too, should I be thinking Nutella replacement?!?! Thanks Jenny and Soom!

  • Lily says:

    I always like to keep a jar of tahini in the fridge, and keep wanting to try Soom, so what a nice confluence of events! I love swirling tahini into a batch of brownies, adding a dollop to miso dressing (so good with roasted beets and carrots!), etc., etc. The possibilities are endless!

  • Avatar Lynn says:

    Iโ€™d love to try the sweet potato dip you have listed above or even just homemade humus (Iโ€™ve tried in the past and just never loved it because of the tahini).

  • Avatar Camille says:

    I have always been in the same camp as you with tahini โ€“ I want to want it, and youโ€™ve convinced me to go out and try Soom to make hummus this weekend! Would love to try the new flavor, and have just the perfect little person for that onesie ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Pam-ella says:

    THis sounds fantastic. Iโ€™ve also been wandering lost in tahini-land. I remember an old roommate making a sauce from tahini, miso and maple syrup that looked dark and mysterious and looked fantastic. Iโ€™ve got the spicy tahini dressing on my list of things to make next. (FIrst, I need to get good tahini though.)

  • Lisa says:

    I also use it for Ottolenghiโ€™s Butternut Squash with Zaatar & Tahini. Itโ€™s one of my go-to autumn dishes and is always a knock-out when I host dinner parties. Iโ€™d love to try Soom. Thanks for hosting the contest!

  • Avatar judy herington says:

    One of my fav go to recipes has tahini and lemon!

  • Avatar Katie says:

    Ooh, this is great! Iโ€™ve been making Ottolenghiโ€™s tahini and halva brownies and was overwhelmed in deciding what tahini to use. It seems like a make or break thing to me! Iโ€™d love to get to try soom brand!

  • Avatar sally says:

    I am OBSESSED with tahini, and love Soom! I made a yogurt/tahini/lemon sauce, with a little cumin and sumac last week. I highly recommend the tahini-halvah brownies from Sweet โ€“

  • Avatar Casey Warner says:

    Iโ€™ve been using Soom exclusively now for 3 years. Nothing compares. In addition to it being delicious and just the right texture and consistency, I love that Soom is a women owned business. These ladies have it going on!!

  • Avatar Sherri says:

    I love Soom tahini! I learned about it Michael Solomonovโ€™s excellent book, Zahav, and have become a devotee to this brand.

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