Sweet Potato Falafel

Lunchtime: unequivocally the best part of the day. But could it be better? Yes sir, it can. You don’t have to spend gobs of money going out, but you also shouldn’t be packing the same peanut butter sandwich year in and year out; there is a middle way. The path to becoming a lunch box buddha isn’t so hard. All you need is a good balance of inspiration and improvisation.

Spanish food and I don’t really get along. To illustrate my point, I took a picture of the fruits and vegetables section of my grocery last time I went shopping.

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One of these things is not like the other

Spanish people are obsessed with pigs. There’s just no getting around it. Galicians in particular also seem to have a borderline-abnormal fixation on plastic bags. Because I am Captain Planet (and also just because I hate when I have a lot of groceries and my bag breaks on the walk home), I always bring my own bags. Unfortunately, the ladies who weigh your produce at the frutería don’t like it if you try to put your onions in your own bag because it’s “unhygienic” (this coming from a people who think it’s totally 100% no big deal to put a severed pig’s head in a pile of lettuce).

So anyway, lunch! This week I invited my German friend Julia over to make lunch with me because it’s Carnaval so all our friends were glamming it up in the Canary Islands and also because I like her a whole lot. Cooking lunch for the week is a whole lot easier when you have someone cooking with you. Not only does it mean half as much chopping, for this particular menu it means you get done faster because one person can roll the pita/falafel while the other cooks them.


Sweet Potato Falafel

Ingredients
Mass Volume
Sweet potatoes g 2
Garlic 2 cloves 2 cloves
Onion 1/2 1/2
Flour, chickpea or all-purpose g 1 cup
Cumin g 2 teaspoons
Garam masala g 2 teaspoons
Pepper g 2 teaspoons
Paprika g 1 teaspoon
Salt g 1 teaspoon
Cilantro, fresh g 1 cup
Lemon juice g 1/4 cup
Olive oil
Instructions
  1. Chop the sweet potatoes into 4 pieces, cover them with olive oil, and then roast at 350° until they’re soft. For me, that took about half an hour.
  2. While you’re waiting for them to cook, chip the onion, garlic and cilantro.
  3. Once the potatoes have cooled enough to touch them, peel the skins off with your fingers and then mash the insides.
  4. Throw the aromatics, flour, spices, cilantro and lemon juice into the mashed potato bowl and mix everything together.
  5. Put the mixture in the freezer for 10 minutes or so so that it’s easier to form balls or patties.
  6. Now you’re ready to cook. You can either bake, fry or deep fry your falafel.
  • To bake them, form little balls and cook for 15 minutes at 200.°
  • To fry them, heat olive oil up over high heat, form patties, fry one side and then the other.
  • To deep fry them, heat olive oil up in a deep pan. Form balls out of the dough and fry them until they have a crispy coating.

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