Easy Quinoa Tabouli
Submitted by at0micgrl
Easy quinoa tabbouleh: ripe tomatoes, parsley, scallions, and fresh mint tossed with cooked quinoa, lemon juice, and oil. A gluten-free Middle Eastern salad meant to rest overnight.
YIELD
2 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
20 minREADY
8 hrsThis is the simplest version of quinoa tabbouleh you’ll find: just chop, mix, and chill. The dish leans on ripe tomatoes and fresh mint, which traditional bulgur tabbouleh usually has too. Substituting quinoa for the bulgur makes it gluten-free while preserving the herb-forward flavor profile.
The overnight rest in the fridge is what takes this from acceptable to excellent. Lemon juice needs time to penetrate the quinoa grains and meld with the tomato juices that release as the salad sits. Twenty-four hours later, you’ll have a tabbouleh that tastes like a single dish rather than a bowl of separate ingredients.
Fresh mint is the herb worth obsessing over. Dried mint won’t substitute well here. The whole point is the cool, almost menthol-like brightness that fresh mint gives, especially against the acid from the lemon juice and the ripe tomato sweetness.
Serve at room temperature, not cold straight from the fridge. The note in the directions is right. Cold dulls the flavor of olive oil, tomato, and lemon. Pull the bowl out 20 to 30 minutes before serving so the salad can warm up and the aromas open back up.
Chef Tips
- Rinse the quinoa before cooking to remove the bitter saponin coating.
- Use ripe summer tomatoes whenever possible. Out-of-season tomatoes are mealy and watery and will ruin the salad.
- Drain off some tomato liquid if it looks too watery before adding the quinoa.
- Use olive oil instead of safflower if you want a more traditional Middle Eastern flavor. Safflower is neutral; olive oil contributes flavor of its own.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Pour water into a 1-quart saucepan.
Add quinoa; bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to a simmer; cover.
Cook for 10 to 15 minutes, or until all water has been absorbed.
While the quinoa is cooking, finely chop the tomatoes, parsley, and scallions.
Add lemon juice, oil, and mint to tomato mixture.
Stir in cooked quinoa and salt.
Mix well.
Let tabouli sit in the refrigerator for a day to blend flavors.
Note: Also, she neglected to mention that tabouli is traditionally served at room temperature.
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