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Crispy Gnocchi Chaat with Spiced Chickpeas

Crispy Gnocchi Chaat with Spiced Chickpeas

This crispy gnocchi chaat delivers everything we love about samosa chaat—warm spiced chickpeas, cool salted yogurt, bright green chutney, and that sweet-tangy tamarind hit—without the folding and frying. Roasted gnocchi turns golden and blistered, while quick-pickled red onions and a glossy date–tamarind reduction give the platter a modern, restaurant-worthy edge. Mildly spicy for the family, with simple ways to dial up the heat at the table.


Ingredients

Quick-Pickled Red Onions

  • 1 medium red onion, very thinly sliced
  • 3 tbsp rice vinegar (or white vinegar)
  • 2 tbsp warm water
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • ¾ tsp table salt

Date–Tamarind Reduction

  • ¾ cup tamarind chutney (store-bought, or our family’s homemade Classic Tamarind Chutney)
  • 2–3 Medjool dates, pitted and finely chopped
  • 2 tbsp water
  • pinch roasted cumin powder (optional; see Notes)
  • tiny pinch table salt

Yogurt

  • 1½ cups plain whole milk yogurt
  • ¼ tsp table salt
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • 1–2 tbsp milk, to thin slightly

Mint-Cilantro Chutney

  • 1½ cups cilantro leaves and tender stems, packed
  • ¼ cup mint leaves, lightly packed (leaves only; remove thick stems)
  • ½ small green chili (serrano or jalapeño), seeded (mild)
  • 1 tbsp fresh lime juice
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • ½ tsp table salt, plus more to taste
  • 1–3 tbsp water, as needed to blend smooth

Crispy Gnocchi

  • 2½ lb shelf-stable potato gnocchi
  • 3 tbsp neutral oil
  • 1 tsp table salt
  • 1 tsp Kashmiri red chili powder (mild; mostly for color)
  • 1 tsp chaat masala

Spiced Chickpeas

  • 2 tbsp neutral oil
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • ½ small yellow onion, very finely minced
  • 1 tsp grated ginger
  • 1 tsp grated garlic
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 tsp ground coriander
  • ½ tsp ground cumin
  • ¼ tsp turmeric
  • ½ tsp Kashmiri red chili powder
  • ¼ tsp garam masala
  • ¼ tsp kasoori methi, crushed finely between palms
  • ½ tsp table salt, plus more to taste
  • 2 cans (15 oz each) chickpeas, drained
  • 2–3 tbsp water
  • 1–2 tsp fresh lime juice

To Finish

  • ½–1 cup nylon sev (thin sev is best)
  • extra sev, on the side
  • 2–3 tbsp chopped cilantro
  • chaat masala, for a light dusting
  • optional: pomegranate arils

Directions

Quick-Pickle the Onions

In a bowl, whisk together vinegar, warm water, sugar, and table salt until dissolved.

Add sliced red onion and toss. Let sit 30–60 minutes, then drain well before plating.

Make the Date–Tamarind Reduction

In a small saucepan, combine tamarind chutney, chopped dates, water, optional roasted cumin powder, and a tiny pinch of table salt.

Simmer gently 5–8 minutes, stirring often, until glossy and slightly thickened.

Blend smooth (strain for an ultra-refined sauce if desired). Cool completely; it will thicken slightly as it rests.

Prepare the Yogurt and Chutney

For the yogurt: whisk yogurt, table salt, sugar, and milk until smooth and lightly drizzleable. Taste and adjust salt if needed.

For the mint-cilantro chutney: blend cilantro, mint leaves (no thick stems), seeded green chili, lime juice, sugar, table salt, and a splash of water until smooth and bright. Add water only as needed to blend; taste and adjust salt/lime/sugar for balance.

Crisp the Gnocchi

Preheat oven to 450°F (conventional bake, no convection). Place the rack on the bottom or lower-middle position.

Toss gnocchi with neutral oil, table salt, Kashmiri chili powder, and chaat masala until evenly coated.

Spread on a bare aluminum sheet pan in a single layer (do not crowd). Roast 25–35 minutes, flipping once around 15–18 minutes, until deep golden, lightly blistered, and crisp on the edges.

Keep warm while you finish the chickpeas.

Cook the Spiced Chickpeas

Heat neutral oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add cumin seeds and cook until they crackle and smell fragrant (about 20–30 seconds).

Add minced onion and cook until softened but not browned, 3–5 minutes. Add ginger and garlic and cook 30 seconds.

Stir in tomato paste and cook 1 minute. Add coriander, ground cumin, turmeric, and Kashmiri chili powder and cook 20–30 seconds to bloom.

Add chickpeas, table salt, and 2–3 tbsp water. Simmer 5–6 minutes, stirring, until the chickpeas are glossy and lightly coated (not wet).

Turn off heat and stir in garam masala, crushed kasoori methi, and lime juice. Taste and adjust salt and lime for a gently warm, savory, slightly tangy finish.

Assemble the Platter

Use a large shallow platter (white looks especially sharp). Scatter hot crispy gnocchi evenly across the platter.

Spoon chickpeas lightly over the gnocchi (don’t blanket the whole surface—leave golden gnocchi exposed).

Drizzle yogurt in ribbons, then drizzle date–tamarind reduction sparingly in thin lines. Add small streaks or spoonfuls of mint-cilantro chutney.

Scatter drained pickled onions. Sprinkle with nylon sev, chopped cilantro, and a light dusting of chaat masala. Add optional pomegranate arils.

Serve immediately while the gnocchi is still crisp, with extra sev on the side for topping.


Notes

Preparation

  • Crispness is the make-or-break detail. Roast the gnocchi on a bare aluminum sheet pan, use conventional bake (no convection), and flip once to encourage browning before the centers dry out.
  • Taste each sauce on its own before plating. The yogurt should be lightly salted, the green chutney should read cilantro-forward with mint in the background, and the tamarind reduction should be tangy-sweet (not dessert-sweet).
  • No roasted cumin powder? Not a problem. If you want it, toast 1 tsp cumin seeds in a dry skillet until fragrant and a shade darker, then grind and use a pinch in the date–tamarind reduction.

Serving Suggestions

  • Serve as a shareable appetizer platter. Keep extra yogurt, chutney, and sev on the side so guests can customize and you can refresh crunch as needed.

Variations

Boost heat (without changing the family-friendly base):

  • Drizzle chili oil over one quadrant of the platter, or over individual servings.
  • Sprinkle individual serving with a pinch of cayenne before serving.
  • Make a “hot” green chutney bowl by blending in an extra green chili; serve on the side.
  • Scatter thinly sliced fresh green chili over one edge of the platter.

For a more traditional chaat feel, add a handful of boiled diced potatoes or a spoonful of chana masala-style gravy to the chickpea layer.

If mint is especially strong, reduce it further (to 2 tbsp lightly packed) and rely on cilantro + lime for the bright green profile.

Make-Ahead & Storage

Make ahead (best):

  • Quick-pickled onions: 2–3 days refrigerated (drain before serving).
  • Date–tamarind reduction: 5–7 days refrigerated; loosen with 1–2 tsp warm water if it thickens too much.
  • Mint-cilantro chutney: 2–3 days refrigerated; press plastic wrap directly onto the surface to slow browning.
  • Chickpeas: 3–4 days refrigerated; reheat gently with a splash of water.
  • Yogurt sauce: 2–3 days refrigerated; whisk before using.
  • Day-of only: roast the gnocchi and assemble right before serving for maximum crispness. If needed, you can re-crisp gnocchi on a sheet pan at 450°F for 5–7 minutes.

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