Leblebi (North African Chickpea Soup)
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Made from pantry staples, including canned chickpeas and tomatoes, Leblebi, a North African chickpea stew, comes together quickly and is incredibly flavorful thanks to spices, herbs, aromatics, and a smoky swirl of harissa just before serving.

I’ve been cooking my way through the bean chapter of Twelve Recipes, which unsurprisingly has been a joy: last week I discovered dal and over the weekend, a black bean soup flavored with orange zest, a subtle but bright touch to a wintry dish. Most recently, I made the leblebi, a North African chickpea stew, swirled with a smoky harissa.
Each of these recipes is made with water (as opposed to stock) and none calls for cream thanks to Peternell’s techniques: slow sweating of the onion, brief toasting of the spices, and thoughtful layering of herbs and garnishes.
I know little more about leblebi than what I’ve read in Twelve Recipes and the few recipes I’ve found online, but from what I gather it originates in Tunisia, is typically served at breakfast, and welcomes many a garnish: poached or hard-boiled eggs, a sprinkling of cumin or capers, a drizzle of olive oil or harissa, toasted bread, preserved lemon, tinned fish, or pickled vegetables.
I served it solely with Peternell’s simple homemade harissa (see recipe box) and mopped it all up with homemade naan.
How to Make Leblebi, Step by Step
First, gather your ingredients.

Next: sweat the onions; then add the spices and cilantro.

Stir to combine.

Then, gather your chickpeas, home-cooked or canned.

You’ll need a can of crushed tomatoes.

Add the tomatoes and chickpeas to the pot.

And simmer until thickened to your liking.

Cal offers a simple harissa recipe (see recipe box for details).

Serve with naan.

Leblebi (North African Chickpea Soup)
- Total Time: 1 hours 25 minutes
- Yield: 4 1x
- Diet: Vegetarian
Description
Leblebi is a North African chickpea stew made with sautéed onions, garlic, spices, herbs, and tomatoes. A swirl of harissa adds a spicy, smoky kick.
Notes:
Source: Cal Peternell’s Twelve Recipes
The original recipe calls for chopped or grated tomatoes or 1/2 cup of roasted tomato puree. I find the canned, crushed tomatoes to work just as well.
Chickpeas: I love my slow cooker for cooking chickpeas from scratch, but you can also cook them on the stovetop or simply use canned.
Peternell suggests a few other serving ideas: croutons, a poached egg or hard-boiled egg, a sprinkling of ground cumin, oil, and capers. I keep it simple and swirl in some harissa, which is now readily available at most markets.
You can also make your own: See Simple Homemade Harissa. Peternell offers two simple recipes as well:
- Make a paste with 2 tablespoons paprika and 3 tablespoons hot water. Add 2 teaspoons crushed garlic, 3 tablespoons olive oil, a splash of vinegar, and, if you wish, ground cumin and cayenne.
- Mix together 3 tablespoons sambal oelek, 1 to 2 cloves crushed garlic, and 6 tablespoons olive oil.
Ingredients
- 4 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 large yellow onion, diced
- 2 teaspoons cumin seeds
- 1 teaspoon paprika
- crushed red pepper flakes
- 1/2 cup roughly chopped cilantro stems and leaves
- 2 garlic cloves, sliced or chopped
- 3/4 cup crushed tomatoes, see notes above
- 6 cups cooked chickpeas, see notes above
- harissa for serving, see notes above
- flatbreads for serving
Instructions
- Heat a large pot over high heat. Add the oil, then the onion and a pinch of salt. Stir, turn the heat to low, and cover the pot. Check and stir after a few minutes, letting the moisture on the lid drip back into the pot to keep things steamy. Lower the heat if there is any browning going on, and re-cover. Cook like this until the onion is tender, about 15 minutes.
- Add the cumin, paprika, pepper flakes, cilantro and garlic and stir for 1 minute. Add the tomatoes and cook for a couple of minutes more, stirring occasionally. Add 6 cups of the cooked chickpeas and enough of their cooking liquid to cover by 2 inches, raise the heat, and bring to a boil. (You’ll need about 4 cups liquid total: all of the cooking liquid, which was 3 cups plus 1 cup extra water — the chickpeas may not be covered by 2 inches, but it will be fine.) Season with salt to taste — I always add another teaspoon, but you may want to start with 1/2 a teaspoon and add more to taste.
- Lower to a simmer and cook for 20 minutes. Put 2 ladles of soup in a blender or food mill and purée — careful: it’s hot. (I used an immersion blender and puréed partially.) Return to the soup pot and stir in to thicken the leblebi slightly. Taste for seasonings and add water or any reserved cooking liquid if it’s too thick. Note: When reheating, you most likely will need to add water to achieve desired consistency.
- To serve: ladle the leblebi into bowls. Pass a bowl of harissa on the side. Serve with warm flatbreads.
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hours 20 minutes
- Category: Soup
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: Moroccan, North African
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87 Comments on “Leblebi (North African Chickpea Soup)”
Another great recipe! This is the second time I’ve made it using 2tbsp of tomato paste instead of diced tomatoes. Used 2tsp smoked paprika. Topped with a dollop of plain green yogurt, roasted cauliflower, and crispy chickpeas. Used the easy harissa recipe mentioned above.
Wonderful to hear this, Deepa! Your toppings sounds UNREAL!
Its not North African, its Tunisian. Tunisian cuisine is different from other North african countries. We use hrissa and tomato sauce which makes our food more spicy and more red in color where Moroccan food is typically yellow.
C’est une de mes recettes préférées. Délicieux, surtout avec la sauce sambal oelek et ail sur le dessus! Un vrai régal végétarien!
Merveilleux d’entendre ça!
This was delicious! Have made it twice, once with crushed tomatoes and once with diced. Both were great. Thank you for the recipe.
Great to hear, Thera! Thanks for writing!
ok if you follow the recipe to much it is in need of more heat and flavors I would recommend adding more spice when cooking and check after my husband is from Tunisia and he loves heat and flavor but other then that this is a very good recipe
I love making this soup (topping it with the harrisa recipe and crispy za’atar chickpeas) and the tarka bread that you have linked to BakingSteel’s website – that link seems to be broken now. Could you please provide the flatbread with tarka recipe?
Hi! I just went through all of the recipes on the site, and it looks as though it’s not there anymore. But, I’ve converted my word doc to a Google doc… let me know if you can access this: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VBk81NlBmwJ1IHPbPzkTCEE0E6Ih2HDL/view?usp=sharing
Hi, if using canned chickpeas, do you suggest veg broth or similar for the liquid or just water? Thanks
I am a fan of water! Unless you are using homemade veg broth/stock, I think water is best.
What is the bread in the pictures? Is there a recipe for that too? LOVE this soup!!! Want the bread haha!
Hi Leslie! They’re Tarka flatbreads, and I had originally shared the recipe on the Baking Steel website, but I can’t seem to find it there. You can find it in this Google Doc: Tarka Flatbreads.
This stew is amazing! I was nervous because 4 serving vegan recipes usually are about 1 serving worth of food for my husband 😉 but this filled all 3 of us up with enough left for our lunch tomorrow. Used fire roasted crushed tomatoes which was excellent, and no toppings because it was a clean up the larder meal, but I can’t wait to add harissa and something crispy next time. Thank you!
🤣🤣🤣🤣 I hear you 🙂 🙂 🙂 So nice to hear this, Cate! Thanks so much for writing.
This was absolutely delicious and so easy to make. Full of flavor. Definitely going to stay in the rotation this winter!
Great to hear Ginny! I love this one this time of year. xo
I doubled the amount of spices and added a half aubergine that was left in my fridge. I also did a mix of normal and smoked paprika powder. I was missing something creamy to go with it, a dollop of youghurt for instance might have been great. For the rest it was a very tasty and nutritious meal!
What could we use for a cilantro replacement and would the amount stay the same? I have the gene where cilantro tastes like soap. I understand to everyone it doesn’t and should add something nice to the dish.
I think parsley would be great.
Absolutely delicious. This is a frequently requested meal at my house. I use canned beans to save time and serve on steamed cauliflower for some and rice for the others.
Yum! Cauliflower sounds delicious with this. Thanks for writing 🙂
Hi Alexandra,
I just want to double check that the cumin seeds are left whole – correct?
Thanks!
Lisa
Yes!
This was very simple and very good. I doubled the cumin and used a generous amount of paprika. Gobbled it up with some jasmine rice. Delicious!
Great to hear, Laura 🙂 Thanks so much for writing.