Easy Tahini (Better than Store-Bought)

This homemade tahini recipe is so easy to make, and it makes a tahini that tastes much better than anything you can buy at the store. It’s ready in less than 15 minutes!

Watch the Video

Homemade Tahini Recipe Video

Tahini is a paste made from sesame seeds. It is a staple in many cuisines, especially in the Mediterranean and the Middle East. It’s vegan, gluten-free, tastes nutty, and is incredibly simple to make.

Store-bought jars of tahini can be expensive. Homemade tahini is not only cheaper, but it also tastes amazing. Use tahini to make hummus, salad dressings, sauces, and more!

Homemade Tahini

Key Ingredients

  • Sesame seeds: I use hulled seeds (pictured below on the left) and toast them in a dry skillet to bring out their natural nuttiness.
  • Oil: I add a few tablespoons of neutral-flavored oil to help the tahini turn into a creamy smooth paste. Try avocado oil, extra-virgin olive oil, or vegetable oil. Sesame oil (not toasted sesame oil) also works.
  • Salt: Optional, but I always use it. It just makes the tahini taste better.

You can also make tahini with sprouted and black sesame seeds. Unhulled sesame seeds, pictured below on the right, are much darker and still have their hull or outer shell intact. Tahini made from unhulled sesame seeds tastes more bitter and isn’t as smooth as when made from hulled seeds.

The difference between natural or hulled sesame seeds and unhulled sesame seeds.

How to Make Tahini

Tahini is incredibly simple to make. If you’ve ever made nut butter like almond or peanut butter, the process is very similar. Grind sesame seeds in a food processor with some oil until smooth.

Toasted sesame seeds make our tahini taste even better! Toast them in a dry skillet over medium-low heat, stirring often and watching them closely until they turn golden.

Toasting sesame seeds for tahini

Toss your toasted seeds into the food processor. Process until they form a crumbly paste. A powerful food processor helps, but most standard ones will work, too. (I’ve included tips for using a blender below the recipe.)

Adding sesame seeds to a food processor to make tahini

Add a few tablespoons of mild-tasting oil. This helps the tahini become smooth, creamy, and drippy. You can use less oil, but the tahini won’t be as easy to pour. I find 3 to 4 tablespoons perfect for a texture like store-bought tahini.

Process a bit more, scraping down the bowl as needed. Your tahini is now ready to use!

Making tahini in a food processor

Storing Homemade Tahini

Keep tahini in an airtight jar in the refrigerator for a month. After some time in the fridge, it might separate like natural peanut butter. To fix this, stir it well before using it.

Ways to Use Tahini

Arguably, the most well-known way to use tahini is when making hummus. Even though we are hummus lovers, we use tahini in our kitchen in many other ways. Here’s a list of suggestions for how to use tahini other than in hummus.

Once you have tahini in your fridge (it lasts over a month), we bet you will find yourself adding it to a variety of dishes without direction from us!

Quick and Easy Tahini

Easy Tahini (Better than Store-Bought)

  • PREP
  • COOK
  • TOTAL

Making tahini at home is easy and cheaper than buying it from the store. I also think it tastes better! For the best deals, look for sesame seeds in bulk bins or at International, Asian, and Middle Eastern markets.

While you can make tahini from unhulled, sprouted, or hulled sesame seeds, we prefer hulled seeds.

Makes approximately 1/2 Cup

Watch Us Make the Recipe

You Will Need

1 cup (140g) sesame seeds, we prefer hulled

2 to 4 tablespoons neutral flavored oil such as avocado,  grape seed, vegetable or a light olive oil

Pinch of salt, optional

Directions

    1Add sesame seeds to a wide, dry saucepan over medium-low heat and toast, stirring constantly, until the seeds become fragrant and turn light golden, 3 to 5 minutes. Stay close and keep stirring, as the seeds can burn quickly.

    2Add the toasted sesame seeds to the bowl of a food processor, then process until a crumbly paste, about 1 minute.

    3Add 2 tablespoons of the oil, then process for 2 to 3 minutes more, stopping to scrape the bottom and sides of the food processor a couple of times.

    4Check the tahini’s consistency. It should be smooth, not gritty, and should be pourable. You may need to process for another minute and add 1 to 2 more tablespoons of oil.

    5Taste the tahini for seasoning, then add salt to taste. Process 5 to 10 seconds to mix.

    6Store tahini in an airtight container in the fridge for one month.

Adam and Joanne's Tips

  • Sesame seeds not processing: The sesame seeds take a minute or two to start breaking down (watch our video for reference). If your seeds are whirling around your processor bowl, you may need a higher-powered processor, or the blade may be sitting above the seeds. If you think this is the case, try increasing the sesame seeds in the bowl.
  • Blender: I prefer using my food processor, but if you have a high-powered blender, you should be able to make tahini. As you blend, stop and scrape down the sides and bottom of the blender to incorporate all the seeds.
  • The nutrition facts provided below are estimates.
Nutrition Per Serving Serving Size 1 tablespoon / Calories 136 / Protein 3g / Carbohydrate 5g / Dietary Fiber 3g / Total Sugars 0g / Total Fat 12g / Saturated Fat 2g / Cholesterol 0mg
AUTHOR:  Adam and Joanne Gallagher
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366 comments… Leave a Review
  • Scott Lewis April 10, 2024, 3:11 pm

    I ahve not made this yet and am concerned about the requirement for storing for a month…Is there a marked difference between making it day of and waiting a month?

    Reply
    • Joanne May 4, 2024, 4:37 pm

      Hi Scott, You can use your homemade tahini the moment you make it. It lasts for up to a month.

      Reply
  • CB March 25, 2024, 10:05 pm

    So delicious and easy. My husband and teens all loved this.

    Reply
    • Adam March 26, 2024, 5:24 pm

      Wonderful 🙂

      Reply
  • melissa keller March 5, 2024, 4:42 pm

    Hi there: I want to make this recipe and wondering if I already have toasted sesame seeds, should I toast again? Thank you so much, Melissa

    Reply
    • Joanne May 4, 2024, 4:38 pm

      Hi Melissa, I still toast toasted sesame seeds since the heat brings them back to life, but it is not as necessary as when starting with untoasted seeds.

      Reply
  • Annie February 21, 2024, 9:11 am

    I used the magic bullet to make tahini . I used 4 Tbsp. Olive oil extra virgin and 1 cup sesame seeds and about a teaspoon of salt. It turned out into a pourable consistency. Used already toasted sesame seeds.. I hope I’m not allergic! The sesame seeds don’t bother me at McDonald’s..

    Reply
    • Joanne February 21, 2024, 6:58 pm

      That sounds like it worked out well!

      Reply
  • Deedee February 11, 2024, 1:38 pm

    Easy to make and this turned out great! I used 6 tbsp of grape seed oil for the consistency I wanted.

    Reply
  • Holly Viola January 28, 2024, 11:59 pm

    I made a Tahini Cake with tahini icing from Girl Meets Farm recipe, it was amazing!

    Reply
  • Zehra A Zaidi January 28, 2024, 9:44 am

    Your recipes are simple and easy to follow.

    Reply
  • Daniela January 13, 2024, 10:26 am

    I have made quite a few of your recipes and they are all amazing. Keep up the great work.😊

    Reply
  • Carrie January 8, 2024, 7:11 pm

    So easy and so good! This is well worth the few minutes it takes to make!

    Reply
  • Bradley B December 27, 2023, 12:53 am

    Was quite nice, but I only did a half batch, and it was a bit too small a batch for my big blender. Seeds got stick under the blades and took many stop and stir episodes. Next time I will just do a full size or large batch even. Different food processors and blenders suit different recipes I guess. Also, while I usually cook with heavy pans, I didn’t want the residual heat to overcook the delicate seeds. So I used a very thin metal enamel large stock pot. Unfortunately a part of the enamel chipped off, and I had to sift through the seasame seeds painstakingly. In future, I will just use a thick pan, but have that tray ready to pour them out quickly for cooling. As for flavour, even with some fairly old seasame seeds, was delicious.

    Reply
  • Aswath December 23, 2023, 2:16 am

    I made a minor change. I used unhulled sesame seeds but added a small amount of jaggery to cut through the bitterness. The advantage being that the tahini tastes nuttier than while using hulled sesame. I liked it, so maybe you might too.

    Reply
  • Kenneth Krause December 16, 2023, 2:04 pm

    Followed this recipe twice, once with three tablespoons of oil and the next with 4. I could never get it to a pourable consistency. It took 1/3 cup of vegetable stock to do so. I have a high-powered Ninja food processor with plenty of power.

    Reply
  • Annmarie M December 1, 2023, 4:45 pm

    Very good! it was the first time ever made homemade tahini.

    Reply
  • Frank Ball November 30, 2023, 2:38 pm

    Wonderful site! Thanks so much!

    Reply
  • Ena November 19, 2023, 6:21 am

    Grest recipe, thank you so much! Im just wondering which food processor you use for this revipe? I have tried making tahini in several different machines but none of them do the job properly.

    Reply

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