How to Make Fluffy Couscous – Easy Couscous Recipe

Fluffy Couscous - just steam it in a casserole instead of a pot
Fluffy Couscous – just steam it in a casserole instead of a pot

I make couscous all the time, whenever I want a break from rice or pasta, or when I just need something that cooks super quick with minimal attention. I know there is a proper way that it is prepared in its native lands, involving multiple steamings in a basket over boiling water, followed by breaking up with your fingers and steaming some more. I’m sure this is fantastic but I’ve always contented myself with the quick “package directions” version where you simply add the couscous to boiling water, turn off the heat, cover, wait 5 minutes and fluff. It isn’t bad but it isn’t all that fluffy or delicious either.

Joyce Goldstein’s wonderful book Saffron Shores (about the foods of the Jewish diaspora in the southern Mediterranean) just showed me a much better way. Hardly any more work than the quickie version. The trick is that you pour the boiling water over the couscous in a low flat casserole so that the weight of the grains and water doesn’t keep it from expanding. I was blown away at how much fluffier and tastier the results are. I’ll never do it in the pot again.

The exact method is below, and if you are looking for something to serve it with, try it with these chickpea cakes or with acorn squash and a yogurt sauce.

Fluffy Couscous
Serves 6
Vegetarian and Vegan
Prep time: 5 minutes
Cook time: 15 minutes

  • 3 cups couscous
  • 4 1/2 cups boiling water
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

Add the salt and oil to boiling water. Spread couscous evenly in the bottom of a large  casserole so that it is in as thin a layer as possible. Add the water and cover tightly with plastic wrap. Wait until all the water is absorbed (about 15 minutes), then fluff with a fork. Enjoy! Below is a picture of it topped with a simple spicy chickpea stew with cauliflower, potatoes, and leeks.

For a delicious and simple couscous salad recipe, make the the couscous as described above. Let it cool, then toss it with  canned chickpeas, finely chopped green onions, fresh mint, olive oil, and sea salt. Other nice additions are raisins, pine nuts, feta cheese, olives, and flat leaf parsley.

Spicy Chickpea Stew Over CouscousSpicy Chickpea Stew Over Couscous
Spicy Chickpea Stew Over Couscous

45 Replies to “How to Make Fluffy Couscous – Easy Couscous Recipe”

  1. WOW! This is the best trick ever! I just made it and it came out perfectly– my first fluffy couscous! Thank you so much 🙂

  2. Wow, thanks for the tip. I only recently discovered cous cous and just love it. I was curious why it was fluffy sometimes, and not others, and thought it was the water. I think now it was the depth or narrowness of the various bowls I was using. I’ll use my big, flat roasting pan next time. Thank you!

  3. Perfect, I made it in a quart zipploc bag and once the liquid was absorved, which took just 30 secs i layed it flat on a small cookie sheet. Left it for 5 min then turned it over and fluffed it with out opening the bag. So much easier and left it in the bag till it was time to serve. MMMM thank you

  4. There really isn't any difference between the pre-pack and bulk stuff except price – all couscous cooks very quickly if you pour boiling water over it, though the traditional steaming and rubbing method takes longer.

  5. Thanks for the tip! I reduced the recipe down to 1/2 cup of couscous and 3/4 cup of almond milk and had it for breakfast this morning. I just put the couscous in a pot, poured in the boiling milk, and covered it for 10-15 minutes. Yielded two servings. Works great!

  6. I’m another couscous convert – nothing easier to prepare. As a suggestion for getting the water/couscous ratio right without using a measuring cup, I add just enough boiled water to cover a dish of couscous by no more than about a quarter of an inch – the result is neither too dry nor too soggy.

  7. I’ve never cooked cous cous before, and I just used this method. Thank you, it turned out lovely! I used vegetable stock and olive oil in the water.

  8. This is the ONLY time my couscous has ever been nice! Thank you! I was worried about using a fork, so used a whisk, and it was so easy to fluff it up!

  9. Just wanted to say this is such a fantastic tip – for years my cous cous turned in to porridge every time I made it (such a waste) or rarely if I didn’t over water it, it would just clump together in to a big dry ball, but cooking it like this in a shallow dish with a little oil and salt in the boiling water comes out perfectly every time. Beautiful buttery cous cous just like you get in a restaurant. Thank you so much for a great tip.

  10. FINALLY, a foolproof way of making couscous! Made it this way last night and every single grain was perfectly moist, fluffy and NOT gummy. Thank you!!!

  11. Brillant timesaving method. I prepared it as specified using a heat resistant glass casserole sealed with an airtight plastic lid. Do you have a recommended absorbtion time for whole grain Couscous, if different? Thanks!

    1. I don’t make whole wheat couscous very often, but it seems to me that the cooking time is about the same. It is such a fine grain size that the water absorbs quite quickly.

  12. Thanks Michael. This method worked brilliantly for me too. I was looking for a simple accompaniment to a chicken & mango dish and this works brilliantly with coriander running through the cous cous. Genius – thank you!

  13. I knew cous cous was pretty easy but hadn’t eaten it much since I lived in Tunisia. When I lived there, a Moroccan woman I knew made it for me in a double broiler/steamer type pot. So I got online, found this one which sounded easy, decided to make it, and only then (since I was on my phone) realized it was your website! (At first I just thought it was an ad popping up for your amazing cookbook, but then realized it was actually herbivoracious.com.) It made a ton, but it turned out fluffy & just perfect. I’m not sure what the chances are that I would’ve found your recipe randomly (after only looking at a couple others), but I’m so glad I did! Thanks for contributing to my meal. (By the way, I also made Sarina’s famous roasted cauliflower and it was a hit!) Safe travels.

    1. Deb – that’s funny! This method will never be as good as hand-steam and rolled, but for a 5 minute version it is pretty tasty. I like it with a lot of thinly sliced green onions.

      1. 4.5 cups of boiling water for 3 cups couscous seems like a lot. i’ve read everywhere else that it’s basically a one to one ratio. No?

  14. Does anyone have the receipe/method how to do the hand rolled version. I realize you most likely will start with cream of wheat? Thank you.

  15. YOU HAVE REVOLUTIONISED MY KITCHEN!

    Thank you so much for this tip! I just tried it (it’s dinnertime here!) and raced back to the computer to say thank you!

    No more soggy cous-cous. It feels like a new life.

    🙂

  16. OMG… I am normally so hopeless making couscous… You are a genius!! Thank you so much. It has turned out perfectly. I added some fried onion with garlic & some dried shallots. Yum yum yum….

  17. I can’t wait to make couscous this way tonight… but what I really want now is the recipe for that chickpea stew you have pictured!

  18. this sounds wonderful and I’l definitely try it but I use point out that couscous is, in fact, pasta.

  19. I am just trying to make the couscous for a salad that I bought in a store but all the ingredients r easy just not sure how to cook the couscous and lentils and it must be served cold any suggestions

  20. I’m from south India. First time buying couscous. Thanks a lot for the recipe. Is it necessary to rinse the couscous? And also after pouring boiling water over the couscous whether have to place the pan on flame. Thank you

  21. Great Advise !!

    This is a very simple tip with a great outcome 🙂

    Who would have thought by just spreading the cous cous on a large tray !!

    Thanks !

  22. Most recipes use a 1:1 ratio for coucous and water. Did you not find that using so much water made the couscous mushy or pasty? Or does it need more water because of the larger surface area?

  23. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I have unsuccessfully been trying to make cous cous for years! In pots, in steamers- I had pretty much given up. Found this site today & made the cous cous & it worked! Best cous cous I’ve ever made!! So straightforward & easy! Thank you so much for sharing this xxx

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