T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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169.1 | Eggplant Parm | USMRW1::JTRAVERS | | Wed Sep 11 1985 13:28 | 45 |
| I make eggplant parm all the time and would love to share my recipe!
The following looks long and complicated... but it isn't! So read on.
Before cooking, have ready:
Eggplant, peeled and sliced (1/8" thick)
Cooking oil for frying
Bread crumbs in a large bowl (flavored or unflavored)
eggs & milk for dipping in a large bowl
jar parm cheese**
Large jar your favorite tomato sauce (I use Ragu or make your own)
Paper towels for draining cooked eggplant slices
PART 1 (This part takes the longest time)
Heat oil in frying pan. Dip eggplant slices in egg/milk then in bread crumbs
and fry both sides till lightly browned. Remove and drain on paper towels.
The more eggplant you use, the longer this process takes. You will have to
replenish the oil, egg and bread crumbs if you're frying several eggplants.
PART 2
Once all of the eggplant slices have been cooked and drained, select the
containers you want to use for the end result. (I usually purchase 2-3
large eggplants and make up several small containers... I buy aluminum loaf
pans at the market, fill them, freeze them. These containers are convenient
because they are disposable. I am asked to make eggplant parm for parties
alot and I don't have to worry about remembering to take my dishes home.)
In layers: starting with eggplant slices on the bottom, top with some tomato
sauce (right out of the jar is okay), sprinkle with parm cheese. Repeat this
process till the container is filled.
** I have at times included in the layers with the parm cheese, a few slices
of mozzerrella cheese or ricotta cheese. I've even seen it cooked with tofu
in the layers.
Heating the parm takes 45 min to 1 hour at 350.
I made up a bunch of eggplant parm last Saturday (eggplant is nice and
fresh these days). Served it with a salad and a side dish of pesto. It
was great!
Bon apetite!
|
169.2 | Shortcuts | KIRK::BARATZ | | Wed Sep 11 1985 23:32 | 5 |
| I sometimes use a shortcut for part I. Instead of frying the coated
eggplant slices I bake them. I can't remember exactly, but it is
something like 350 for 10 minutes, turn the slices and then another
10 minutes. You can probably fit all the slices onto one cookie
sheet.
|
169.3 | Hints | KIRK::BARATZ | | Wed Sep 18 1985 22:36 | 3 |
| re .2 & .3 You can if you wish to get some oil flavor drizzle some
olive oil over the slices before baking and after turning.
|
169.4 | Soaking Eggplant | OLIVER::MEDVECKY | | Mon Nov 11 1985 07:24 | 3 |
| Seems to me I heard someone say that the eggplant should be soaked in a
water and walt (I think) solution then drained to get the bitter taste
out???? Since Im not a particular fan of eggplant I really dont know
|
169.8 | Need help with eggplant | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Sun Mar 22 1987 16:55 | 8 |
| Does anyone have a recipe for eggplant parmesean that does not require
the eggplant to be breaded and fried (I'm willing to fry in olive oil
but would like to avoid the breading if possible). My recipe books
fail me on this one.
D
|
169.9 | | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | force or guile could not subdue... | Mon Mar 23 1987 13:24 | 13 |
| Are you trying to avoid the egg/milk as well? If you are just trying
to avoid the breadcrumbs, dredge your eggplant in just the parmesan
cheese. Alternatives to egg/milk can be just plain water or better
still water with a little bit of cornstarch to provide adhesion
without changing the taste. Otherwise the recipe[s] would be
essentially un-altered -- maybe you'd add less parmesan later.
Alternatively, since its got tons of sauce anyway, would any kind
of breading be missed if you didn't want breading to begin with?
Am I being too simplistic?
Annie
|
169.10 | Easy and Fast | ARCH::MANINA | | Mon Mar 23 1987 14:11 | 16 |
| I don't fry the eggplant anymore. Instead, take some cookies sheets,
line them with aluminum foil. Coat the foil with a thin layer of
oil. Dip the sliced eggplant into egg then flour and place on cookie
sheets. Place in a preheated oven (350 or so) and cook about ten
minutes or till lightly browned. Turn the slices and cook till
the other side is browned. The cooking time varies depending on
how thick the slices are. If the slices don't cook all the way,
that's alright too because they'll cook more after the sauce and
cheese are added. This way is also quicker because you can do more
than 3 or 4 slices at one time. I usually use two cookie sheets
and fit about 6-8 slices on each tin.
After you remove the slices from the oven, place them on a brown
paper bag to drain(the bag absorbs the excess grease). Layer with
sauce and cheese and bake.
Manina
|
169.11 | The real taste of Italy | NOGOV::MIOTTO | | Thu Mar 26 1987 08:44 | 37 |
|
Here's a word from the old Continent... I don't know what your local
version of "melanzane alla parmigiana" is (you call it eggplant
parmeasan - incidentally, eggplant is called aubergine over here),
but this is a variation on the theme of my mother's recipe. Try
it out, it's super!
The aubergines are sliced (not too thin,and quite wide), salted
thoroughly on both sides and left spread out on a plate for 20 mins.
The salt is then washed off, and the slices squeezed to eliminate
excess water.
Meanwhile, one will prepare a white sauce with flour, marg, salt,
milk and nutmeg.
And also a bolognese sauce by frying finely chopped onion,carrot,
celery in oil/marg; adding some lean ground beef, a bit of stock,
wine and a can of tomatoes, chopped. This is to be left simmering
for at least half an hour: the longer the better.
Once all this is ready, grease a baking tin, place a small layer
of white sauce and cover with aubergine slices. Then spread a layer
of bolognese on this and, again, one of white sauce. Cover with a
good sprinkle of parmesan cheese and start again from the aubergine
layer, adding 2 or 3 layers, until you run out of ingredients. Your
last layer must be one of parmesan.
Bake in the oven at 180 deg. C until nice and brown. No need to
fry anything, the aubergines will be as lovely and soft as you could
possibly wish.
Enjoy it with a nice bottle of Italian wine, but do not serve straight
out of the oven. Let it cool for 15 min, that will make serving
easier.
Ciao.
OLIVO
|
169.12 | Sauteed Eggplant? | DECSIM::TELLIER | | Thu Mar 26 1987 13:04 | 12 |
| Has anyone had any luck sauteeing eggplant? I've had reasonable
success with slicing/breading/deep-frying, but just sauteeing seems
to be a pain.. the eggplant just absorbs whatever oil is being used
(you'd swear that a few slices of eggplant couldn't *REALLY* suck
up that much oil, but they do!)... then they seem too greasy; and
if
you don't use enough oil, it seems that the slices just dry out;
also the skins don't seem to soften well either, at least not as
well as when you go deep-fry.
any thoughts would be appreciated!
Jim
|
169.13 | Eggplant makes a good meat extender, too. | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Thu Mar 26 1987 13:24 | 28 |
| Since I've been dieting, my eggplant hasn't seen a drop of oil.
Instead, I have cooked it various ways, mainly using it to fill
out a dish in which I've reduced the amount of beef. I use chopped
eggplant in my tomato/meat sauces and stews to give them body.
And I've found that eggplant, simmered in tomato juice or V8 until
it's soft, is quite good without any fat. By the way, I peel my
eggplants, and remove some of the seeds if there are too many.
Here's my diet tomato sauce recipe:
Brown the ground beef or ground turkey (works out fine with turkey)
and onions. Drain all fat. Add mushrooms and eggplant and stir,
then add any other sauce ingredients you like, like tomatoes and herbs
and garlic, and cook until thickened. I've even used V8 in place
of other tomato sauces, with great success. I'm going to have to
try the hot V8!
Amounts? Per person, I use 3 oz of meat, 1/2 an onion,
1/2 cup chopped eggplant, 1/2 cup sliced mushrooms, 6 oz V8 or 3/4
cup of canned tomatoes, 1-2 cloves garlic, and large amounts of
basil, oregano, marjoram, and parsley. Sometimes I add in chopped
celery, too. Note that the meat is measured before cooking,
and about an ounce of fat will drain off - less if it's lean meat.
So this is really not very much meat, compared to the usual recipe.
If I'm using ground turkey I sometimes use 4 oz, since the ground
turkey seems to have a high water content, and it's lower in calories
than beef anyhow.
--Louise
|
169.14 | Microwave | XANADU::RAVAN | | Fri Mar 27 1987 09:34 | 6 |
| I've taken to using the microwave for eggplant, especially if the
recipe calls for baking it. When nuked, the slices cook faster and
stay moist, instead of drying out as they always seem to do in the
oven.
-b
|
169.15 | Use paper towels instead | ORION::BLACHEK | Chocolate is my destiny | Mon Apr 06 1987 13:49 | 7 |
| Re: .2
You shouldn't use the brown grocery bags for food. The bags are
filled with chemicals. I read this recently on a bag and was
surprised.
Judy
|
169.16 | more chocolate chips than you put in... | VIKING::INGMANN | | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:46 | 12 |
|
re -.1
I also read an article about using grocery bags for food (could
have been a chapter in _The Jungle_) ... DON'T!
The article talked about how the bags were stored in warehouses
along with all the other things that come along with warehouses,
ie rats, mice, and their respective droppings & poisonings.
Tina
|
169.17 | "Painless" Eggplant | PARROT::GALVIN | | Wed Jun 03 1987 14:52 | 50 |
| I searched the directory for a better place to put this note, but
it didn't really fit into any existing topic.
This recipe comes from a friend who works at LucasFilm's Droid Works.
We jokingly call it "Painless Eggplant" because we've both served
it to lots of people who swear they don't like eggplant but still
like this dish. It's a variation of ratatouille.
Preparation Time: ~45min
Serves: 4-5
1/3 - 1/2 cup olive oil
1 large or 2 small eggplants
1 green pepper
2 large onions
2 cloves garlic
1-28 oz can of peeled whole tomatoes (keep the juice)
1/3 - 1/2 cup red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons basil
1/2 lb fresh mushrooms
hunk of mozzerella (optional)
salt
Slice the eggplant(s) (do not peel). Stack them up, with salt
on each layer, so they look like whole eggplants again. Let the
stacks sit for as long as you can stand it -- aim for about 1/2
hour. You can 'process' the other veggies while you wait.
Cut tomatoes (This is messy), peppers, onions, and eggplant
into decent sized cubes (1/2" - 1") and mince garlic. Combine
oil, vegetables, and the reserved juice from the tomatoes in a
saucepan (add each vegetable as it is prepared). Cook over
medium heat for about 20 minutes after you add the last vegetable.
Now, slice or quarter the mushrooms. Add the mushrooms and all
of the rest of the ingredients except the cheese. Cover and
simmer over low - medium heat for about 15 minutes.
Cube the mozzerella and add it when the "stew" has cooled down
a bit. Or, if you prefer non-stringy cheese, eat the dish as
is, and add the cheese to the leftovers when it is cold.
This dish is great at all ranges of temperature. It's wonderful
to bring to work for lunch.
Enjoy!
Susie
|
169.18 | Plan to make "leftovers" of this! | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Jun 03 1987 16:54 | 22 |
| The best thing about making a BIG pot of "rat-tails" is that it
freezes well and is the start of many many quick and delicious
meals. You can simmer chicken in it, or micro-zap chicken in
it and, even without the skins, the chicken doesn't dry out.
It goes well on toast or in a bowl with mozz. cheese on top-
heat the rat-tails and then put the cheese on and broil like
you were making French onion soup. It's just dandy with veal
cutlets, even makes those preformed breaded ones taste gourmet.
You can brown beef, pour off the fat, and spoon in some rat-tails
and heat for a quick supper. It's even good cold spooned into
a pita pocket (don't use too much or it'll be messy) for a quick
lunch on those hot summer days. And it's good for you and
cheap.
I shop the reduced racks for eggplants and other ingredients
for this dish, since they are fairly liberal about their definition
of "bad veggies" and the stuff on the rack is fairly good.
Even at full price the dish is cheap. So go ahead and double or
triple or nple the recipe on some cool evening, and save yourself
some work on those steamy days when you don't want to cook.
--Louise
|
169.19 | Parmigiana | MCIS2::CORMIER | | Wed Aug 31 1988 10:17 | 21 |
| Saw this on the Victory Garden TV program this weekend :
Light Eggplant Parmigiana
Slice eggplant about 1/2 " thick (leave skin on)
Oil bottom of lasagna pan (mine is 13 X 9 X 2) to prevent veg. from
sticking...extra virgin olive oil is preferable (my own opinion!)
Place slices in a layer on the bottom of the pan.
Top with tomato sauce, 1/3 cup grated cheese (I use Romano), and
slices of mozarella.
Repeat until you run out of pan or eggplant!
Bake at 350 for 40 - 45 mins.
It's lighter than regular Eggplant Parmigiana because you usually
would dip the eggplant slices in an egg wash and bread crumbs first,
then sautee in butter and oil until browned, then go through the
layering bit.
Sarah
|
169.20 | Cant you tell that I like eggplant too? | TUDOR::ERYN | | Wed Aug 31 1988 10:29 | 77 |
| Eggplant can be prepared either with or without the skin; since I dont like
the skin I remove it, but not everyone does and it depends on the dish. For an
eggplant lasagna it could be left on. For Baba-ganoush (a middle eastern
eggplant tahini dip), it should be taken off.
I have given some 'recipes' below, but I also have a request: At the Moroccan
Pavilion at Epcot Center, they serve a marvelous eggplant salad, with lemon and
cumin (and probably olive oil). If anyone has a recipe that sounds like this I
would like to have it.
These aren't official recipes because I am at work with no cookbooks or cards
or anything handy, but, some of my favorite ways to fix eggplnat:
EGGPLANT-CHICKPEA STEW:
peel and chop eggplant in 1/2 inch squares. Chop an onion, saute in OLIVE oil
(must be olive because it is a main flavouring in this dish even though there
isnt much of it), add eggplant and a few tablespoons of water. Cover and let
eggplant cook about 5-10 minutes. Add a 16 or 20 oz. can of chickpeas
(drained) and a 16 oz can of tomatoes (or use 5 or 6 fresh tomatoes). Season
with salt and pepper and serve over couscous, a middle eastern semolina.
Cous-cous is available in grocery stores from NEAR EAST, sold in little boxes
in the rice and pilaf section of the store.
EGGPLANT LASAGNA
at least 2 large eggplants
your favorite lasanga filling (ricotta, tofu, meat or combination)
spaghetti sauce
beaten egg or mayonnaise
bread crumbs seasoned with basil, oregano
Slice (and peel) eggplant into 1/2 slices. Dip slices in egg or spread very
thinly with a little mayonnaise, dip in bread crumbs, and layout on a lighly
greased (or sprayed) cookie sheet. Bake at 400 for 10 minutes on each side.
In a lasagna pan, layer sauce, eggplant slices, and filling until pan is full,
ending with slices and sauce on top. bake 1/2 hr to 45 minutes at 350-400
until sauce is bubbly and filling is set.
Ratatouille (approximately- it changes slightly everytime I make it)
olive oil (1-2 Tbs is plenty, but I dont use large amounts of fats)
onion
zucchini
eggplant
tomatoes (fresh or canned)
green peppper
herbs - basil, oregano, tarragon, salt, pepper ...
Chop larger vegetables in 1/2 inch chunks, onion slightly smaller. Starting
with the onion, saute in olive oil, add the other veggies and some herbs, some
water or tomato sauce if the tomatoes aren't juicy enough, and simmer until
veggies are done. Serve over cous-cous or rice.
Baked Stuffed Eggplant
1 large eggplant
1 egg
1-2 Tbs butter
1 onion chopped
1/2 (or more if necessary) cup bread crumbs
salt and pepper
Bake the eggplant in an oven or microwave until soft, cut in half and scoop
out the filling. Put the skins either side by side in a pan small enough to
support them or coat a greased casserole dish with them. Saute the onion in
butter, mash the eggplant well, and beat the egg, Mix the egg, onion (with the
butter), eggplant, and bread cumbs, season with salt and pepper, and put into
the 2 halves or casserole dish. I generally do all of this in the microwave so
I dont remember how long to bake it in a regular oven, but my guess would be
about 1/2 hour at 350 (until it sets).
I also have an eggplant cheese strudel recipe but I dont remember all of it
and I dont remember all the ingredients to baba-ganoush (the eggplant dip). If
you are really interested I could try to remember to bring them in.
|
169.21 | HELPFUL HINT | EMASA2::SOKOLOWSKI | | Wed Aug 31 1988 12:10 | 11 |
| ONE HINT I LEARNED FROM AN ITALIAN COOK IS TO PEEL AND SLICE
THE EGGPLANT THE MORNING BEFORE YOU ARE TO USE IT -
PLACE THE EGGPLANT IN LAYERS IN A COLANDER AND SPRINKLE
EACH LAYER WITH SALT AND COVER WITH A PLATE AND PLACE SOMETHING
HEAVY ON TOP OF THE PLATE - PUT IN THE FRIDGE. (EGGPLANT WILL
BROWN - BUT NOT TO WORRY) , WHAT THIS DOES IS SQUEEZE THE EXCESS
FLUID FROM THE EGGPLANT SO ITS NOT MUSHY WHEN YOU MAKE FRIED EGGPLANT
OR PARMESIAN. I FOUND THAT THIS IS A VERY IMPORTANT STEP.
|
169.22 | This was the best I EVER had! | CSSE32::BELLETETE | Something Clever Goes Here | Thu Sep 01 1988 10:35 | 24 |
| Re: .-1
We had an eggplant parmigiana which was the BEST I have ever had just
a few nights ago and we discussed this procedure or helpful hint.
This was not done for the eggplant parmigiana and it was determined
that it was an unnecessary time-consuming step. One point the cook
did make was that when she fried the egg-washed breaded eggplant
slices she changed the OLIVE oil whenever it started to get discolored.
After tasting her eggplant parmigiana I was convinced. Her recipe
was a combination of few we have in this topic.
Slice the eggplant. Beat a couple of eggs in bowl and add some grated
cheese. She used Progresso Italian bread crumbs and lightly coated
all the eggplant slices. Then she heated OLIVE oil (previously
mentioned IMPORTANT ingredient) in a frying pan and fryed all the
slices. Whenever the olive oil started to discolor badly she discarded
it, wiped pan , and started over. After all slices where done she
layered tomato sauce, eggplant slices, mozzarella cheese, and grated
parmesan and/or romano cheese. Ending with a whole package of
mozzarella cheese on top. This parmigiana was GREAT!
|
169.23 | baking versus frying | CURIE::FERESTIEN | | Thu Sep 01 1988 16:03 | 8 |
| on reply #4, instead of frying (which is tedious and an aversion
for some), you can lightly bread and place on a lightly greased
baking sheet, bake for 20 min at 350. I turned the slices over
once so that both sides were browned. Then layer away and cook
parm for about 40 min covered, uncover for last 15 min.
It's easy to prepare this the night before so that all you have
to do is bake it the following eve.
|
169.24 | Eggplant-Tahini Dip???!!! | EMELDA::SHLANSKY | | Tue Sep 06 1988 16:52 | 6 |
| Someone recently told me about the eggplant tahini dip but
wasn't sure how to make it. It was "mentioned" earlier in this
note....I'd really appreciate the recipe....
I'm a big eggplant fan and that dip sounds fantastic!!!
Thanx...
|
169.25 | Eggplant parmasan in white sauce. | WHYVAX::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:13 | 40 |
|
Not oily at all, but it will be somewhat mushy unless you do the
salting and draining mentioned in a previous note. Since I am lazy
and don't mind it mushy, I didn't bother. Also, my measurements
are general since I don't usually measure things like how much extra
milk I whisked into a sauce.
2 medium eggplants
parmasan cheese
butter
breadcrumbs
Peel eggplant. Slice crossways. Remove seeds (I do this since
the seeds are what makes eggplant often taste bitter, and gets it
rejected by my picky eater.), especially if they're brown/mature.
Butter a 2-3 quart covered microwave/oven dish. Put a layer of eggplant
in, sprinkle generously with cheese, repeat until eggplant is done.
End up with a layer of cheese, then a generous layer of breadcrumbs.
Pour sauce on top. Cover. Microwave, 10 min, turning 1/2 way through the
time. Let the dish sit another 5 minutes, closed. This can also
be cooked at (guess) 325 deg. F in your oven for (guess) half an
hour to 45 min.
sauce:
2 tbsp flour (I used brown flour)
dash of salt
1/2 cup milk, plus additional milk (see directions)
handful of fresh basil, minced, or 1 Tbsp dry basil
black pepper to taste
(you could change the herb, and/or use garlic, for a
different flavor. Use fresh herbs if at all possible,
even if it means changing the type. Parsley would be
good.)
Blend flour, salt and 1/2 cup milk in a saucepan. Put on medium
heat. Cook, whisking often, until it starts to thicken. Add basil
and pepper. Add more milk, whisking all the while, until you've
added 1/2 to 1 cup more and the sauce is like thick gravy. Too
thin and the dish will be too mushy - too thick and it will solidify.
Somewhere between pourable and spoonable. Got it?
|
169.26 | Baba Ghannuj | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Sep 08 1988 09:40 | 25 |
| (This is a Lebanese version of this dish; I guess that explains
the odd spelling! Of course, it is Arabic anyhow, so pick your
favorite transliteration.)
1 large eggplant
1 clove garlic
(salt to taste)
4 T tahini (sesame paste; buy it in a can or jar)
1/4 c water
1/4 to 1/2 c lemon juice, to taste
finely chopped parsley or pomegranate seeds (for garnish)
1 T olive oil, optional
Bake or grill the eggplant over a flame until done (grilling is
better because the eggplant should have a smoky taste - which is
why my husband won't eat this stuff!). Place eggplant in a bowl
and remove the skin carefully so as to preserve the liquid. Chop
eggplant pulp finely. Mash garlic (with salt if using salt). Add
tahini and blend thoroughly. Pour over eggplant pulp. Using a
potato masher, mash up the ingredients thoroughly. Garnish edge
of serving dish with garnishes, then mound eggplant mixture in the
middle. Some people like to pour the olive oil over the top.
If you are going to use this as a dip for pieces of pita bread,
the texture will be easier to dip into if you spin the ingredients
in the blender or food processor rather than just mash them up.
|
169.27 | Eggplant Pizzas | FGVAXZ::RITZ | Caught in the Devil's bargain | Thu Sep 08 1988 16:04 | 27 |
| Julia Child gives a recipe for baked eggplant that she uses to
make eggplant pizzas:
EGGPLANT PIZZA
oven at 375 degrees
2 medium eggplants (choose firm, dark ones)
oregano, thyme, basil (fresh are best)
3T olive oil
2 c. tomato sauce
12 oz. mozzarella cheese (grated)
Slice eggplants 3/8" thick; salt and drain for 1/2 hr. Oil slices
on each side and place on baking sheet. Sprinkle chopped herbs over
them. Cover sheets with foil and bake in 375-degree oven about 20
minutes, until not quite done. Top each with sauce and cheese, adding
more herbs or vegetables if desired. Broil until cheese is melted.
You can use the same baked eggplant recipe for moussaka; see
_Julia Child's Kitchen_ for details. This is a great book, not just a
compilation of recipes - it's readable and full of tips on choosing,
storing, and preparing food, plus many anecdotes from a life devoted to
teaching the art and science of food to the public.
John Ritz
|
169.28 | See note 1389.2 | JACKAL::CARROLL | | Wed Jul 12 1989 12:47 | 11 |
| See note 1389.2 and substitute eggplant for veal. One thing you
want to do is salt down the eggplant and allow to dry out for a
while before you put batter on it. If you do this in the morning
before work then you will be able to cook it sooner when you get
home.
Slice the eggplant approx.1/2 inch thick. Liberally salt both sides
and place on rack over paper towels in a single layer. The salt will
drain off as it draws out the liquid. This pevents the eggplant
from being soggy when cooked.
|
169.29 | | TOLKIN::GRANQUIST | | Wed Jul 12 1989 16:13 | 7 |
| As I recall, eggplant blackens much like a potato does if left to
the air. When I made Eggplant parm. some years ago. I peeled the
eggplant, breaded it, fried it immediatly, and then built the parmesan
as with other recipes. It got great reviews served with pasta and
sauce.
NG
|
169.30 | Here's one | SCOLOX::BROWN | | Wed Jul 12 1989 16:18 | 41 |
|
Just in case you don't feel like searching the entire COOKS notesfile
for a recipe, I'll enter mine here for you. Hope this helps.
EGGPLANT PARMESAN
3 medium sized eggplants
2 cups bread crumbs seasoned with:
1/2 C fresh grated Parmesan
1 teaspoon fresh minced Parsley
1 teaspoon fresh minced Basil
1/2 teaspoon fresh minced Garlic
3 eggs
3/4 C milk
olive oil
2 Packages sliced mozarella cheese
1 Cup ricotta cheese (optional, I don't use this)
1 jar tomato sauce (or better yet, use your homeade!)
Wash off eggplant. Slice eggplant into slices about 1/2" thick or
less. The hint about salting down the eggplant and drying it out is a
good one, the batter will hold much better.
Mix eggs and milk together. Dip slices in mixture, then in
breadcrumbs. Fry these lightly in olive oil, then make a layer of them
in a casserole dish or jelly roll pan. Cover this layer with mozarella
and sauce (not too heavy on the sauce, or it will get mushy!) Repeat
this process. If you love the taste of eggplant and don't want it
overpowered by cheese, or sauce, go every two layers of eggplant to the
cheese and sauce.
After layers are complete, top with additional grated parmesan cheese
and herbs de provence. Bake at 300 for about 20-25 minutes, or until
cheese is bubbly.
Enjoy!!!
-Lisa
|
169.31 | Eggplant Parmesan for Two | TLE::DIBONA | | Thu Jul 13 1989 16:54 | 26 |
|
EGGPLANT PARMESAN
1 medium sized eggplants
1 egg, beaten w/1 TB water
seasoned bread crumbs
flour for dredging
olive oil
12 oz. part skim/low moisture mozarella cheese, shredded
grated parmesan cheese
1-2 cups homemade (preferably) tomato sauce
Peel eggplant and slice about 1/4 to 1/2" thick. Salt liberaly and
set on paper towels to drain (1 hour minimum). Pat dry; dredge in
flour, dip in egg wash and then into breadcrumbs. Cook in olive oil
and drain on paper towels. In a 13 x 9" pan, spoon 1/4 cup of tomato
sauce, then add a layer of eggplant. Top with a handful of grated
mozzarella and parmesan cheese, tomato sauce, and another layer of
eggplant, tomato sauce and a final handful of cheese. Bake at 350
degrees for about 25-30 minutes, until the top is lightly browned.
/ann
|
169.32 | alternative to frying | CURIE::FERESTIEN | | Mon Jul 17 1989 14:00 | 6 |
|
Another suggestion, for those who like to avoid the "Fried foods" is
to bake the breaded eggplant at 350 degrees for about 15 minutes.
Just lightly oil a baking sheet, and I just keep testing the eggplant
for doneness. Much neater and healthier!
|
169.34 | Eggplant Seeds UCK! | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Wed Dec 05 1990 10:44 | 17 |
| eggplant... how come i can't get the seeds out? it has been said that
the seeds in the plant make the/any dish bitter. i happen to agree. i
also do not know what kind of eggplant has the least amount of seeds.
i have tried to make eggplant parm twice now and it keeps getting
turned down because of the seeds. i have used the medium sized and
large sized plants that are very firm. the medium one on top didn't
have too much seeds but the larger one had seeds throughout its whole
body.
am i buying the wrong size/kind? how can i get the seeds out without
damaging the cutlets/slices so much that it ruins my dish?
any help at all as usual is greatly appreciated. thank you in advance,
cj
|
169.35 | Prepare the Eggplant first | PENUTS::VIVIEN | | Wed Dec 05 1990 13:18 | 12 |
| Hi,
Slice the eggplant, put the the slices on a platter and sprinkle salt
on each piece. Then leave out for several hours (~6), preferably in a
sunny window. All the bitterness will be drained from the eggplant and
will wind up in the bottom of the dish in the form a light brown
liquid. All you have to do then is drain the eggplant and continue to
prepare the parmigiana as you normally would. This is how I was taught
to prepare eggplant for parmigiana by my mother who is from Italy.
Good luck!
|
169.36 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Wed Dec 05 1990 15:48 | 11 |
|
Rep .0
I usually try to select the smallest eggplant I can in both size
and diameter. The larger the eggplant the more seeds in it. I agree
with the eariler reply about the salt trick but then the final dish
is too salty for my tastes. Eggplant is like a sponge and just sucks
up everything. I had good like with my selection technique.
-mike
|
169.37 | | REORG::AITEL | Road to hell is paved with chocolate | Wed Dec 05 1990 17:21 | 4 |
| Also, the more expensive "oriental eggplants", which are usually
long and thin, have fewer seeds.
--Louise
|
169.38 | Draining bitterness is bunk... | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:15 | 32 |
| With the oriental variety, eggplant parm will be a LOT more work. I
agree that the smaller the fruit the fewer the seeds, and the more work
it will be to make the same volume of parm.
However, I would recommend buying less seedy fruit rather than trying
to remove the seeds. But this is simply because the texture of the
less seedy fruit is better, in my opinion. I've made non-bitter parm
with big, seedy, and small fruit.
The old story, propagated by many contemporary TV cooks is that salt
"drains" the bitterness is not correct. The salt makes a lot of the
liquid come out of the eggplant, and the liquid MAY be responsible for
the bitterness, but if the old story were true, the bitterness would be
gone only when ALL of the liquid was removed.
Causing the eggplant to loose some liquid can be desireable in
situations where you don't want to end up with a soupy dish. However,
I've made eggplant parm without draining the slices (broiling them
instead of frying) and have not had problems due to too much liquid.
If you don't like a lot of salt, you can wash the slices and wring them
out a bit after letting them drain.
The real secret to "removing" the bitterness is a miniscule amount of
salt. This amount of salt causes your tastebuds to notice neither the
salt nor the bitter. The best demonstration of this is to take a cup
of coffee that is bitter (like the last cup of the pot that's a little
burnt from sitting on the hot plate too long). Taste it. Then add
about 5-6 GRANULES of salt. Stir, and taste it again. It's amazing
how the bitterness will just disappear.
-JP
|
169.39 | How's This | BIZNIS::MARINER | | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:50 | 19 |
| I read an article just the other day about bitter eggplant. This is
something I have never heard before and don't know how to tell one from
the other other but here goes.
There are male and female eggplant. The male eggplant has more seeds
and the female has a lot fewer. This seems to make sense because I
have found some have very few seeds and others a lot.
My husband's family always thought that salting the eggplant removed
the POISON. Imagine. They salted it, put a plate on top and let it
sit for several hours. If you just salt it and set it on paper towel
that will absorb some of the water, then you dry the slices off before
you use them and you will have a much less watery dish.
As an aside, my father always put a pinch of salt in the coffee pot
when making coffee. He said it improved the flavor.
Mary Lou
|
169.40 | a pinch of salt acts like a pinch of msg | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:53 | 8 |
|
what is odd about salt in coffee?
I could also mention traditional porridge (with salt, not sugar and
milk), or the fact that in many tropical countries drinks like
lemonade, soda or cola has [quite a lot] of added salt...
/. Ian .\
|
169.41 | Not on this planet! | REORG::AITEL | Road to hell is paved with chocolate | Thu Dec 06 1990 09:58 | 20 |
| There are not male and female eggplants. I'm a gardener and majored
in biology in college, and it is not true.
Eggplants will vary in seediness depending on the maturity of the
fruit, the heat/moisture of the growing season, and the variety
of eggplant. The last is probably the most decisive factor. Some
day the plant breeders will come up with a seedless eggplant, just
as they've come up with a seedless watermelon. Send mail to Burpee!
If you use the oriental eggplants for parmasan, slice them LENGTHWISE.
Crosswise slices will make preparation take forever, as mentioned.
Note: with the usual large type of eggplants, it is easier to remove
seeds if you slice lengthwise. Then you can cut out the seedy areas.
You will have holes in your slices - if you're picky you can take
smaller bits of eggplant, sans seeds, and stuff them in the holes to
make the slices whole again. I am not so picky.
--Louise
|
169.42 | Brown Paper Bags | OFFPLS::STARKEY | Doreen Starkey | Thu Dec 06 1990 10:20 | 3 |
| Has anyone heard of slicing the eggplant and laying it between brown
paper bags to remove the bitter. I was taught this way years ago and
it seems to work for me.
|
169.43 | More opinions | VIDEO::BENOIT | | Thu Dec 06 1990 11:54 | 13 |
| This is interesting.
About bitterness in eggplants I have heard or read (elsewhere) all of
the
following:
lightly salt the slices ,let them drain to remove bitterness;
eggplants from male & female flowers, one has less seeds(I thought
male?)you can tell the sex by the blossom end but I don't remember how;
modern eggplants have been bred to remove the bitterness so you don't
need to salt(Ha ,you say);
Your guess is as good as mine.
|
169.44 | interesting.... | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:26 | 17 |
| well, these are some interesting replies. my original question that i
did not word right was how to get the seeds out. i was assuming from
reading other notes that the seeds made the dish bitter. i never
thought the dish was *that* bitter but did not like the seeds..
hence the reason for the topic. my so tells me that the eggplant parm
that he has had at restaurants does not contain seeds.
i found that the salt does overpower the dish tremendously after
salting them but i think i used too much salt.
anyways.. keep those comments coming, maybe one of us can figure this
out.
cj
|
169.45 | my opinion is... | FORTSC::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:08 | 26 |
| re: using brown paper bags for draining the egg plant.
This is not a good idea due to the insecticide that is sprayed on the paper
and bags to deter bug damage in warehouses. Brown bags should never be
used to prepare food. Brown baking paper (often sold in yuppy makets or
specialty cooking stores) is safe to use. It comes on rolls just like
foil.
re: removing eggplant seeds
Traditionally, the seeds are simply cut out with a sharp knife, giving
the slices (taken across the bulb of the plant) a "lacy" look. I remember
my neighbor, an Italian from New York City, patiently cutting out the
seeds before making parmesan with the egg plant. I'm too lazy and don't
mind the seeds, so I leave 'em in.
re: preparing eggplant for cooking
I always learned to drop the eggplant into reasonably salted water for
approx. 15 minutes, drain, rinse, press between 3 layers of paper towels
on top and bottom under a heavy plate for 30 minutes. Dry with more
paper towel and use for your cooking. I like the result, although I
don't know if you would consider it bitter - frankly, I kinda like that
"tang" to the eggplant....
Ah well, to each his/her own....
|
169.46 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A goal is a dream with a deadline | Fri Dec 07 1990 11:10 | 13 |
| >re: using brown paper bags for draining the egg plant.
>
>This is not a good idea due to the insecticide that is sprayed on the paper
>and bags to deter bug damage in warehouses. Brown bags should never be
>used to prepare food. Brown baking paper (often sold in yuppy makets or
>specialty cooking stores) is safe to use. It comes on rolls just like
>foil.
I was disappointed to hear the woman who does Ciao Italia on Channel 11 out
of NH suggesting to viewers that they drain fried food on supermarket paper
bags.....maybe I'll write her a letter!
--Sharon
|
169.47 | Octopus Ink???????? | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Fri Dec 07 1990 11:29 | 14 |
| I always soaked the eggplant in cold water changing the water
frequently and continuing the soaking until the water remained clear,
no black juices. Lately I have been using the salting method, placing the
slices in a colander, salting and weighing down with a plate. I then
rinse the salt off and dry with paper towels. I really don't know
which one works better. The soaking method always amazed me seeing all
this blackness coming out of the vegetable.
I bought two eggplants yesterday and am planning on making a type of
torte. The eggplant is the crust and it is filled with pasta, ground
beef, etc. Earl Peyroux made it this week on his show and it really
looked good. I think I'll soak it this time.
Flo
|
169.48 | Macaroni & Eggplant Torte | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Mon Dec 10 1990 09:32 | 65 |
| Eggplant Torte
It was!!!!! Not only wonderful but gorgeous to look at. It fed the
eyes as well as the palate. I'm going to make it again for my
Christmas eve buffet.
Butter a spring form pan - sprinkle with bread crumbs. I used the
seasoned.
3 eggplants - sliced - put in a colander sprinkle with salt, weigh down
and let drain. (I used two good size ones) Wash and dry well.
Fry slices in peanut oil until brown. Drain on paper towels. Line
bottom and sides of spring form pan with eggplant reserving some for
the top.
Meanwhile -
Cook 1/2 lb. of ziti until al dante. Drain and hold in cool
water.
Fry 1 lb ground beef in butter (did not use the butter, but a non stick
pan and 90% lean beef) for approximately 10 minutes.
Add 1 onion chopped and fry for approximately 5 minutes.
2 cloves of minced garlic and fry.
2 tablespoon of tomato paste and a little red wine if it appears
dry.
Frozen green peas - about a cup.
1 cup provolone or fontana (sp) cheese - shredded
1 cup parmesan or to taste
salt/pepper and 1 tsp. oregano
Add the cooked macroni - combine all.
Fill eggplant shell with mixture.
Top with reserved slices of eggplant. Sprinkle
with additional breadcrumb.
Bake at 350 degrees for 35-40 minutes.
Bake on a cookie sheet or tray as it may leak.
Let sit for 10-15 minutes - unmold, garnish with parsley
and if you like a tomato rose and slices of tomato.
Enjoy!!!
Flo
PS Hope this came out - I was disconnected.
|
169.33 | Eggplant and Salad Meal | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Mon Feb 18 1991 09:56 | 55 |
| Here's a different type of recipe. I discovered Earl Peyroux on TV and
find the majority of his recipes very good. Here's his eggplant
parmigiana.
Prepare a meat sauce by sauteing (sp) onions in olive oil until
carmelized. Add 1/2 lb. ground beef and a 1/2 lb. of ground pork -
brown. Add crushed tomatoes, bay leaf, salt and pepper. Cover and
simmer for 2 1/2 hours - add 3/4 cup of tomato paste and cook 2 hours
longer.
Cut eggplants in 1/2" slices - salt or soak in water as you prefer to
remove any bitterness. Dip in egg milk and salt mixture and then in
breadcrums - seasoned or unseasoned as you prefer. Fry in olive oil -
drain on paper towels.
Prepare egg noodles about 1 lb - by boiling in water (salted if you
like) - drain and keep in lukewarm water in strainer.
Coat large casserole dish with olive oil. Place a layer of egg
noodles. Top with a layer of eggplant - cover with 1/2 cup of sauce -
sprinkle with 1/2 cup of parmesan cheese. Repeat this layer. The last
layer should be a layer of noodles topped with a small amount of sauce.
Top this with slices of mozarella cheese. Bake at 350 degrees covered
with tented aluminum foil for 20 minutes. Remove foil and bake for 15
minutes longer or until cheese is browned. Let rest for 10 minutes
before serving.
Ingredients and quantities:
3 eggs
1/3 cup of milk
2 medium eggplant
1 cup of breadcrumbs
4 T of olive oil (I used a lot more)
1 recipe of meat sauce
1 cup of parmensan
8 large slices of mozarella
1 lb. of cooked eggnoodles
Earl served this with a great salad, which should go under another
note, but I'll add it here.
Cut day old or older French bread in about 2 inch cubes. Sprinkle with
red wine vinegar. Top with tomato slices and onion rings. Add hard
cooked egg slices and sweet gerhkin (sp) pickle pieces (I used my sister's
pickled watermelon rind). In a small mixing bowl, add basil, oregano,
salt and pepper. Whisk in olive oil till blended. Pour over salad
ingredients. Mix.
Sorry I did not get quantities - This was delicious and a good way to
use up my leftover bread.
IMHO I think Earl is the greatest.
Flo
|
169.5 | Skins | CSCMA::PIERCE | | Mon Mar 04 1991 16:08 | 7 |
|
{ SKINS PLEASE!}
I've always left the skin on the eggplant, it's REAL tasty! There
isn't anything wrong with this is there?
Mel
|
169.6 | skin can be dangerous | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:52 | 14 |
| > I've always left the skin on the eggplant, it's REAL tasty! There
> isn't anything wrong with this is there?
usually not...however, if you buy eggplant "off season" (if you just HAVE
to have some egg plant and it is the dead of winter, for instance), you
probably DO want to discard the skin. Many of our off-season veggies and
fruits come from other countries to which our lovely chemical companies
sell all the insecticides and herbacides that are NOT LEGAL to sell in the
USA.....due to the fact that they are KNOWN cancer-causing agents, or known
allergens, or....
you get the idea. The rule is if you don't know where it was grown, DO NOT
TAKE A CHANCE. Assume it has been exposed to dangerous chemicals and proceed
accordingly.
|
169.7 | Eggplant Boats | NEWPRT::WAGNER_BA | | Mon Jul 29 1991 15:05 | 30 |
| This is my grandma's recipe (she's italian) that our family has enjoyed for
years!
2 Eggplants
1lb Hamburger
1/2 an onion
1 cup cheese cubes (cheddar and monterey)
2 to 3 cups your spagetti sauce (or bottled)
olive oil
garlic salt and pepper
parmesan cheese
Slice both eggplants in half, and cut about 3/4 inch in around the
edges and scoop out filling to make a boat. Drizzle olive oil and a
sprinkle of water into a covered baking pan and put boats in. Sprinkle
them with parmasan cheese and set aside. Chop the eggplant fillings
into squares and throw them into a frying pan with the onion chopped.
Saute in a small amount of water with a dollop of olive oil. When
the eggplant is partially cooked, throw in your hamburger and cook.
Season with garlic salt and pepper. Regular salt for hamburger if you
want. When hamburger is done, drain mixture. Now fill up the boats
and stick in cubes of cheese. Pour the spagetti sauce over the tops
of each boat.
COVER!!! and Bake for one hour at 375 degrees.
(Be careful in taking the boats out of the pan, there will be alot of
juice on the bottom.) Sprinkle with Parmesan Cheese!
These can also be made with italian sausage!
|
169.49 | layered eggplant and tomatoes | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Thu Sep 24 1992 13:47 | 16 |
| fresh tomatoes
fresh eggplant
mozzerella cheese
italian seasoning
parmesean cheese
butter
get a small eggplant. they don't have seeds and are quite sweet. my
garden has changed my view about this vegatable. peel the eggplant and
slice into 1/4 inch slices. slice the tomatoes the same. butter a
baking pan and put the eggplant in. top with tomatoes and italian
seasoning. repeat layers and on top put mozzerella cheese, a bit more
parm and the spices. place a few cubes of butter, not much, around the
edges and bake for one hour at 325oF. delicious and fast.
cj
|
169.50 | need recipe without tomatoes! do they exist? | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Fri Oct 02 1992 09:55 | 10 |
| does anyone know if eggplant can be frozen? i thought that it might
become mushy. having the first frost the other night we picked about
10 of them and i don't have the faintest idea on what to do with them.
i was hoping to find a recipe that did not involve tomatoes. is there
one out there that would help me? i'm beginning to think not.
help!
cj
|
169.51 | Frozen Eggplant | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 11:22 | 17 |
|
>> does anyone know if eggplant can be frozen? i thought that it might
>> become mushy. having the first frost the other night we picked about
>> 10 of them and i don't have the faintest idea on what to do with them.
Even as we speak, the scooped-out pulp of some roasted
eggplant is in the freezer, as an experiment. I'm hoping it
will hold up in this state for future batches of baba ghannuj
(or however you want to spell it).
Since it will be pureed in the food processor and then heavily
seasoned, I would imagine I'll have success with it. We're
having the same problem right now, and this seemed like a
reasonable way to use up some of them anyways.
Good luck,
Di
|
169.52 | Stuffed Eggplant | SNOC02::MASCALL | "Tiddley quid?" dixit Porcellus. | Wed Oct 07 1992 02:39 | 40 |
| Don't know if this is the sort of thing you're looking for, but it
definitely doesn't have tomatoes in it!
ITALIAN STUFFED EGGPLANTS
(Quantities are all approximations, I've never seen them measured.)
Get a bunch of eggplants. Halve them and boil them in salted water
until the flesh is soft. Wait for them to cool! and then scoop out the
flesh, being careful not to tear the skins. Squeeze as much moisture
out of the flesh as you can (that's why you allow to cool!).
Make sure the skins are quite dry - pat them with paper towels or
whatever. Salt them a little, too.
To the flesh add breadcrumbs, parmesan cheese, parsley and/or oregano
and/or basil, a bit of salt and pepper, a couple of eggs - enough to
make the quantity stick together. At a really rough guess, I'd suggest
equal proportions of breadcrumbs to cheese. You want to end up with a
sort of paste, not too dry, not too runny, with enough body to mould.
(You can also add some meat (chicken, veal, beef,pork) that has been
cooked (steamed) and minced, if you like; this is very nice).
Take each skin and mould some of the stuffing into it. Don't make it
too high, but a decent amount. Make sure it's well stuck to the skin.
Then you fry them in just enough oil that they are covered, until
done; five or ten minutes. You'll know when they're ready. Drain on
paper towels.
They can be eaten hot, warm or cold. I prefer them hot myself, but my
Italian boyfriend's mother, who showed me how to make them, often
serves them cold after the hot pasta course at Sunday lunch.
I love 'em!
Sheridan
:^)
|
169.53 | | TRUCKS::GAILANN | It takes a gourmet to get a silver dollar | Wed Oct 07 1992 04:45 | 7 |
|
sorry for being thick but I'm not sure if you mean deep fried or
shallow friend..
can they be baked?
gailann
|
169.54 | low-fat eggplant snack | UHUH::D_CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Tue Jan 05 1993 15:59 | 21 |
| Made a tasty snack/appetizer the other day, that even my
non-eggplant-loving SO really liked...easy and healthy...
(Inspired by a more complicated and less healthy recipe in "Indian
Cooking" by Madhur Jaffrey)
Slice an eggplant in to thin slices (aprx 1/4 inch).
Sprinkle the slices generously on both sides with salt and hot curry
powder (tho' I suppose it would work with the bland commercial sort...I
get mine at an Indian grocery.)
Spray a large non-stick pan (or better yet, electric skillet) with
cooking spray (again, generously) or a little oil and heat on
med-high
Fry slices until soft in the middle, and slightly browned/crisped on
the outside
Squeeze fresh lemon juice over them, and serve straight from the pan
Mmmmmmmmmmmmm!!!
(Better than it sounds. Don't skip the lemon.)
D!
|
169.55 | Babba Ganoosh | WMOIS::SAADEH | Will there ever be peace over there | Tue Sep 21 1993 09:20 | 37 |
|
E g g p l a n t D i p
(Babba Ganoosh!!!)
-------------------------
Egg Plant 1 Large
Lemons 1 Whole
Tahni (sesame seed paste) 3 Tablespoons
Garlic 1 Clove
Italian Green Hot Pepper 1
Salt
Put Eggplant in microwave for 15-20 minutes.
Crush the Garlic and chop the Green Hot Pepper.
Put the Garlic,Green Hot Pepper,Salt in a large
mixing bowl.
Mix 3Tablespoons of Tahni with Lemon Juice till
the Tahni breaks up into a thiner paste than put
in in the bowl with other ingredients.
Peel the cooked Eggplant removing the seeds if necessary.
Take Eggplant and put in the bowl and mix all ingredients.
*The amount of Garlic/Pepper/Salt you add depends on your
love for those ingredients.
Saah tain, (Here's to your health)
Eman S. Sa'adeh
*note* Any ??'s call my wife Tel: (508) 342-5862
|
169.56 | Eggplant BBQed? | SUPER::HARRIS | | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:07 | 3 |
| I saw a recipe for bbq'ing eggplant on a cooking show, but wasn't
really paying attention. I'd like to do something like this. Any
suggestions on coating/toppings?
|
169.57 | | STAR::MWOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:30 | 20 |
|
Rep .56
>>>I saw a recipe for bbq'ing eggplant on a cooking show, but wasn't
really paying attention. I'd like to do something like this. Any
suggestions on coating/toppings?
Slice the eggplant into 1/4" slices the long way. Marinate in olive
oil, the juice of one lemon, the zest of one lemon, crushed garlic
<no set amount to taste>, herbs de provence, and salt and pepper to
taste. You can also add crushed dried chiles if you want it spicy.
Grille over a hot fire for about 2 minutes per side and remove.
Drizzle a few tbsps of a flavored vinegar over the top and serve.
Also great cold but it usually never lasts that long.
-mike
|
169.58 | 2 Recipes for BBQ Eggplant | POWDML::VISCONTI | | Thu Aug 17 1995 08:45 | 89 |
|
Grilled Eggplant in Garlic Sauce
_______ ________ __ ______ _____
INGREDIENTS: 2 whole eggplant
1/4 cup olive oil
1 piece ginger, peeled and diced
1 bulb garlic, peeled only (whole cloves)
1/2 cup white onion, diced
1/2 cup green onion, diced
1 cup chicken stock
1/2 cup hoisen sauce
1/8 cup seseme oil
1/4 cup soy sauce
DIRECTIONS: Place whole eggplants on grill, turning several times until
skin feels soft all over, approximately 20 minutes.
While the eggplant is cooking, preheat frying pan.
Coat the bottom of the fying pan with olive oil.
Saute' ginger, garlic, white and green onions around 5 minutes
on the burner, then another 5 minutes on the grill.
Add the chicken stock, hoisen sauce, seseme oil and soy sauce.
Cook for around 5 minutes.
Slice the eggplant in small pieces:
Slice each piece in quarters then slice all quarters into
small pieces.
Add the eqqplant to the frying pan with the garlic sauce for
around 5 minutes.
Add more chicken stock if the pan is dry.
Serve with noodels or rice or as a side dish.
Grilled Eggplant 'sandwiches'
_______ ________ ____________
INGREDIENTS: 1 large eggplant, around 1 1/2 lbs, unpeeled
Salt
2 tblsp. olive oil
4 slices fontina (or another melting) cheese
2 - 3 slices prosciutto
8 med. fresh basil leaves
2 med. tomatoes, cored and cut into 8 slices
DIRECTIONS: Stem the eggplant and slice it across into rounds about 1/2
inch thick, making at least 8 slices in all.
Liberally salt the rounds on both sides and put them in a
collander for the salt to draw out the juice.
Leave for about 30 minutes.
Rinse the slices and lightly press to remove as much liquid
as possible; pat dry.
Preheat the grill.
Place the eggplant slices on the rack and grill them for
about 5 minutes, until the bottoms are lightly browned.
Turn, brush the top surface with a little olive oil and grill
about 5 minutes longer, until the eggplant is golden on
both sides.
Top each slice with a piece of fontina trimmed to fit.
When the cheese begins to melt on the eggplant, lay a slice
of prosciutto on top of each round, then another trimmed
piece of fontina.
Cover the grill briefly to melt the top piece of cheese to hold
the sandwich together.
Put a basil leaf and slice of tomato on top and brush with
a little more olive oil.
Serve at once, with 2 pieces per serving.
Serves 4.
(The Boston Globe, 31-Aug-94)
|
169.59 | Another BBQ Eggplant Recipe | POWDML::VISCONTI | | Mon Aug 21 1995 10:46 | 42 |
|
Grilled Eggplant (Malanzane alla Griglia)
_______ ________ __________ ____ ________
INGREDIENTS: 3 large cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
3/4 cup finely minced fresh parsley
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
salt and freshly ground black pepper (to taste)
2 medium eggplants
DIRECTIONS: In a bowl, mix the garlic with the parsley and slowly whish
in the olive oil. Season with salt and pepper and let sit
at room temperature for several hours.
Trim the eggplant and slice lengthwise into 1/4-inch slices.
Salt each slice and place in a colander set in a bowl.
Fill another bowl with water and set it on top of the eggplant
to act as a weight. Let stand for 2 to 3 hours, to remove
excess moisture from the eggplant.
Heat the grill. Wipe the eggplant slices dry with paper towels.
Oil the grill rack and place the eggplant slices on the grill.
Grill until browned and soft, about 5 minutes on each side.
Arrange the eggplant in a shallow serving dish and pout the
olive oil mixture over it.
Serve at room temperature.
(Ciao Italia by Mary Ann Esposito)
NOTE - For a different presentation, cut Tuscan bread or other
good hearty bread into large chunks and toast for a few
minutes on the grill. Serve the eggplant on top of the
bread with some of the dressing spooned over.
|
169.60 | What happens if ... | DECWET::WOLFE | | Tue Aug 22 1995 14:52 | 4 |
| Many recipies seem to call for salting
veggies to get the moisture out. What
happens if you skip this step or don't
let the vegtable sit long enough?
|
169.61 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue Aug 22 1995 15:39 | 4 |
|
.60 I use fresh eggplant from the garden, never salt and drain them,
even when the recipe calls for it (most seem to) and I haven't died
yet. ;>
|
169.62 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Wed Aug 23 1995 00:29 | 5 |
| RE: .60
The worst that can happen is the dish ends up excessively soupy.
--PSW
|
169.63 | salt mainly just makes food salty | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Aug 23 1995 12:54 | 6 |
| I never salt vegetables - we don't cook with salt at home (with the
exception of oily scallion cakes, which we make maybe once a year).
Nothing bad happens if you don't. The salt is supposed to make some
veggies less bitter and other less moist.
/Charlotte
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169.64 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Tue Feb 25 1997 18:35 | 8 |
| I probably should have analyzed this more closely when I was out a few
years ago.
Anyone have a recipe that approximates the eggplant over spinach at
Ciro's in Maynard? It sort of reminded me of a lasagne with eggplant
as the pasta, but not quite.
meg
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169.65 | and it was yummy! | ENGPTR::ANDERSON | There's no such place as far away | Thu Feb 27 1997 12:57 | 16 |
| Meg,
I don't have a recipe, but I've had that dish recently. It is like a
lasagne, with the eggplant as the pasta. The other layers were
spinach
artichokes
roasted peppers
procuttio(sp)
It had a tomato sauce over it (and probably in the layers), and had a
sharp flavor. There was melted cheese over the top.
Hope this helps,
marianne
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