When done right, eggplant is simply delicious. This fruit鈥攍ike tomato, it鈥檚 considered a fruit鈥攊s plenty more than just an aubergine orb destined for the grill.
According to one USDA handbook, it may be 鈥渙val, round, long, or pear-shaped; the skin is smooth and shiny. The color may be black and purple, yellow, white, or striped. The main types include Standard (American), Japanese, Italian, Philippine, Thai, and Chinese.鈥 Here in the U.S., we鈥檙e simply most accustomed to the long, purple varietal.
Well-prepared eggplant can reach epic taste heights鈥攖hough it could take what some would consider forever in kitchen time. Here鈥檚 what I mean: You slice it up, salt it, let it sit for hours (at least three is ideal) in a colander over a bowl, rinse and dry each piece, bread or flour it, cook it, then eat it. Common eggplant dishes like eggplant parm work best in my opinion when you prep the main ingredient using this process, too.
Because I can鈥檛 make that time commitment on most weeknights鈥攁nd most weekends for that matter鈥攎y eggplant quest this CSA season has been to find preparations that don鈥檛 require such a time-suck and that also don鈥檛 leave the fruit so soft. One great recipe we鈥檝e made a couple times is , what writer Martha Rose Shulman describes as 鈥渁 sweet-and-sour Sicilian version of ratatouille.鈥 The eggplant gets roasted, chopped up, and mixed with olives, capers, tomato, celery, onion, and garlic. It鈥檚 great on top of a crusty, thinly cut baguette.
Also, here are two eggplant parm recipes that should take less time than the original. 鈥淓ggplant Parmesan is a lot of work,鈥 writes Mark Bittman in his book Food Matters. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 a more , with the vegetables and meat grilled or broiled instead of breaded and fried.鈥 It also happens to include chicken, but Bittman suggests swapping in zucchini or Portobello mushrooms if your aim is to keep the dish vegetarian. This also doesn鈥檛 require salting and breading the eggplant.
Eggplant peaks in the summer, and though we鈥檙e nearing the end of that season, there鈥檚 still plenty of time to ramp up your recipe repertoire. Here are four additional recipes to try, the first of which came strongly recommended from 爆料公社 senior editor Susan Cosier:
, Martha Stewart
, Smitten Kitchen
, Bon App茅tit
, Aarti Sequeira/Food Network