(See previous entry, “Fab Four,” for the premise of the next four entries.)
My first recipe will feature the wee little Indian eggplant. These eggplants have a naturally sweet, fresh taste and they cook quickly to the ideal state of mushiness. This improvised recipe worked well, the only shortcoming being that it was rather oily. Try coating the pan with a thin layer of oil, rather than frying in steeper oil as I did... in the meantime, I’ll continue to experiment with ways of making these eggplants less greasy. The flavors, however, were delicious. ("Were," past-tense, because I ate them all.)
I should mention that the onion date chutney is inspired by a near-identical dish served at Marigold, a Chicago modern Indian eatery. Mine is tastier, however, due to the addition of more salt and several hefty squeezes of lime.
Recipe #1. Fried Indian Eggplants with Raita and Onion Date Chutney
Appetizer, serves 2 – be sure to double or triple the recipe unless cooking for self or romantic candlelight dinner
Ingredients
4 Indian eggplants
1/4-1/8 c chickpea flour (can substitute wheat flour if desired)
pinch of salt
turmeric, paprika, cumin, coriander
1/2 c plain yogurt
Some carrot
Some cucumber
ca. 15 pitted dates
1 vidalia onion
crushed red pepper
1 lime
olive oil
peanut, corn or canola oil for frying
Eggplants
Remove the leafy flaps from 4 Indian eggplants, leaving the stems attached. Trim stems down to a stub.
Combine chickpea flour with salt, turmeric, paprika, and cumin.
Moisten the surface of each eggplant and dip face-down into flour. Pour a nice-sized pool of frying oil in pan and heat on medium-high. Fry eggplants face-down in oil until browned, then turn and cook other side; the eggplants should cook very quickly. Remove from oil and place on paper towel to soak excess grease.
Raita
Mix yogurt with shredded or chopped carrot and cucumber, coriander, and salt to taste.
Onion Date Chutney, the highlight of this dish in my opinion
Note: this recipe makes a LOT of chutney, enough to feed a whole family of chutney gnomes.Try halving or even quartering the recipe if you don’t anticipate spreading chutney on your toast for the next two weeks.
Coarsely chop vidalia onion and sauté in olive oil until caramel-brown.
Add ca. 15 dates, 1/2 cup water, a good dash of crushed red pepper flakes and paprika.
Simmer on low-medium for about 10 minutes, adding water to avoid burning. Add salt to taste.
Place stewed mixture in food processor and squeeze in the juice of 1 lime. Purée until smooth.
The resultant combination is great as an appetizer, or could be coupled with a bowl of rasam soup, roti and some salad for an Indian lunch.
Rasam, eggplant and red pepper relish, yogurt, lime pickle, cucumber and greens salad -- all possible companions to fried eggplants with chutney and raita. |
Looks delicious -- thanks for the excellent photos! I wish someone would come cook like this for me.
ReplyDeleteYay chutney recipe! It's ON, as soon as I make it out of terrible Tuesday.
ReplyDeleteThank you for trying my recipes! Do let me know if you have any comments -- if things go particularly right or wrong, etc. I want to make sure that my occasionally nonspecific instructions translate well.
ReplyDelete