Generally speaking I am not a fan of eggplant at all. Unless it has been cooked into submission and is no longer recognizable as its former self. I have tried to eat eggplant in various forms to no avail. I have even forced myself to maintain an open mind and try new recipes. My husband knows of my aversion and even shares it, although to a lesser degree. He happened to be watching a show with Bobby FLay in Ireland one night and literally woke me up and told me that we HADTOTRYTHIS recipe. "I would eat that" were his words. That was approximately 4 months ago. Unfortunately, the show never listed a recipe, so I have had to wait until another brave soul in the world tested and tried to figure out the recipe (this is only because I am too
lazy busy to do it myself). That being said, here is the recipe:
Ingredients:
3 eggplant
1/2 to 1 tsp chili powder (use less or more as you prefer)
1 tsp ground cardamom
2 tbsp olive oil
2 tbsp honey
2 tbsp tahini sauce
2 tbsp plain yogurt
Method:
Slice eggplant lengthwise, about three slices
Whisk together honey, olive oil, ground cardamom and chili powder
Brush eggplant slices with honey and spices mixture on both sides, let sit for half an hour
Arrange the eggplant slices in a baking pan
Bake in preheated 400 degrees F oven for 3-4 minutes on each side or until tender
Turn on the broiler and cook for another 2 minutes or just to achieve a broiled effect and brown the skin and sides.
Serve with tahini sauce mixed with yogurt
Here are my thoughts:
There is no salt listed anywhere in this recipe. So I salted the eggplant right before I put the marinade on. In the future I will salt the eggplant AND add salt to the marinade. Also, I only used 1/2 tsp of chili, which for me wasn't enough warm, so next time I will add more. The marinade does have a great flavor on the eggplant and is good enough that I am willing to overlook the lifelessness of cooked eggplant.
The one thing I did not enjoy was the tahini yogurt sauce. I started making it as the recipe said, but it was way to thick to drizzle over the eggplant and I did not enjoy the taste at all. I understand that the purpose is to offset the heat and sweet from the marinade, but it just didn't appeal to me in the least bit. So, then I had to go about trying to loosen it up a bit. I did this with buttermilk, lemon juice, water, then milk and it was still too thick. Also, again no salt, so I added some. It was still awful to me.
So, while I loved the eggplant, I need to work on a different sauce to go with it. Perhaps it was the tahini I bought. But I actually think that next time, I am going to try a peanut sauce of some kind.
I will say that despite all of this, both my husband and I went back for seconds and that, my friends, is saying something!!