Doomsday Roasted Eggplants

Doomsday Roasted Eggplants

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On Nov 28th at exactly 7:20pm, I got fed up.  I’ve had my 5th servings of chronic-crashing on my chrome in 1 day and my whipped iTune seemed to be super-unnaturally allergic to my iPad because it decided to kill itself everytime at the sync of it.  So in the attempt to steer my PC into the shinning new-era and deliver it to the promised land of salvation, I upgraded it to – Windows 8 (plug your best Angel music here).  …The reported beacon of hope had turned out more to be the beacon of NOPE, and I was punished for it.  Because then came as I previously mentioned here – the ultimate internet doomsday which led to my double emotional-meltdowns on the kitchen floor.  You didn’t think I was gonna spare you that story, did you?  Neeu…

For the next 3.5 days, not only my savior wiped out my internet on desktop but it also screwed with wifi as well.  They say that you don’t know what you had until it’s gone.  I swore then that if I could have my internet back, I’d put a ring on it.  To push my fragile state of mind even closer to the edge was my ANOTHER mistake to switch mobile company awhile back, whom – I realized in the attempt to turn on my iPhone’s AH-HA! “personal hot spot” (see how technology-savvy I am) – has randomly located my apartment to be the communal DEAD SPOT because frankly I’d be lucky to even make out a SOS-emergency call if I fell and broke my will to live, let alone connecting to the internet.  Have I successfully turned my misery into your BOREDOM yet?  Because the best has yet to come.  Oh yes, meltdowns.  On the second day in my informational vacuum, a little preview of sobbing and brief whimpering started around noon, then at 7 before I started making dinner, an avalanche of anger and self-pity came tumbling down and rendered me down to an emotional wreckage.

Just imagine a pre-middle age woman crouching and bracing an iPad to her chest… iPhone scattered a few feet away along with a perplexed broccoli-head sitting on the countertop… snot-blazing and BALLING HER LIFE OUT on the cold kitchen floor while her dogs watched.  You know how they say dogs can sense their owner’s sorrow and offer comfort?  Mine didn’t sense it… they were FRIGHTEN by it, it was that bad.  But wait, there’s an inspiration here somewhere… something about endurance…  Because 40 min later, I miraculously scooped myself out of my emotional black-hole and… cooked dinner, without internet.  How about that.  On the first day at ground-zero, I made a roasted broccoli salad.  Let’s not talk about it because it was flavored with the stench of my fury and frustration which I blame for the salad’s mediocre-ness.  But on the 3rd night (which was the FINAL day of hell-storm if you weren’t counting), I made this.  And it was testimony of how one can find beauty in tragedy.

I never realize how much time there was in a day when I was accompanied with technology.  Wow, how I survived my teenage years I had no idea…  But in between feet-twitching and nail-biting, I decided to put my suicide.doc aside and instead browse through those new cookbooks I had no time to open, one of which being Ottolenghi’s Jerusalem.  I didn’t think I could potentially be someone who’s enthusiastic about Jewish cuisine.  They do good bagels and let’s leave it at that.  But I literally folded the page-corners to death as bookmarks and worried myself slightly that this blog is gonna read like “The Asian Girl Who Cooks Like a Jew” considering how many dishes I want to do.  I promise I’lll restrain but you have to know about this one.  It’s vegetarian and I found it absolutely amazing.  Eggplants are roasted with lemon and chili pesto and as if that wasn’t enough, topped with more flavor explosive yumminess.  I adapted it with the addition of some Turkish flavor that I adored on the trip to Istanbul (spiced rice) and for the first time in 3 days, I saw a light at the end…

Jason: “Wait!  I think I fixed it!”

THANK GAAWWWWWDDD!!

Servings: 2

I substituted some ingredients that I didn’t have: preserved lemon peels with fresh lemon zest, and bulgur with Jasmin rice plus some other added spices.  I think the pairing is absolutely perfect.

Ingredients:

  • Roasted Eggplants:
    • 4 medium, long eggplants
    • 2 garlic
    • 1/2 tsp of sea salt
    • zest of 1 lemon
    • 1 tbsp of Turkish chili flakes
    • 1 1/2 tsp of ground cumin
    • 1 1/2 tsp of ground coriander
    • 1 tsp of paprika
    • 1/2 cup of olive oil
  • Spiced Rice:
    • 1/4 cup of assorted, or golden raisin
    • 1 1/2 cup of cooked Jasmin rice, or basmati rice
    • 1 tbsp of olive oil
    • 1/2 medium onion, finely minced
    • 4 tbsp of chicken stock
    • 1/4 tsp of ground cinnamon
    • 1/3 tsp of ground allspice
    • Salt and black pepper
    • 1 tsp of lemon juice
    • 1 1/2 tbsp of cilantro, chopped (leave 1/2 tbsp for final sprinkling)
    • 1 1/2 tbsp of mint, chopped (leave 1/2 tbsp for final sprinkling)
    • 1 tsp of chili flakes
  • Yogurt Dressing:
    • 5 tbsp of plain yogurt
    • 2 tsp of lemon juice
    • 1/2 tsp of ground black pepper
    • 1/4 tsp of salt

Preheat the oven on 400ºF/200ºC.

In a stone mortar or food processor, puree garlic, sea salt, lemon zest, chili flakes, cumin, coriander, paprika and olive oil to a pesto consistency.  Cut the eggplants in half length-wise, score the flesh diagonally without breaking the skin, and place on a baking sheet.  Evenly apply the spice oil on top of the eggplants and bake in the oven for 30~40 min until soft.  A fork should insert without any effort.  This depends on the eggplants and mine took 35 min.

Meanwhile make the spiced rice.  Soak the raisins in hot water until plumped up, approx 5 min.  Remove from the water and coarsely chop them.  Set aside.

Heat 1 tbsp of olive oil in a skillet and add the onion with a little pinch of salt.  Saute on medium high heat until the onion is browned all over on the edges.  Add the cooked Jasmin or basmati rice, chicken stock, cinnamon, allspice and season with salt and ground black pepper.  Saute until the rice is heated through and fragrant.  Place the rice in a bowl and add the raisins, lemon juice, chopped cilantro, chopped mint and chili flakes.  Stir to combine and set aside (There should be slightly more than enough for the final assembly because I found it irresistible to snack on while I wait for the eggplants).

Make the yogurt dressing by whisking the yogurt, lemon juice, black pepper and salt together until smooth.  Set aside.

Once the eggplants come out of the oven, use 2 forks to gently make a well in the middle.  Stuff it with the spiced rice and drizzle with yogurt dressing.  Sprinkle the reserved chopped mint and cilantro on top.

Bust out the best extra virgin olive oil you got and give it a splash.

14 Comments
  • G

    December 13, 2012 at 1:03 PM Reply

    WTF Mandy this looks SO GOOD!!!!! I am coming to live at your house. I will fix your internet for you whenever you break it in exchange for free unlimited food. KTHXBAI.

  • G

    December 13, 2012 at 1:09 PM Reply

    Also my dear, you should Photoshop your images and reduce their size for the web. Images should be changed to 72 dpi resolution and exported using File -> Save for Web & Devices. You should save the images as JPG’s instead of PNG’s and then play with the quality of the compression to make sure the file size is under 200Kb. I actually prefer that all images are under 100KB but you’re using really large images so maybe aim for 200KB. For example, the first image in this blog post was 3.5MB. 3.5MB for a web image!?! That’s crazy! You don’t want it to take so long to download the webpage for users to view. XOXO

    • Mandy L.

      December 13, 2012 at 2:22 PM Reply

      G, thank you! I will definitely look into that. PNG file for the header image is because there is overlays in the picture but you are right. 3.5 MB is too big. Thanx again.

  • Jenna

    February 16, 2013 at 2:02 AM Reply

    This was really amazing. Everything I make usually ends up tasting like nothing. This was a great improvement – so many flavors! My only comment is that it isn’t all that filling, so if you want more of a hearty meal, make a protein to eat along with it!

    • Mandy L.

      February 16, 2013 at 1:51 PM Reply

      Jenna, yes lambs would go beautifully with it!

  • kk

    February 18, 2013 at 12:30 PM Reply

    This was sooo good!! This is the second recipe I made from your blog, and they were both equally amazing!! I think I’m going to have to make everything on your blog!!! Thank you for another wonderful recipe!!

    • Mandy L.

      February 18, 2013 at 2:02 PM Reply

      KK, what was the first recipe!!?? :)

      • Kk

        February 18, 2013 at 5:40 PM Reply

        It was the Korean taco! Sooo good! I’m thinking about the carrots and blue cheese scones next, since I have both in my fridge. A little nervous though….Any suggestions for my next recipe?

  • Reem Bieber

    October 8, 2016 at 1:47 AM Reply

    I just made this and its excellent ! the rice is indeed amazing.

  • Enlightenment

    May 27, 2017 at 5:54 PM Reply

    This is a recipe that I return to again and again. The crispy crunchy tangy sour photos are enough to start a cycle of salivation and desire, an itch from which the only relief is to actually start cooking this doomsday dish. Enough of fantasy, back to reality. I have had the Jerusalem cookbook for years but it took a fiery Chinese lady to bring it to my attention. It’s taking my cooking in a different direction since I first found your blog and your blistering Sichuan Mapo Tofu recipe.

    • Enlightenment

      May 13, 2020 at 7:16 PM Reply

      3 years later I am still returning to this page monthly to ensure that I follow this astronomically tasty recipe without deviation (well, almost no deviation),

  • SC

    July 10, 2022 at 1:49 PM Reply

    Hey Mandy!

    When you say “2 garlic”, do you mean cloves or head?

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