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Recipes that include eggplant

Ratatouille Terrine

Friday, September 4, 2009

When I first started buying cookbooks, I was attracted to books that seemed vast and comprehensive, with tiles like 1,000 Indian Recipes, The Soup Bible, How to Cook Everything, and The Cake Bible. I wanted big and heavy hard covers with lots of pictures. I was an excited culinary student who wanted to learn how to cook every dish known to man. I still want to learn every dish, but years later, I now realize it will take 4 lifetimes, possibly more. What makes it even harder is that there are dishes and books you want to go back to and repeat.

The idea behind this dish is a Broiled Vegetable Terrine in one of my first cookbooks, The Italian Cooking Encyclopedia. I made that recipe with the guidance of my wonderful neighbor, at the time, Carol Gelles, who ironically wrote and gave me a copy of 1,000 Vegetarian Recipes. For the 3-ish years that I lived next door to her, I accumulated a ton of great cooking memories. As I flipped through The Italian Cooking Encyclopedia recently, I landed on a picture of the vegetable terrine, which made me smile, think of Carol, and then really want to make it again. The original recipe has an onion and raisin mixture  that I thought was a little awkward in the dish and also made it more work so I removed that but left the wonderful concept of layering that give you different textures in each bite. The colors will impress your guests, but the natural sweetness of fresh vegetables is what will have them asking for more.

Colorful Vegetable Terrine with Balsamic Reduction 3

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Brunch: Veggie and Goat Cheese Sandwiches, Manchego Mini Quiche, and Danish Apple Pastry

Monday, September 15, 2008

We had our friends, Peter, Jeff, and Erin, over for brunch. Since brunches are around noon, you have to plan to make some things in advance, unless you want to get up way too early. I’m pretty anal about optimal eating, meaning I won’t allow for something that’s ok because of convenience. I’ve got to eat and serve things the best way possible. For that reason, I use roasted and grilled veggies a lot. They taste better (in my opinion) the next day. So, the night before, I fire roasted peppers, and grilled eggplant and zucchini.

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Chilled Sesame Eggplant

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

I’ve been getting some requests for vegetarian friendly recipes and I’ll try to accommodate.

This recipe is inspired by the eggplant we had at Aquagrill. We had never had anything like it and since it’s been so long, I can’t really remember it exactly. What was amazing though, was the unique texture. It’s so soft, yet each piece holds itself together, while being unbelievably juicy. My best guess to achieving this texture was to steam the Chinese/Japanese Eggplant, marinate it, then chill it. I think that’s the method because it tasted pretty darn close. Lon can’t remember the eggplant from Aquagrill, but he really liked this one.

Chilled Sesame Eggplant

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Hummus, Quinoa Tabbouleh, and Eggplant Caperberry Salad

Monday, September 1, 2008

As I mentioned in my previous post, I served Moroccan Spiced Chops with Pluot Sauce to Angie and Scott. You don’t think that’s all I served, do you? Of course not! Meals at our place are always feasts! With that we had Tzatziki (I’ve posted this recipe before), Hummus, Quinoa Tabbouleh, Eggplant Caperberry Salad, and fresh Pita. Here are the recipes to make your feast!

I can’t believe I’ve never posted a hummus recipe. If you have a food processor, it is so easy to make, you’ll never pay for store bought versions again. Take this recipe as a guideline, adjusting to your taste. My tahini (which we brought home from Greece) is super dark so here I use 1 tablespoon but you might need more. Keep in mind that the quality of your ingredients will make a big difference here, especially what olive oil you use.

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Lazy Sausage Meatballs with Eggplant

Thursday, July 31, 2008

I’m still getting over the cold, or whatever I have, so I’m still doing lazy dishes. Thankfully, I had half a box of sausages in the fridge left-over, since it was a BJ’s box of meat, exactly 1 pound 13 ounces, so that’s what’s in the recipe. Don’t be alarmed by large amount of food this makes. It’s the perfect thing to have left-over, easily re-heatable in the microwave, or easily packed as a lunch.

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Spicy Baba Ganouj

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

I decided to make Baba Ganouj today and a light bulb went off – I should add harissa (that I bought at SOS Chefs) to it. It just made sense in my head so I was hoping the result would be as good. For me, the harissa was a hit! It brought out a smokiness and added a tang, and of course some heat. Unfortunately, Lon didn’t like it. We do occasionally differ on taste. Oh well.

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Roasted Eggplant and Red Pepper Salad

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

I’m trying really hard to eat lighter and this very low fat salad was great. It doesn’t taste like it’s missing the fat at all. Enjoy!

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