d o c t o r a n d m a m a

Linda Shiue

Linda Shiue
Location
San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I am a physician and spend my free time with my husband and kids, reading everything in sight, eating, traveling, and cooking meals inspired by my travels. These days I'm spending more time at my food blog, spiceboxtravels.com. Please visit me there and follow me on Twitter @spiceboxtravels. Disclaimer: Health information presented here is not intended nor recommended as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your own physician or other qualified health care professional regarding any medical questions or conditions. © 2010-12 Linda Shiue. All Rights Reserved.

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JULY 3, 2010 10:11AM

The World Through Eggplant-Colored Glasses

Rate: 12 Flag
eggplants with shades by Linda Shiue  

Some people see the world through rose-colored glasses.  This means that they are optimists, maybe excessively so.  Mine are tinted eggplant.  What does this mean? Literally, I have a thing for sunglasses with purple lenses.  Figuratively, it means that I am not just an eggplant fan, but a fanatic.  There is nothing I don't adore about eggplant, the food and the color.  There's purple in most everything I own, even my front door.  I know many names for eggplant-- aubergine, melongene, brinjal, bademjan -- and they all sound like poetry to me. 
 
There is no eggplant dish I don’t like.  Eggplant is my gateway food into any unfamiliar cuisine.  Because I am sure of my love for eggplant, I am willing to try any preparation.  This entrée into the unfamiliar has led to new appreciation of cuisines as far flung as Indian, Thai, Persian, Lebanese, Turkish, and Greek.  In all these cuisines, eggplant is cooked in savory dishes, but it is actually a fruit, not a vegetable.  Like the other fruit we eat as a vegetable, the tomato, the eggplant is a member of the nightshade family. Yes, it is true that the nightshades include the henbane that killed Hamlet's father.  This may sound forboding to some, but this suggestion of danger only adds to eggplant's appeal for me. But fear not: while the eggplant's deep ebony-violet hue enshrouding starkly pale flesh suggests mystery and perhaps danger, it is completely edible, unlike the poisonous members of its extended family.
 
eggplants by Linda Shiue 
 
Since I have always been a huge fan of eggplant, I have never understood why so many people dislike it.  How can people hate such a beautiful, delicious and versatile food? It might be the way many Americans are introduced to it.  Most often, eggplant is served deep-fried, as in the Italian eggplant parmigiana or as fritters, such as tempura.  While I enjoy these heavy treats, I often regret eating them later.  That's because one of the main problems with cooking eggplant is that it has an infinite capacity for absorbing oil.  Often, this means a greasy, soggy mess.  Another downside of eggplant is its reputation for bitterness.  Some varieties actually are not bitter at all, but there is a simple technique to draw out the bitter and bring out the sweetness of any type of eggplant.  This involves salting sliced eggplant and allowing the slices to sit for half an hour.  The salt causes the slices to “sweat”, and after rinsing, the bitterness is gone. This process is known by the violent-sounding term "degorging." 

So what can you do with this bitter, oil-loving fruit? One of my favorite chefs, Nigella Lawson, British food writer extraordinaire, has a superb recipe featuring eggplant which manages to be neither bitter nor greasy.

Nigella is familiar to her British compatriots, a bit less so here. She has authored many beautiful cookbooks, including Nigella ExpressFeastForever SummerNigella BitesHow to Be a Domestic Goddess, and How to Eat.  She has also hosted several cooking shows based upon her cookbooks in Britain and in the US on the Food Network, style, and E! channels.
 
I can’t even remember how I first heard about Nigella, but I do remember the first recipe of hers that I made.  You won’t believe it, and I can’t remember how I decided to make this. It was a recipe for Ham in Coca-Cola, her take on a recipe from the American South.  I made it for my baby’s first Christmas.  I have no idea if it was authentic, but it was good! After I shared news of my success with this recipe, my college friend Esther presented me with Feast.  It’s not just Nigella’s great recipes and gorgeous food photography that enraptured me, but even more so her persona and story.
 
As I read more about Nigella, I became even more smitten.  I admired that she was not a trained cook but rather a journalist who loved cooking for her family, and happened to discover her hidden talents as a food writer and television personality.  I identified with her as a working mother of young children.  And I was positively drawn in when I read that, in one of life’s greatest ironies, her husband was diagnosed with throat cancer.  The treatment, which included removal of the tongue, meant that her husband would never again be able to taste or eat her cooking.  Beyond this element of the tragic, which always gets me, I am just a huge fan of her way.  She seems like any one of us, or at least the more glamorous among us.  She cooks in a casual, chatty way, sincerely enjoying the process.  This also comes across in her cookbooks, where she annotates each recipe with hints, much as you might see scribbled on a recipe from a friend.  On television, she flirts with her viewers.  She licks her fingers and approximates measurements, but in the end, produces stunningly beautiful, delicious and simple food.  It seems that if you got to hang out with Nigella, you’d have a great time.

You could imagine enjoying brilliant conversation with her at a summer garden party featuring her grilled eggplant and feta rolls. Like Nigella, these eggplant rolls are sophisticated without being fancy, sensual yet restrained, and appealing to the eye as well as the tastebuds.  These make a great appetizer or light entrée in the summer, when eggplant is in season. This is one of the few eggplant dishes where you don’t have to worry about either greasiness or sogginess.  A light brush with olive oil before grilling is all you need, and the grilling means that not enough time passes for that oil to get absorbed.  The feta is brightened by the summery flavors of mint and lemon and a light bite of chili.

Don’t ask me, the one with the eggplant-colored glasses, to pick my favorite eggplant dish—I simply can’t.  But this one would definitely fall in my top 10.

*     *     *

Grilled Eggplant Rolls with Zesty Minted Feta
 
eggplant feta rolls by Linda Shiue 

Adapted from a recipe in Nigella Lawson's Forever Summer. 

Makes 20 rolls.  
 
Serves 8 as an appetizer, 4 as a main course.  As a main course, I would serve this with a side of orzo, in keeping with the loose Greek theme, and some black Mission figs, in keeping with the purple theme.

These are Nigella's notes for this recipe, which give you a sense of her charming style:
 
"You can fry or broil these eggplant or just blitz them in the heat of the grill: I really don’t care. The point is this: once your slices of eggplant are cooked, you pile up one short end with lemon-soused crumbled feta, chopped red chilli and fresh mint and roll the whole thing up; it’s really more of an assembly job than cooking.  I tend to think of these simple snacks as an ideal vegetable picky-thing to serve either as a starter before, or alongside, a generally meat-heavy barbecue, but they don’t have to be: frankly, just serve these with drinks and you don’t have to think of a first course for the rest of summer. And I eat these happily deep into winter too."
 
Ingredients

2 large eggplants, each cut thinly, lengthwise, into about 10 slices
4 tablespoons olive oil
8 ounces feta cheese
1 red chili, finely chopped, seeded if desired (I used a bird pepper)
1 large bunch of fresh mint, finely chopped (I used 3 Tbsp)
juice of 1 lemon
freshly ground black pepper to taste
salt
 
Technique

1.  Preheat a grill, stovetop griddle or broiler to high heat.
2.  Sprinkle slices of eggplant with salt and allow to sit in a colander for at least 30 minutes.  After you see droplets of liquid on the surface, rinse well with cool water and dry with a paper towel.
3.  Brush both sides of the eggplant slices with olive oil, and grill them for about 2 minutes each side until golden and tender.
4.  Crumble the feta into a bowl and stir in the chilli, mint and lemon juice.   Add freshly ground black pepper to taste.
5.  Place a heaping teaspoon of the feta mixture on the end third of each cooked eggplant slice.
6.  Roll each slice up to form a soft, stuffed bundle.
7.  Place each roll seam-side down on a plate, and garnish with mint.
 
  

© 2010 Linda Shiue

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Aubergine--the veg of the gods. Partly for the name, Linda. In her Brit books, that's what Nigella calls it.
I enjoyed reading this immensely. It has taken me 45 years to learn to like eggplant, due to a bad first date, but now I love done cooked in an Indian curry or presented in a sushi roll. Now I look forward to the unknown and exciting possibilities of eggplant variations you have introduced me to here guided by the rules of degouging and oil exposure restraint. The featured one looks and sounds delish. Nigella sounds like my kinda chef, and I've never disliked a color purple fan. smiles.
Ebony-violet, it's so true! I love Nigella, too, for all the reasons you name. Especially nice pictures. Bonne chance!
It is writing and recipes like this that make me keep coming back to try eggplant even though I am not much of a fan. It's not that I actively dislike eggplant like a kid hates broccoli (stereotypically), it's just never been something I've liked but that I will keep trying because I listen to the praises of the zealots who, almost certainly, have learned some great truth that I have not yet been able to discover.

Oh, and one other nightshade we regularly eat? Potato. Obviously, the potato isn't a fruit, but as with the tomato and the eggplant, eat the leaves (or any part other than the "fruit") at your peril.
I'm always learning with these food posts, especially yours. I love eggplants, the color, shape, so beautiful and exotic. I can't say I've been very adventurous when it comes to trying dishes with eggplant, but after reading your lovely post, I'll give it serious consideration. Rated for nudging me outside my food comfort zone!
Leon, I should have named one of my daughters Aubergine.

Maria, thanks! That must have been a pretty bad date, but glad to know you've moved beyond :)

Lucy, thanks! And to you!

Gavinesq, if I can convince you of the pleasures of eggplant, I will be proud. Yes, I read about the potato as nightshade as well, but it didn't work with the flow of my fruit not vegetable comment :)

Willett, great! This recipe is a pretty tame one to try, but if you're willing to branch out, I would highly recommend any Persian eggplant dish.
Aubergine would have topped Bernardine, which is a male-appendage moniker.
Eggplant is one of my favorite colors. I love dishes with eggplant but have no idea how to cook with it. My impression is that it is much like tofu in that it is a basically a vehicle for other flavors. I'll bet I'm wrong though. I look at them in the market and want to put them in my basket, but now just walk on by. Thanks for stopping by and posting a comment Linda! these pictures and recipes are making me sooo hungry!
Eggplant is one of my favorite vegetables, Linda, because it is a palette to be painted into many tastes. I love those glasses and would love to see the world through them. Nigella is also a seed I like on baked goods. ~~~R
Graham, thank you. I find eggplant as versatile as tofu but not so much a vehicle for other flavors; I think it carries its flavor a bit more robustly. Try some!

Füsun, you need a pair of eggplant shades!

Bonnie, thank you.
Our likes and dislikes depend not only on how we're introduced to food, but on the quality of that food. I never cared much for tomatoes until a patient gave me some from her garden. It was like discovering a new vegetable (or fruit, depending on your perspective). I bet I would like eggplant as seen through tinted glasses. Fine, fine post. I love your writing style.
Great post. I love the glasses! I'm a fan of Nigella's, too. I love her style. This recipe looks like a keeper!
Steve- thanks for stopping by and the nice comment. There is nothing better than a garden grown tomato. You can taste the sunshine in those. I am waiting for my neighbor's crop to mature...

Thanks, Lisa!
oooh, I am SO trying this rollup recipe. I love food you can pick up in your hand? Or can you? Ah well, I can, and then I lick my fingers!
I'm also a Nigella fan and hadn't hear about the tragic, bitterly ironic cancer that left her husband unable to taste her marvelous recipes. Feta, lemon, mint - and the tip about removing bitterness - make for a fantastic recipe. Oh, last week I read a baked bean recipe that also uses Coca Cola (with cannelini beans!) that I made yesterday. It adds a unique flavor to baked dishes. First rate writing!
diana ani, definitely finger food, but I do eat most things with my hands!

Paul, don't worry too much about Nigella. Her first husband died of that cancer but she has since remarried to Saatchi, of the marketing agency, so I think she is both happy and thriving. Is it time to make the chocolate Guinness cake again?
Yay, another eggplant fan! I always thought they were the prettiest veg, too. The haters really don't know what they're missing--but at least that leaves more for the rest of us!
Eggplant on the grill is a great summerfare for berenjena, aubergine, in any language.
Thanks for reading and commenting, Felicia and Gardenia.