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Lucy Mercer

Lucy Mercer
Location
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I cook, I write, I carpool. You may also find my words at A Cook and Her Books. Email acookandherbooks@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!

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AUGUST 16, 2010 9:03PM

Redneck Ratatouille

Rate: 12 Flag

ratatouille creamy grits

I've returned to the kitchen, my source for solace in the late summer. The light through the window is changing, it's amber coming through at a different angle, backlighting the spider web on the porch. My soul seeks comfort food, but my warm house isn't quite ready for day-long braises and Dutch ovens bubbling over with stewed chicken and bready dumplings. Ratatouille, thick with chunks of eggplant swimming in fresh tomato, I've found, speaks to my soul and lets me walk away from the table without needing a starch-induced nap.

There are at least two approaches to preparing ratatouille: the one-pot method, where each item is chopped and added to the pan gradually. This yields a tasty, but homogeneous stew. My preferred method requires roasting some of the vegetables, namely the eggplant, to give some textural variety to the final product. My recipe is evolving, first with the boilerplate recipe in the "Gourmet Cookbook," now tweaked by Francis Lam’s primer on Salon.com (previously published at Gourmet.com.) It is, to use Lam’s phrase, so good you’ll want to punch a hole in the wall (but please, don’t, somebody‘s mother will have to fix that.)

Redneck Ratatouille

I tend use whatever quantities of these vegetables I have on hand, given the general guidelines in the recipe. I’ve used roasted Poblano peppers and assorted banana and chili peppers instead of or in addition to the bell peppers. Just be mindful of the heat factor when cooking with the spicy peppers.

2 medium eggplant, peeled and diced into 1-inch pieces

Salt

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

4 large garlic cloves, peeled and smashed

3 large onions, peeled, halved, each half cut into 4 wedges

2 medium zucchini, peeled and diced into 1-inch pieces

2 medium yellow crookneck squash, peeled and diced into 1-inch pieces

4 large tomatoes, cored and chopped

2 tablespoons tomato paste (optional)

2 bell peppers, cored, seeded and cut into 1-inch pieces

A handful of fresh basil

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste.

1. Eggplant prep: follow this step only if you have the large globe eggplants which tend to be bitter. If cooking with the smaller Asian eggplants, proceed to step 2. Set up a colander over a larger bowl and place eggplant in colander. Pour out about a tablespoon of salt onto the eggplant and toss. Let eggplant drain over bowl for about 30 minutes, discard the liquid.

2. In a large oven-proof pot, preferably one with a lid, pour in all but about 3 tablespoons of oil and turn heat to medium. Add garlic and onion and bring to a bubbling boil. Let cook for about 30 minutes while you prep the remaining ingredients. Don‘t walk away, because, you know, it‘s a pot of boiling oil.

3. Heat oven to 450 and get out a half-sheet pan or a large cast-iron skillet. Pour eggplant and squash and zucchini out onto the pan (you may need to do this in batches), pour remaining three tablespoons oil and some salt and pepper on the vegetables and set in oven to roast for about 30 minutes. You’re looking for a touch of caramelly brown on the edges of the veg, not blackened.

4. Ok, now we have a pot of boiling oil and alliums on the stove and a pan of roasting squash and aubergine in the oven. It’s time to turn your attention to the tomatoes. In a food processor, puree the tomatoes and peppers. Add to the onion and garlic oil and continue to cook for another 30 minutes. Optional: if using tomato paste, you can add it to the pot with the tomatoes and peppers.

5. When tomato/onion/garlic/oil mixture is a rich red color, add in roasted squash/zuke/eggplant. Taste mixture for seasoning, then add salt, pepper and basil.

6. Turn oven to 300° and set Dutch oven with stew inside. Let ratatouille cook for at least one hour, and several more if you can. Remove pot from oven and let cool.

I serve ratatouille at room temperature over a bowl of creamy grits. Other choices are pasta such as rigatoni, or couscous, or polenta.

 

True Grits

  grits

Let's be clear: I was born in the South, I live in the South, and I will love grits 'til my dying day. Growing up, quick white grits with a puddle of butter were a Sunday morning treat alongside scrambled eggs and bacon. My husband introduced me to his ritual of crumbling bacon into the grits for a salty, smoky crunch.

Before the girls came along, I would come home some nights, dead tired from work, put on jammies and fix a bowl of grits, sprinkle them with shredded Cheddar cheese and eat them in front of Thursday night's Must-See-TV. These days, I still turn out grits for breakfast, but I've expanded my options and use grits the way Italian cooks use polenta - as a foil for rich stews such as ratatouille.

Here's my recipe for creamy grits. You can use regular quick grits (never instant!), or the sunny yellow grits made by Dixie Lily.

Creamy Grits

2 cups water

1 cup chicken broth

1 cup milk

1 cup grits

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Small amounts of Cheddar cheese, cream cheese, butter and other goodies, p.r.n.

1. In a medium saucepan, preferably nonstick, combine all liquids and place over medium heat. Slowly whisk in grits. Bring to a simmer, whisking occasionally, and cook until the grits are smooth and free of lumps.

2. Stir in cheese, if using, and butter and seasonings. Serve with breakfast or as a base for ratatouille.

Text and images © 2010, Lucy Mercer.

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Comments

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i came for the ratatouille and stayed for the grits. mmmmmm, grits. there's just nothing better. grits, butter, grated parmesan. and the spider web photo is fantastic.
I love ratatouille, but I must admit that my Italian background favors the polenta. The spider web photo blew me away. Thank you. -R-
Grits, grits, grits, grits, Yeah! Why ruin perfectly good grits by letting them congeal into polenta? Femme got it right!
This sounds yummy and wholesome. I love the idea of pairing the ratatouille with grits--I've served ratatouille with polenta and it works great; but with grits (especially cheese grits) it could be even better!
Uh-huh. That's right. You may be that twin I was separated from at birth.
Nothing redneck about that! Lots of good ideas in your post. I use poblanos in place of bell peppers in almost all recipes these days, and grits are my go-to comfort food every time -- ooohh, with fried fish, baked beans and hushpuppies! My favorite readily available brand is Bob's Red Mill.
Like Femme Forte I came for the ratatouille and stayed for the grits. We didn't eat grits where I was from, but marrying a Southern gal fixed that for me. Grits and eggs and country ham with red-eye gravy? Yes please. Cheese grits, oh my.

And I'm partial to the small Asian eggplants now, because you don't have to "sweat" them like you do the big aubergines.
I had no idea what a big red neck I was because I could eat this just about everyday. Mmmm...it's good to meet a fellow grit lover.
Interesting. Grits is my favorite food (I live outside of my home country and it is the one item I carry back to my adopted country after each visit ). Ratatouille is one of my top 5 favorites. Strangely, and I see clearly now how well they would go together, I've never thought to combine the two (Love Ratatouille with brown rice for a mid week meal). That's about to change. Thank you!

Btw, other grits combos that work well - fresh tuna salad and grits; corned beef hash and grits; grits with avocado/guacamole, and grits with sausages and shrimps cooked with onions, fresh tomatoes and chilli peppers.
I LOVE grits. I love polenta, too, but the slightly crunchy texture of grits is so satisfying. If that's Redneck Ratatouille, then I'm moving to the south!
Lucy, gorgeous! I love grits, too, though I am sure not as much as you! When we were in Louisiana a while back I noticed instant, flavored grits, like Quaker instant oats, on the shelves. Regular grits cook so fast, I can't imagine why people would want the instant ones-- do they taste any good?
Grits taste really good with a little smidgen of cinnamon too!!
Thanks, everyone, for reading and commenting. Your comments have made my day.

Femme forte: Are you a GRITS (Girls Raised in the South)?

Christine: I like polenta, but need a nonna to teach me how to make it properly.

Fred: I like my grits a little bit runny, too.

Felicia: I’d love to see what you do with grits - everything else you make is beautiful!

Theresa: I’m beginning to think that, too.

Bell: I’m going to try Bob’s Red Mill - kind of like my Dixie Lily, but it doesn’t hurt to shop around…

David: You married well. I love the Asian eggplants, but they’ve been tough to find this year - no CSA could be my problem.

Anna: Grits are forever.

Zoty: I love your ideas - especially tuna and grits! I sometimes make a black eyed pea salad and I’ll stir it into leftover grits (kinda weird, but tasty). You have great ideas - post in the SKC!

Grace: Thank you for visiting! If you love barbecue and grits, you can make it in the South.

Linda: Instant grits are an abomination against the Lord, any Southerner will tell you. Folks still eat them, but they are vile. Thanks for visiting and commenting!
Such a terrific title for a truly nourishing post. Everything in the list of ingredients for the ratatouille is in the pick-up shed at my CSA this week, save for the onions. Methinks I know how to scare some up, though. Rated with pleasure!