Skip to main content

Mnazzalleh

 
Our annual CSA eggplant extravaganza is well underway. Several CSA members have contacted me, asking for more creative ways to serve up the pounds and pounds of beautiful eggplant we receive in our boxes from Johnson's Backyard Garden. Today, I have a wonderful, simple, stewy, fall-like one-dish recipe to share that will help you incorporate more eggplant into your menu planning.

Here's a small secret: I'm not a fan of eggplant. I usually pick around it when served something that incorporates eggplant. Baba ganoush is one of my worst nightmares, since there are fewer culinary horrors than being served something you don't like that has been pureed and presented to you cold. So learning to love the eggplant has been a venture for me. I've been making Mnazzalleh for about a year now, and it's a frequent repeat recipe for me -- easy to make, healthy to eat, and a recipe that really makes the eggplant tasty, firm, chewable, and memorable.

Mnazzalleh is a type of Iraqi stew that features eggplant, beans, and tomatoes. Served over rice, you have a one-dish dinner that does require preparing ingredients the night before, but that needs only about an hour to bring to the table. This version of the stew comes from Paula Wolfort's book Mediterranean Cooking. I was first given the recipe by my good friend Walt Holcombe, the cartoonist. I was looking for eggplant recipes, and he referred me to the website for the World Hearth Circle of International Cooking, which has turned out to be a gold mine of delicious and well-tested recipes. Highly recommended.



1/2 c chickpeas, dried, soaked overnight
4 small eggplant
salt
1/2 c olive oil
1 large onion, sliced
5 cloves garlic, minted
3 medium tomatoes, chopped (I used canned)
1/2 c parsley, chopped
1 T sugar
1/2 T mint leaves, chopped
pinch nutmeg
pinch cinnamon
2 T cilantro, chopped

Begin with two "overnight" preparations. (You can use "overnight" loosely -- if you want, take both of these steps in the morning so that your ingredients will be ready for dinner. I tend to take these steps in the evening, and then just let things hang out in the fridge during the day until I am ready to prepare the Mnazzalleh.

Soak the chickpeas over night in a bean:water ratio of about 1:3. In the morning, examine the water level in the pot; depending on the age of your beans, it could be that all of your soaking water has been absorbed. If that is the case, add more water to cover by plenty. Bring the pot of water to a boil, partially cover, and simmer 90 minutes, or until beans are tender.

Dried chickepeas, compared to chickpeas that have been soaked overnight. 

Choose your eggplant. Remove three vertical strips of skin from each eggplant, making them striped. (I don't know the history of this step, but I do find that it gives the eggplant a more interesting texture to have the pieces half-skinned. It seems to help the eggplant keep its texture when cooked, but also, to not be too tough.) Cut each eggplant into large bite-sized chunks -- we will be salting and draining the eggplant, so they will shrink; therefore,  make your chunks slightly bigger than the size you actually want to eat. Salt the eggplant and leave them to drain overnight.


When ready to prepare the stew, rinse the eggplant and squeeze dry.


(The original recipe calls for the cooked chickpeas to be cut in half, but I have never taken that step as it sounds kind of boring to do.)

Heat oil in a skillet (once again, I use my trusty large cast-iron skillet). Add eggplant and fry until golden brown on all sides. Transfer to a plate and set aside.

Reheat oil in a skillet. Add onions and 1/2 c water and cook for 20 minutes.


When the water has evaporated and the onions have turned golden, add garlic, chickpeas and tomatoes. Cook, stirring, for a minute. Then, add another 1 1/2 c water. Bring to a boil. Cover, and cook 20 minutes.

Add eggplant, along with half the parsley. Add salt, sugar, mint and nutmeg. Simmer until the eggplant is very soft, about 20 minutes. (Test this step!! -- it's no good serving eggplant that is still too firm.)

Remove from heat, and garnish with cilantro and remaining parsley.



Comments

Sharon said…
Wow! I made this for dinner on this rainy, chilly Sunday evening and it was FABULOUS! I used a can of garbanzo beans (chickpeas) and a can of tomatoes, so it was easy and NOT overnight. Used 4 eggplants and an onion from the CSA box. Thanks for sharing!

Popular posts from this blog

Cauliflower and Arugula Soup with Tibetan Flatbread

Because the weather is chilly, and because I had a bag of arugula from the last farm box taunting me, only to be compounded by a fresh bag of arugula from the recent farm box, I decided to try this soup I found from a blog associated with a California-based CSA, Eat Outside the Box . Cauliflower and Arugula Soup Eat Outside the Box farm blog 1 head cauliflower 1 red or white onion, peeled and chopped 3/4 lb zucchini, peeled and chopped 1/4 lb arugula 15 oz stock 15 oz water 1 T olive oil salt and pepper Parmesan cheese, grated First, let me state how important it is to wash your arugula before using it. I don't know about you, but sometimes I get lazy and rely on the "well, if it doesn't kill me, it'll just make me stronger" approach to washing my foods and vegetables. This laziness is only enhanced when the food I'm considering has come from an organic farm. But leaving aside all the various things that can get on the food

Mayocoba Beans with Green Chiles

I love this dish so much that I can barely stand it. Delicious the night it was made, and fantastic as leftovers throughout the week. Mayocoba beans are easily replaced -- try pintos, if you can't find mayocobas. Mayocoba Beans with Green Chiles Baptism of Fire 3-4 green chiles, roasted and chopped 1 onion, chopped 1 clove garlic, minced 1 T lard or olive oil 1/2 tsp oregano 1 tsp cumin pepper 1 c mayocoba beans, dry 3 c water 1 tsp salt Cook the green chiles, onion, garlic, oregano, cumin, and black pepper in the fat until the onions begin to caramelize. Add the water and bring to a boil. Turn off the heat and let the beans sit, uncovered, for an hour. You may drain the water to remove some of the slightly indigestible sugars that cause gassiness. If you decide to drain them, add enough water back into the pot to cover the beans with about 2" of water above the beans for cooking.  Bring the beans back to a boil and cook, until tender. This will take

Chilled Soba Noodles with Cucumber, Snow Peas, and Radishes

  We destroyed these. In a good way. It's a lovely-to-look-at dish, chock full of vegetables. More so than I had anticipated, and more so than most soba noodle dishes I've made in the past. We absolutely gobbled this up! Served here with a five-spice chicken and smashed cucumbers.  The original calls for nori. We don't love nori so left it out. Maybe we are missing a part of the experience, but even without it, this was delicious.  Chilled Soba Noodles with Cucumber, Snow Peas, and Radishes Cook's Illustrated 8 oz soba noodles 3 T white miso paste 3 T mirin 2 T toasted sesame oil 1 T sesame seeds 1 tsp ginger, grated 1/4 tsp red pepper flakes 1/3 English cucumber, quartered lengthwise, seeded, sliced thin 4 oz snow peas, strings removed, cut lengthwise into matchsticks 4 radishes, trimmed, halved, sliced thin into half-moons 3 scallions, sliced thin Bring 4 quarts water to boil in large pot. Stir in noodles and cook according to package directions, stirring occasionally