Roasted Japanese Eggplant With Crushed Tomato, Pecorino and Thyme

- Total Time
- 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4small Japanese eggplants
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided
- Sea salt
- Cracked black pepper
- 1large, very ripe heirloom tomato
- 2cloves garlic, crushed
- 4sprigs of fresh thyme
- 2ounces pecorino di Fossa (or Parmigiano-Reggiano), shaved or thinly sliced
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 450 degrees.
- Step 2
Peel the eggplant and place in a roasting pan or dish. Coat eggplant with 2 tablespoons olive oil, and season well with salt and pepper. Roast until tender and light golden brown, about 25 to 30 minutes.
- Step 3
While the eggplant cooks, hand-crush the tomato in a medium bowl and add garlic, ½ teaspoon salt, remaining olive oil and thyme sprigs. Stir to combine.
- Step 4
When eggplant is tender and light golden brown, add tomato mixture to the roasting pan, and roast for another 10 minutes.
- Step 5
Scatter with pecorino and roast for about 5 minutes until cheese is melted.
- Step 6
Transfer to a serving dish, including the pan drippings, and serve hot.
Private Notes
Comments
I feel like the peeling might be more important if you are using conventional eggplant. I grew up in Phoenix, my parents still live there and am still a semi-regular at Bianco joints (his mom and my mom are church friends!). He usually doesn't peel his eggplant, but he also is sort of a greenmarket savant, and gets the best produce. So if you feel confident in your eggplant, you probably can get away with not peeling it.
This is my new favorite eggplant recipe! I use any kind of eggplant, but do not peel it. I add some granulated garlic, salt, pepper, and a little lemon juice to olive oil and dip the slices into that before roasting. I line a roasting pan with aluminum foil, coated with olive oil, roast for 10 minutes, turn over and roast another 10 minutes, then fold the foil over the slices to cool. I love using shaved Parmesan Reggiano and cooking longer and lower temp to caramelize the final step.
This very similar to a dish my mama and I have done for years except that we add roasted red peppers and use a dash o oregano in place of thyme. We generally use it as a side and it's good served room temp as well as hot, maybe better IMO; and I love it in a sandwich using a crusty roll. To peel or not to peel an eggplant. I think it depends on its freshness; picked right off the plant in my garden the skin is tender and I don't peel.
After reading the article I made this and after roasting put this on a pizza with mozzarella. Creamy crunchy used fresh oregano instead of time. Used slender Japanese eggplant given to me as a gift - gave them a rough peel.
Tried this again with plum tomatoes and globe eggplant. It was not as good. But I should have blanched the plum tomatoes and taken the skin off. What’s delicious about this recipe is the burst of the heirloom tomato which adds a sweetness and texture.
Made this as a side dish to pan-fried rudderfish and it was the perfect pairing. I added a couple teaspoons of crushed Calabrian chili peppers to the tomato mixture, only because I like a little spice. I plan to make this again. Very good!
I peeled three Japanese eggplants and roasted them for 30 minutes at 450. Peeled and seeded one large heirloom tomato, which I think is a necessary step. Then hand crushed them and mixed with three small smashed garlic cloves. Best to take the thyme off the stem before adding to the tomatoes. The result was a wonderful side dish I served with steak frites and good Cabernet from Walla Walla, wash. Memorable dinner! Will make this again