Persian-Italian Eggplant Stew - Recipe (Vegetarian, Vegan, Gluten-Free)
Persian-Italian Eggplant Stew
Yes, I said Persian-Italian. Bear with me here for a second. I was looking for some sort of moist eggplant dish to serve with Persian rice (a wonderful basmati pilaf with a crunchy crust; I'll tell you about that soon). I came across several recipes for a Persian dish named Fesenjan-e Bademjan, which is eggplant braised in a sauce of walnuts, pomegranate, and honey.
This sounded amazing, but I had two problems: I had no pomegranate molasses in the house, and I can't serve walnuts. I scanned my pantry for something that might replace the pomegranate, and hit upon mosto cotto (aka saba), which is the cookedgrape must that would become balsamic vinegar if it was aged.
Mosto cotto is fruity, sweet and sour in a way very comparable to the pomegranate molasses. So I decided to roll with it and reimagine the dish as if it were cooked by a Persian traveling on a trade route through Italy in the 10th century. (I have an active imagination). The sweet / sour / spiced flavors seem almost medieval.
As for the walnuts, I figured that their main purpose was to thicken and enrich the sauce. I substituted roasted, unsweetened sunflower seed butter. But if you have walnut butter or can toast and grind whole ones, I'm sure that would be great.
You'll notice I don't salt and drain the eggplants. Some people feel this is essential to remove bitterness. To me, it just makes them wet so they don't brown well. I don't find them particularly bitter.
Persian-Italian Eggplant Stew
Vegetarian, vegan (if you replace the honey with say agave nectar), and gluten-free
Serves 4
Labels: (Vegetarian, Eggplant, Gluten-Free), Persian-Italian, Recipe, vegan
<< Home