Egg­plant, Chick­pea and Toma­to Casserole

 

Egg­plant, Chick­pea and Toma­to Casserole

(serves about 6 as side dish)

4 medi­um egg­plants, cut in 1/4 inch slices

1/2 cup olive oil (add more if and as needed)

1 soup-size tin chickpeas

1 large tin plum tomatoes

2 medi­um white onions, sliced thin

6 cloves gar­lic, minced

3 balls buf­fa­lo moz­zarel­la cheese, torn into bite-sized pieces

sprin­kling Parme­san or Pecori­no cheese

sea salt and fresh black pepper

hand­ful chopped flat-leaf parsley

With all egg­plants sliced and ready, heat olive oil in a large shal­low fry­ing pan.  In a series of sin­gle lay­ers, fry egg­plant slices until soft.  Set aside on paper towels.

Fry sliced onions in the left­over oil until soft, then add gar­lic.  Do not burn the garlic.

When all egg­plant and onions and gar­lic are fried, cov­er the bot­tom of a 9x13 casse­role dish with a lay­er of egg­plant, then spread the onions and gar­lic over them.  Add anoth­er lay­er of egg­plant and scat­ter over half the plum toma­toes, squeez­ing them into small­ish pieces as you take them out of the tin.  Add salt and fresh pep­per.  Add the chick­peas.  Add half the cheese, then fin­ish with a lay­er of egg­plant and top with the rest of the toma­toes and scat­ter the remain­ing cheese on top.  Sea­son sauce to taste and stir in half the parsley.

Cov­er with foil and bake at 425F/220C for 30 min­utes, or sim­mer on stove­top for 30 min­utes.  Serve hot or warm with remain­ing pars­ley on top.

This dish can also be assem­bled in the skil­let in which you cook the egg­plants.  After you’ve fried all the egg­plants, drain the extra olive oil from them back into the skil­let and fry the onions and gar­lic.  Place the egg­plants back in, along with the toma­toes, chick­peas, salt and pep­per and half the pars­ley.  Sim­ply sim­mer until the toma­toes are cooked, and add cheese and remain­ing pars­ley just before you’re ready to serve.

6 Responses

  1. John's Mom says:

    What do you think, could this be a main dish for a veg­e­tar­i­an? Maybe with a sal­ad? Does it taste main dishy at all? Also, when do you best put in the gar­ban­zo beans?
    Egg­plants are gor­geous here right now and makes me think of that aubergine bak­ing dish.

    John’s Mom

  2. kristen says:

    Well, hel­lo! Yes indeed, it WAS a main course for dear Cathy this sum­mer! The rest of us had home­made chick­en ten­ders (one of my new stand­bys!) and enjoyed the egg­plant as a side dish. I’ll edit the recipe because I see I haven’t said when to put in the chick­peas, but it does­n’t mat­ter, soon­er rather than lat­er, but no big deal. Also you can add — as I am tonight — sauteed courgettes/zucchini. Up the cheese if you want to!

  3. Sue K says:

    Main dish? Prob­a­bly. But also the per­fect dish to accom­pa­ny any meat or fish. It real­ly is heav­en­ly… and pret­ty too.

  4. kristen says:

    I’m so glad you enjoyed it! You know what it would be good with? Stuffed pork tenderloin! :)

  5. Sandy Warren says:

    Hel­lo from South­bury, CT! Just received your new book and it looks luscious!
    I’m plan­ning to make this recipe for guests next week, and I was won­der­ing if you could clar­i­fy what you mean by “sauce” when you say “sea­son the sauce to taste.”
    Best wishes.

  6. kristen says:

    I’m so sor­ry, Sandy — I just saw this com­ment. I sim­ply meant to sea­son the toma­to base of the whole dish. I hope I’m not too late, or that it made sense to you in the end! Thanks so much.

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