This week for Tyler Florence Fridays I made Tyler's Eggplant in Curry Coconut Sauce and loved it! This is a three part recipe where you make your own ghee and curry powder along with the eggplant, but I skipped the curry powder and just used some from my spice rack (that had pretty much the same spices anyway, just already ground up). I did make my own ghee for the first time and that was pretty interesting...
Eggplant in Curry Coconut Sauce
1/2 cup ghee, recipe follows
1 yellow onion, chopped
1 tablespoon curry powder, recipe follows
1 cup unsalted cashews, coarsely chopped
1/2 cup shredded coconut
2 cups unsweetened coconut milk
2 cups vegetable broth
8 baby eggplants
1 cinnamon stick
1 dried red chile
Salt
1/2 lemon, juiced
Mint leaves, for garnish
Heat 1/4 cup of the ghee in a large pot over medium flame, add the onions and sprinkle with the curry powder. Cook and stir for a few minutes until the onions are soft. Add the cashews,
shredded coconut, coconut milk, and vegetable broth.
Bring up to a simmer and cook for 15 to 20 minutes. In the meantime, prepare the eggplant.
Cut the eggplant into chunks. Heat the remaining 1/4 cup of ghee in a deep skillet or Dutch oven and add the eggplant.Cook and stir until the eggplant gets charred and sticky.
Puree the coconut sauce with a handheld blender, until it’s pretty smooth. Pour the sauce over the eggplant and toss in the cinnamon stick and chile. Season with salt, to taste, and simmer for 15 minutes until thick. Give a squeeze of lemon to brighten the flavor, garnish with mint leaves, and serve with steamed basmati rice and/or flat bread.
Ghee:
1 pound unsalted butter
Put the butter in a heavy saucepan over moderate heat, swirl the pot around to ensure that it melts slowly and does not sizzle or brown. Increase the heat and bring the butter to a boil. When the surface is covered with foam, stir gently and reduce the heat to the lowest possible setting.
Gently simmer, uncovered, and undisturbed for 45 minutes, until the milk solids in the bottom of the pan have turned golden brown and the butter on top is transparent. Strain the ghee through a sieve lined with several layers of cheesecloth.
Silly me first tried to do this with just a small mesh strainer but I had to redo it since the milk solids slipped through.
The ghee should be perfectly clear and smell nutty; pour into a glass jar and seal tightly.
This was my first time making ghee so I hope I did everything right!
Yield: 1 1/2 cups
Curry Powder:
2 tablespoons coriander seeds
1 tablespoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
1/2 teaspoon whole cloves
1/2 teaspoon mustard seeds
1 tablespoon cardamom seeds
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
2 dried red chiles, broken in pieces, seeds discarded
1 tablespoon turmeric
Toast the whole spices (coriander, cumin, fennel, cloves, mustard, cardamom and peppercorns) and the chiles in a small dry skillet over medium-low heat, shaking the pan often to prevent them from burning. Toast for a couple of minutes until the spices smell fragrant. In a clean coffee grinder, grind the toasted spices together to a fine powder. Add the turmeric and give it another quick buzz to combine. Use the spice blend immediately, or store in a sealed jar for as long as 1 month.
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Changes I made to the recipe were to skip the onion and add some onion powder (not an onion texture fan), and not puree the coconut cashew sauce before adding it to the eggplant, I figured I'd like a chunkier sauce and it turned out perfectly. I do think I could have used less ghee, it seemed a little too much at the end when the 1/2 cup total kind of seperated, but oh-well. I was so surprised that even my kids liked this! I will be making this again but adding lots of other veggies along with the eggplant. I served it over some Mahatma imported Basmati rice which was delicious. I was only wishing I had made some naan to go with the meal. The leftovers were great as well and I was missing this dish when we ran out :) I can't wait to make this again!