Translated literally this means the Imam (a holy man) Fainted. I
guess lying on their sides the stuffed eggplants look like a passed
out Imam. Many included fresh tomato and cinnamon. This one does not.
It was on the Isle of Crete that I learned the Turkish recipe. One
year I decided to go to Greece early. A friend owned a resort. I
ended up hooking up with a native of Crete that happened to be in the
army and two tourist girls. He had extra bedrooms so we became
“locals” for a while.
guess lying on their sides the stuffed eggplants look like a passed
out Imam. Many included fresh tomato and cinnamon. This one does not.
It was on the Isle of Crete that I learned the Turkish recipe. One
year I decided to go to Greece early. A friend owned a resort. I
ended up hooking up with a native of Crete that happened to be in the
army and two tourist girls. He had extra bedrooms so we became
“locals” for a while.
Serves 4
4 eggplants
1/2 cup/125ml olive
oil
oil
2 onions, diced
3 cloves garlic,
minced
minced
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon black
pepper
pepper
2 tablespoons/30ml
tomato paste
tomato paste
handful parsley
chopped
chopped
Preheat oven to
400F/204C/Gas Mark 6
400F/204C/Gas Mark 6
Cut the eggplant in half. Scoop out the center leaving about 1/2
inch/1.27cm around the skin. Chop up the insides. Heat half of the
oil in a large stove top/oven proof pan. Fry the eggplant for 2-3
minutes on each side. Remove to paper towels to drain. Add remaining
oil to pan. Place onion in the pan. Cook for 1-2 minutes. Add garlic
and sauté until fragrant (about 30 seconds). Stir in tomato paste,
season with salt and pepper and cook another minutes. Add the chopped
insides of the eggplant. Cook for 4-5 minutes. Remove from heat.
Stuff the eggplant shells and return to pan. Bake for 20 minutes.
This is great on its own, with rice, couscous or even a green salad.
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