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Home Page » Cooking & Drinking » Recipes
 

Sicily's Great Eggplant - Tomato Stew

 

I ran into a friend yesterday, who tells me that he should be harvesting eggplants from his garden any day now. Of course, this got me thinking about Caponata, the famous Sicilian eggplant and tomato stew.

This is a terrific 'contorno', vegetable course, and also a great topping for 'bruschetta', Tuscanys grilled bread. Of course it's one of the quintessential Italian antipasti too. And when you can walk into your own garden and harvest the vegetables to put it together, Caponata becomes all the more magical.

Italians have a particular fondness for 'le primizie', the smallest of the first crop of vegetables. So if you have access to a gardeneither your own or a friend'sor if you can get to a farm stand, now is the time for you to be thinking about caponata too.

The recipe below is excerpted from my first cookbook, "La Cucina dei Poveri."

My Grandmother's Caponata

When the garden was in full swing during the summer, Noonie (my grandmother) would harvestwell, more accurately, she would direct Pop (my grandfather) to harvest some eggplant, tomatoes, and peppers for this delicious antipasto that she referred to as 'Caponatina. My recollections fail as to how she served it, but Im betting that it was over a piece of Italian bread that Pop had fried in olive oil.

Nowadays, I serve it over bruschetta made from some good Tuscan bread whichIm happy to reportseems to be turning up more and more frequently at supermarket bakeries.

Ingredients:

  • 4 Tbs. Olive oil

  • 2 Cloves garlic, peeled, and thinly sliced

  • 1 Medium onion, peeled, and chopped

  • 1 Medium eggplant (approximately 1 1/4 Lb.) cut into 1 inch cubes

  • 2 Medium bell peppers

  • 1/4 Lb. Green olives, pits removed

  • 1 Tbs. Capers

  • 1 Cup Italian plum tomatoes, roughly chopped

  • 1/4 Cup sugar

  • 1/4Cup red wine vinegar

  • 1/2 Cup raisins

  • 2 Tbs. Fresh mint, chopped

  • 1/4 tsp. Red pepper flakes

Preparation:

Heat the olive oil in a saut pan over medium-high heat, then add the garlic. Saut until the garlic just begins to give off its aromaperhaps a minute or two. Add the onion and saut for about five minutes, until it becomes translucent.

Add the eggplant and saut for about five minutes or until it begins to soften, but still has plenty of texture. Add the peppers, olives, and capers and saut until the peppers become tender. Add the tomatoes and continue cooking to incorporate the tomatoes with the other ingredients and to begin to form a sauce.

Add the sugar, spreading it evenly over the pan, then the vinegar, raisins, mint, and red pepper flakes. Stir well to blend all the ingredients, then remove from the heat.

Italians typically serve Caponata at room temperature.

Serves four to six.

Author: Skip Lombardi
 
Author Bio:

Skip Lombardi

Skip Lombardi is a life-long Italophile who grew up in an Italian-speaking household. He has traveled to Italy more times than he can remember.

Mr. Lombardi holds degrees in Music and Mathematics. While he has been a musician, high school math teacher, and software engineer over the course of his career, he has never allowed any of those undertakings to interfere with his passion for cooking and eating.

He shares his late mother's philosophy that there are no ailments in society that cannot be healed by "a good dish of pasta."

This article can be searched using: recipes, low calorie & vegetarian recipes, recipe, free recipes, crockpot recipes, food recipes
 
 
 

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