Flavors: Roasted Eggplants With Tahini and Pomegranate Molasses Dressing
- Food
- Arts & Culture
- Recipes
2
Recipe by Yasmine Elgharably and Sheweker Elgharably
Photograph by Yehia El-Alaily
Eggplants are a heavenly ingredient, a mainstay of the healthy Mediterranean diet and a staple of Middle Eastern cuisine.
For a light dish in which you can really taste the essence of eggplants, we simply roast them in olive oil and combine them with arugula, a tahini dressing and one of our favorite ingredients: sweet-sharp pomegranate molasses. It’s a recipe that impresses in any setting.
Preheat the oven to 180 degrees Celsius (350 degrees Fahrenheit). Line an oven tray with baking parchment.
Slice the eggplants into thin rounds, brush them lightly on both sides with 1 tablespoon of the olive oil and lay them carefully next to each other in one layer on the oven tray. Place in the middle of the oven for 30 minutes until fully cooked, turning halfway through.
While the eggplant slices roast, put all the ingredients for the dressing along with about 4¼ cups of lukewarm water into a medium bowl and mix to combine. If the dressing is too thick for your liking, you can mix in a little more water.
When the eggplants cool, arrange them next to each other on a plate, drizzle with the tahini mix and then lay the arugula leaves on top. Season with salt and pepper, drizzle olive oil and pomegranate molasses. You can garnish with a handful of fresh pomegranate seeds and toasted pine nuts.
Reprinted with permission from
Bilhana: Wholefood Recipes From Egypt, Lebanon, and Morocco
Yasmine Elgharably and Sheweker Elgharably.
AUC Press, 2021.
aucpress.com
Yasmine Elgharably is a self-taught home cook with a business background and a passion for Middle Eastern food. She is a cofounder of cairocooking.com, a recipe-sharing platform helping cooks across the Middle East. She is also based in Cairo.
Sheweker Elgharably is a certified holistic health coach and culinary nutrition expert based in Cairo, Egypt. She completed the Integrative Nutrition Program and the Culinary Nutritional Program at the US-based Academy of Culinary Nutrition. Originally an established interior designer, after seeing how small food and lifestyle changes have a huge impact on health, she wanted to help people strive to live healthier and happier lives. Shewekar is also the founder of #HealthyRocks.
You may also be interested in...
Flavors: Beef Stew with Green Peas (Bazela bil roz)
Food
This hearty beef stew, a type of yakhni, or popular stew, is served with rice in the Syrian style.Flavors: Shir Yakheh Gulab (Rose and Pistachio Ice Cream)
Food
During the hot summer months, ice-cream shops, called shir yakh feroshees, would sell an assortment of ice creams and other cold desserts. My sister Fatema remembers going into beautiful little shops after school to buy shir yakh. They were colorful and decoratively tiled and had Bollywood music playing in the background. The shir yakh, with rose and pistachios, is a favorite at Parwana, one of her restaurants.Flavors: Afghan Breakfast Eggs Tokhme Banjanromi
Food
Arts & Culture
My mother recalls having this dish for breakfast during family day trips, such as to Mazari-Sharif (in northern Afghanistan) for the Red Tulip Festival (Guli Surkh), during the spring equinox. It would be made in a beautiful copper karayee, a shallow heavy-based pan used in Afghan cooking. The karayee would be placed directly over a portable kerosene burner, where the eggs, vegetables and spices would bubble away. The large karayee is then placed in the middle of the breakfast spread, surrounded by naans and various chais, for everyone to help themselves.