LOGIN
SIGN UP
Your free recipe manager,
shopping list, and meal planner!
Learn more!
Go to Community recipes!
Baba ghanouj is a signature grilled eggplant purée found across the Middle East, enriched with tahini and seasoned with lemon juice and lots of garlic. The dish has a smoky, pungent flavor. Don’t forget to pierce the eggplant before you put it on the grill or over a gas flame on the stove. If you can, for the best consistency, use a sesame tahini that's slightly runny. Also, as tahini sits, the oil separates, so the mixture should be stirred before it’s used.

Servings: About 2 cups

Servings: About 2 cups
Ingredients
  • 2 pounds eggplant, preferably small eggplants
  • ¼ cup lemon juice (more to taste)
  • ¼ cup sesame tahini, stirred if oil has separated out
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons plain (or greek) yogurt, as needed
  • 2 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
  • Salt to taste
  • Extra-virgin olive oil
  • Chopped flat-leaf parsley
Steps
  1. Prepare a hot gas or charcoal grill. Pierce the eggplants in several places with a fork or the tip of a knife, and place over the hot coals. Grill, turning regularly, until soft and blackened all over. If you don’t have a grill but do have a gas stove, heat the oven to 425 degrees. Cover the top of your stove under the burner grates with foil to facilitate cleaning. Turn on your oven fan (so the smoke alarm won’t go off), and roast the eggplants directly over the flame, turning often until charred and softened. Small, thin eggplants will cook through this way, but larger eggplants must be finished in the oven. Wrap in foil, and place in the hot oven for 20 minutes until thoroughly softened. You can also roast the eggplant under a broiler until charred and softened. The flavor of the baba ganoush will not be as smoky.
  2. Place the eggplant in a colander in the sink, and allow to cool and drain. Peel and discard the black skins, cut off the stems, and let the eggplants sit in the colander to drain for another 15 to 30 minutes.
  3. Purée the eggplant in a food processor fitted with the steel blade. Add the lemon juice, yogurt, tahini and garlic. Add to the food processor, and blend with the eggplant. Add salt to taste.
  4. Mound the purée in a bowl or on a platter, and drizzle with olive oil. Sprinkle with parsley. Serve with pita bread.
Notes
  • Advance preparation: This dish can be made several hours ahead. The flavors are best on the day it’s made, as the garlic, lemon juice and eggplant become more pungent over time. Martha Rose Shulman can be reached at martha-rose-shulman.com.
  • Note, season with some Aleppo pepper also.
 

Page footer