La Nonna’s Sweet and Sour Eggplant Dip

My paternal nonna (grandmother) was the quintessential Italian cook.  She was short, a bit on the round side and everything she cooked in her kitchen was Italian, even after living in a Latin American country for over 30 years.  I always thought she missed Italy so much, that was the only way she could stay connected to the mother country - By refusing to change her cooking style and adapting new ways.  She stayed true to her Italian ways.

And that is how I learned to cook Italian food.  The old way.

We use to spend most of the summers with my grandparents.  To me it was 3 whole months of cracking eggs, baking, stirring, cutting and writing down the recipes to take back home as my nonna cooked them up.  She never cooked with precision, it was always a “Little of this.. a dash of that”.  My 20+ year old cookbook still has those recipes, meticulous written in my 11 year-old handwriting and with little doodles and markings all over the margins.  Most of the ingredients are written in Spanish and Italian, because that is how she will be dictating them back to me…

“dos melanzana es sufficiente” 
Translation: “two eggplants is enough”

“una cebolla, tritatta piccolina”
Translation: “one onion, cut up very small”

And on and on. 

I do miss cooking in that kitchen. My love of cooking comes from these lessons.

She was knows for tons of signature dishes.  And their ranking order was establish by how many people in the family would request them and how often.

This eggplant dip was one of my favorites.  Even at that young age, with all the grown up ingredients, I loved this dip.  It’s perfect to eat with toasted bread, or smoother on French bread or on top a steak, or mix into scramble eggs.  As you can see the application is endless.  It’s not a complicated recipe, and as always in Italian regional cooking, simplicity rules the day.  Plus it keeps well in the refrigerator, which gives me an excuse to make a big batch and eat it for days.

The only tip I can give you on this is the type of eggplant to use.  You can use any type of eggplant. But, I like the Chinese or Indian variety.  Mainly because they are both sweeter and tender than the American eggplant, helping the dish hit its sweet & sour point to its full potential.

Ingredients
(enough for about 4 or a small jar)

2 Eggplants (if using the big American variety) if using the Indian or Chinese, you will need about 5 or six.
1 to 2 cup of olive oil
2 medium yellow onions
2-3 tomatoes chopped
3-4 cloves of garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons of drained capers, rinsed and chopped
3 tablespoons of pitted olives, chopped
¼ cup of red wine Vinegar (you may use less than this)
¼ cup of sugar (you may use less than this)
Salt and Pepper to taste

Cut eggplant into small cubes (about ½ inch) and transfer to a colander. Toss with 2 teaspoons of salt. Let drain 1 hour.

While waiting for the Eggplant, prep your other ingredients by chopping your onions, tomatoes, garlic, capers, olives and measuring your vinegar and sugar.  Put everything aside.

After an hour, gently squeeze (I use a potato ricer to do this task) eggplant to remove excess moisture and pat dry (they need to be very dry). Heat about 1 ½ cup of the oil in a heavy skillet over moderately high heat until very hot.  You can test the oil by adding one of the eggplant cubes, if it rapidly bubbles up, the oil is ready. Fry the eggplant in batches (don’t crowd the pan, you want the eggplant to crisp up) stirring and turning constantly with a slotted spoon, until browned and tender, 3 to 5 minutes per batch. Transfer to a tray lined with paper towels to drain and cool.

Pour off all but 2 tablespoons oil from skillet, then reduce heat to moderate and cook onion, until translucent.  Add the garlic and cook until golden, season with salt and pepper, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes of so.

Add the eggplants and tomatoes and stir to coat. Then add the olives, cappers and cook for about 2-3 minutes more to mesh all the flavors together.

Now the tricky part, building the sweet and sour flavor.

I usually start by adding the vinegar and sugar in increments of 1 tablespoon at a time, stirring and cooking for about 1-2 minutes after each addition and tasting it as you go along until you get the right amount balance to your taste. I’m also at the same time, adjusting the salt and pepper if needed.

Remember taste, taste and taste some more, as you are cooking along.

Once you find that right sweet and sour punch, simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally for about 15 more minutes.  Cool to room temperature and served.

You can also store it in a jar and chill in the refrigerator.  It usually keeps up to a week.

In my house, we finish this up by the third day, we cannot seem to keep it around for much.

Some notes: 

  • Go easy on the seasoning of the salt, since you salted the eggplants during the soaking period. And the Olives and cappers are already on the salty side… so make sure you taste each step of the way.
  • You can replace the red-wine vinegar with Balsamic, but you need to reduce the sugar as well.
  • You can also add herbs to it, like oregano, or thyme.  Be sure to do this as the last step.

Crabs cakes on the fly

I got home yesterday to find Tom on the breakfast table devotedly taking blue crab after blue crab and picking their luscious crabmeat out of the shells and into a pile on a side plate.

He looked at me and stated the obvious.

“I did the hard work, now it’s your turn to turn this crabmeat into a yummy delicious something for dinner.”

*gulp*!

Don’t get me wrong I love crab, and if the restaurant has it on the menu, then that will be my first choice - ok, maybe the lobster will be first choice, but, crab is sure high up there as my economical choice. Unless, they are stone crabs, then …

Wait! Were was I?

Oh yeah, our own crabs - compliments of the crabbing trip his visiting relatives did the day before. So we had about 20 or so crabs, which were supper fresh and ready for some magic.

The problem was that I was press for time, tired and in no mood to cook anything. But seeing that Tom had gone thru all the trouble of cleaning about 6 of those crabs, I just simply could not get away in bowing out.

So, I’m looking for something that will be quick, easy and fast?

What to do? What to do?

CRAB CAKES!

Except that the recipes that I had needed over 20 ingredients, 15 of those were nowhere to be found in my pantry or refrigerator, so we had to do this on the fly.

And you know, sometimes working on the fly is when creativity kicks in.  And in this case beautifully.

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons of Mayonnaise
1 large egg
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
½ teaspoon of Dijon mustard
½ teaspoon of lime juice
2 teaspoon fresh Italian parsley and/or basil, roughly chopped
½ cup of breadcrumbs
1 teaspoon of Old Bay seasoning (optional)
½ pound of lump crabmeat, picked over for shells and cartilage
Salt and cracked pepper to taste
½ cup of panko breadcrumbs

½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter if baking

½ cup of Olive oil if frying

In a flat dish, pour the ½ cup of panko and put aside.

In a deep mixing bowl, combine the mayo, egg, Worcestershire sauce, Dijon mustard, lime juice, chosen herb (I had basil and parsley so I did a bit of both) and the ½ of cup of breadcrumbs. 

Note: Our fresh blue-crabs was originally cooked with Old Bay seasoning, so I did not put more, but if your crab came from those store-bought containers, you may want to add it to give it a bit of and additional flavor punch.

Add the crabmeat to your mixture and fold, making sure not to break it too much.  At this point it should be wet, but be able hold when trying to form the patties. The patty should form easily and not be too sticky*.   Using a spoon (or ice cream scooper) take some of the mixture, put in your palms and form a ball, then flatten it about 1” thick, making sure it they are nice and round. 

*(If you put it on your palm and it’s too sticky – it means the mixture is too wet. Add a bit more of the breadcrumbs or panko  ... then try again.) 

Take the form cakes and roll into the panko crumbs until coated on all sides, put in a lined (with wax paper or silicone liner) baking sheet and chill for about 10-15 minutes or so (this will help in keeping it together if frying them).

After chilling them, take out and cook.

If frying them: Melt about 3-4 tablespoons of butter and about ½ a tablespoon of olive oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat.  Cook the crab cakes until golden brown, about 3 minutes on each side.

If baking them: Turn the oven to 375 degrees. Melt the butter in the microwave and brush the top of the crab cakes with the butter.  Bake until golden, about 12-15 minutes, turning them once at the ½ way point.

Serve with your favorite dipping sauce.

Last night we mixed a bit of mayonnaise, ketchup, lime juice and a 2 or 3 sprints of hot sauce and used this as our dipping sauce.

Yummy, Oozy Club Sandwich

You know those days? The ones that are so hard, that all you want to do is have a do over and block it from your mind.

Yesterday was one of those days.

So, when I got home, I was glad that the boyfriend was at his mother’s house and the only person to feed was me. But, there was a problem. There was nothing in the refrigerator and we were out of milk, so the bowl of cereal was out.

Then I saw the eggs, and I knew I had a bag of baby spinach in there, somewhere and when I checked the cheese box? SCORE! There was ham in there too!

So it was time for a Club Sandwich.

This version is quick, satisfying and the end product is delicious.

Ingredients
Any type of sandwich bread (I use Potato bread)
1 tablespoon Mayonnaise (or enough to cover both side of the bread)
1 teaspoon Ketchup
1 teaspoon Mustard
1-3 slices of Ham
1 Tomato cut into round slices
1-3 leaves of Lettuce (or in my case) spinach leaves
1 Egg, fried
1-3 of slices of Cheese, I used Havarti, but any cheese will do.
1 teaspoon of Butter (to fry your egg on and toast the bread)

And we start with putting a bit of butter to melt in a sauce pan at medium heat, when hot, crack the egg, add a bit of salt and pepper and fried until done. NOTE: I like my yolk soft/runny, because this sandwich whole existence is to dip it in the oozing yolk when cut in half. When done, put the egg to the side.

Keep the sauce pan on the heat, but bring it down to low

Take the slices of bread and coat both with mayonnaise. Then coast one slice with a bit of ketchup and the other with mustard.

On the ketchup side place the ham, then pile a couple of lettuce/spinach leaves on top. On the mustard side, place the slices of tomato, season with salt and pepper and then the cheese. Place the friend egg on top. Cover with the ham slice of bread.

Coat the outside of both bread with a bit of butter and place in the hot sauce pan on the stove. Toast about 1 minute and flip, until you have it toasted.

Take out, place on plate and cut in half… let the egg ooze out of it and now eat up!