This is one of my favourite dishes. I cook it regularly and it has evolved from a recipe I read a while ago in which the aubergines were fried. I prefer the aubergines to be oiled and baked until golden and charred in places. They give the whole dish a unique sweet smoky taste. Chickpeas are a good source of protein, fibre, copper, manganese and folate
Viungo kwa ajili ya mbili
mafuta
a medium aubergine (eggplant..melanzane..)
a small onion
3 gloves of garlic
400g (14oz) can of plum (or chopped) tomatoes
3 teaspoons of dried crushed red chillies (or to taste, this will be slightly fiery)
nyanya puree
a pinch of dried oregano (hiari)
a 400g can of chickpeas
200 g (7oz) of dried spelt or wholewheat penne (or less if you dont want a hearty main course)
pilipili freshly ya ardhi
rock salt for garnishing
table salt
a small bunch of flat leaf parlsey coarsely chopped
Method
Preheat tanuri kwa 200C (400F gas/mark 6)
Put a large pan of water on to boil (add a dash of salt when it does)
Cut the aubergine into thin slices (about a half of a centimetre or a quarter of an inch) juu ya kidogo mshazari kupata vipande kubwa. Bake mpaka dhahabu kahawia pande zote mbili na kugeuka mara moja kwa muda wa dakika thelathini
Dice the onion and chop the garlic
Splash baadhi mafuta katika sufuria kubwa na mahali juu ya joto chini ,add the diced onion, kuinyunyiza na chumvi kidogo, koroga na kanzu wa mafuta. Jalada. Kupika kwa dakika kumi au hadi vitunguu ni laini lakini si kahawia. Nusu njia kuchochea katika vitunguu na kuongeza pilipili aliwaangamiza na baadhi pilipili freshly ya ardhi (and the pinch of oregano)
Wakati vitunguu ni tayari kuongeza bati ya nyanya, boga kidogo dhidi pande za pan kama kutumia plum. Kuongeza squirt (kuhusu mbili vijiko) ya nyanya puree, koroga vizuri. Lete polepole kuchemsha na kuongeza chickpeas mchanga, reduce heat to simmer uncovered for a further ten minutes while the pasta is cooking
Kuongeza pasta kwa kuchemsha maji chumvi ni kupika kwa dakika tisa au al dente. Kuelekea mwisho wa wakati kupikia kuongeza michache ya Vijiko ya maji ya kupikia kwa mchuzi simmering na koroga
Drain the pasta
Zima joto chini ya mchuzi. Kuongeza aubergines, theluthi mbili ya parsley kung'olewa. Koroga na kisha koroga katika pasta mchanga
Serve garnished with the rest of the parsley, black pepper and rock salt
I hope you like the other recipes too Adriana
if the recipe that was supposed to make me scream ‘meat is murder’ (once agreed on giving murder a bad connotation) was your penne con melanzane rendition, that failed to hit the mark, not because of the ingredients, I in fact love aubergines, rich in nicotine and with a very peculiar spicy texture, but because all the effort and time spent in cooking could be saved and spent pursuing different objectives..
just yesterday, what a coincidence, i bought in sainsbury’s a jar of roasted greek aubergines imam, that, once chopped in smaller chunks, spread onto slices of mozzarella, and put in a microwave for about 40 seconds, gives you a very close approximation of your recipe..
just to be sure i was’n fooling myself with the final result, ive just had it as an afternoon snack, without the pasta, of course..
delicious.. ..and within a very reasonable price range (£2.26 a jar)
of course if i had to cook for more than 2 people, your method would be considered, but to indulge myself in a fast treat, i consider my procedure easier..
going back to the murderous recipe, i was expecting something on the lines of the ortolan, blinded songbirds fattened up to 4 times their size in a dark cage, then drowned in a snifter of armagnac, plucked, then roasted for about 6 minutes…
such a delicacy that they must be eaten whole, biting off the head, with the diner’s own head covered by a napkin, not to be disturbed during such a feat…
unluckily the practice has been banned in the past 3 years in france, and it would be very expensive to get hold of one in the near future..
good for me, as you know, i am off to vietnam in less than a month, and there, next to dogs, rats and snakes, i will be able to taste drunken prawns, drowned in rice wine..
maybe not the peak of gastronomy, as ortolans are reputed to be, but still some new flavours to add to my library..
after all even Darwin himself wanted to taste every single animal he was coming in contact with.
(comment posted on jan 2012)
Yum. Going to make this tonight