
Eggplant Parmesan is a dish found on menus everywhere. Curiously enough, the eggplant is actually a
fruit and not a vegetable. Even though it
looks robust, the eggplant is fairly delicate.
Buy one that weighs about 8 ounces, and be sure to use it within a day
or two of purchase. As it ages, it gets
bitter and the skin gets tough.

Making Eggplant Parmesan is very similar to making Chicken
Cutlets except - of course – that we are using eggplant instead of
chicken:
The eggplant is first “breaded” and fried.
It is then put in a baking dish on top of your favorite
spaghetti sauce.
Finally, it is topped with cheese and baked in the oven for
15 minutes.

1. “Sweating” the
Eggplant:
“Sweating” an eggplant means to get out any bittenerss that
may have developed by making it sweat.
Start by slicing an 8-ounce eggplant in slightly larger than
¼-inch thick slices.

Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of Kosher salt, over all of the slices of
eggplant, being sure to salt both sides.
Set the salted, sliced eggplant into a colander and let it rest for
about 30 minutes.

By then the eggplant should begin to sweat. (Notice the little droplets of moisture being
extracted by the salt from the surface of the eggplant.)

Remove the eggplant from the colander, and place the slices
on a paper towel. With a second paper
towel, blot off all the excess moisture which has formed.

2. Preparing the
Cheese:
While the eggplant is resting, get the cheeses grated. The (1/4 cup of) parmesan should be finely
grated.

And the (8 ounces of) mozzarella needs to get shredded.

3. Preparing the
Coating:
I tried several different types of breading for this recipe.

In the photo above, the bottom left shows an attempt to fry
the eggplant without first “breading” it. Unbreaded eggplant is like a sponge.
It will get very “greasy” done this way.
The top right was breaded with just egg and then flour. The texture, taste and appearance were all
wrong on that one as well.
The remaining two were perfect! The bottom right (my favorite) was done with
flour, egg and “panko” bread crumbs which made a very crunchy
coating. The top left was made with
flour, egg, and dry breadcrumbs which made a tasty and very traditional coating
on the eggplant.
“Italian” rather than plain-flavor panko or dry crumbs add a
nice flavor to the final dish.
4. Breading the Eggplant
Put the flour, egg, and crumbs into three separate flat,
rimmed dishes.
Add 1 teaspoon of water
to the egg and with a fork, beat the egg and water together.

If you set everything up in a row it will be easier to do
this next step. Be sure to get a plate
out for the breaded eggplant.

A huge time saver is to put the flour in a plastic bag
instead of just dipping it one-by-one in the rimmed dish.

The 10 slices of eggplant can all go into the bag at
once. Gently shake the bag so that all
the slices are coated with a fine dusting of flour.

Now, one-by-one, shake off the excess flour and place the
slice of eggplant in the beaten egg.

Turn it over so that both sides get coated with the egg.

Now put the slice into the crumbs….

…and turn that over too.

Press some of the crumbs into the eggplant making sure it is
completely coated. This is where an
extra pair of hands would be great!

5. Frying the
Eggplant:
Once the eggplant is all breaded, preheat your frying pan on
medium high heat. Add 3 Tablespoons of
vegetable or olive oil to the pan and let it get hot.

When you add the eggplant to the pan you should hear a
serious sizzle! If you don’t, then the
pan is not hot enough. Remove that one
slice and let the pan heat up some more.
Do not over crowd the pan.

Once the eggplant is golden brown, flip them and fry the
other side. It will take about 4-5
minutes in total to brown both sides. FLIP
THEM ONLY ONCE!

Place the eggplant on a plate that has been lined with a
paper towel.

Before frying the second batch, clean the pan out with a
paper towel and a pair of tongs.

Add the remaining 3 Tablespoons of oil to the pan and…

…fry the remaining eggplant.

6. Assembling the
Eggplant Parmesan:
This recipe requires 12 ounces of spaghetti sauce. You can make your own or buy a jar of your
favorite sauce.

Spread the sauce in a baking dish…

…large enough to hold the eggplant in a single layer. (A little bit of overlapping is fine.)

Sprinkle on the mozzarella cheese….

…and the parmesan cheese.

Bake the Eggplant Parmesan in a preheated 425º F ( = 220º C
= gas mark 7- hot) oven for 15 minutes or until the cheese is melted and golden
and the sauce is bubbly.

Dinner’s ready!
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Stefani | posted on May 17, 2008
Great pics! I would love to make these one day.