It doesn't look like much, but trust me. It's so, so delicious. |
On the grill and cut into one- to two-inch thick slices, they only needed to cook for about six or seven minutes. In the oven, I think you'd probably shoot for 15-20 minutes? Just check it every five minutes or so. When the eggplant is soft to the touch and juicy, they're ready.
While the eggplants grilled, I prepared the rest of the ingredients and placed them in a food processor. Cilantro, garlic, cumin, and chipotle peppers in adobo sauce are what make this eggplant dip so good.
When the eggplant was done, I placed about half of it in the processor, processed it, and then added the rest of the eggplant to the mixture and processed it again.
What you get for your trouble is totally worth it. My dad assumed it was a bean dip, because the texture is transformed when you blend it with a little oil. The smoky, southwest flavors also give the impression that this is a bean dip. This is a pretty healthy dish, needing only a little oil to smooth it out.
I like eating it with tortilla chips and I definitely prefer it to traditional bean dip. It's lighter and you don't feel guilty for eating a lot of it. Well, so I'm told. I don't believe in feeling guilt over enjoying your food, whatever it is. :-) Try it out, y'all!
Chipotle eggplant dip
(makes a lot of dip--I didn't measure, but it would be enough for at least 6-8 people to eat as an appetizer)
light adapted from Bobby Flay
Ingredients
2 large eggplants, roasted or grilled
1-3 three chipotle peppers in adobo sauce
4 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tbsp ground cumin
1 bunch of cilantro, roughly chopped (about 1/2 cup?)
2 tbsp lemon juice or red wine vinegar
1/4 cup olive oil (I used extra-virgin)
Salt and pepper, to taste
Directions
Grill or roast eggplants until soft and juicy (see above post for preparation suggestions). While they cook, place the next five ingredients in the bowl of a food processor or blender.* When the eggplants are cooked and cool enough to touch, scoop out the flesh and place in the food processor. I suppose you could leave the skin on, but that would really affect the texture.
Process the eggplant and other ingredients together, slowly adding the oil in. Add salt and pepper to taste and blend together.
Serve warm or at room temperature with tortilla chips.
*I think you could make this with just a handheld mixer, if you minced the garlic, chopped up the cilantro really finely, and mixed everything together before adding the eggplant and oil.
2 comments:
This is one of my all-time favorites! I still remember the first time you made it. :)
I still remember sitting on the floor in Bryan with my blender and your Foreman. Some people made gin buckets. We made eggplant dip. :-P
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