x24,Top3,TopLeft,x25,x12
solar backpack
a discovery company

Try this Spicy Sichuan Eggplant

Choosing a vegetable changed my meal plan

Kelly Rossiter

By Kelly Rossiter
Toronto, Canada | Wed Apr 22 10:30:00 GMT 2009

spicy eggplant photo


Kelly Rossiter

I'm always talking about allowing yourself flexibility in the kitchen. Let your ingredients give you a bit of guidance. I usually start out with a particular ingredient or recipe in mind and then build my menu around that. I had planned to make a vegan potato salad and I found some organic pork scallopini at my local market which I could quickly pan fry adding a little stock and a bit of lemon juice to make a sauce. Scouring the vegetable aisle for something from Ontario, I came across some greenhouse eggplant.

Once I got home and started thinking about the eggplant, the game plan changed. I love spicy Chinese eggplant and it occurred to me that I could julienne my very thin pork slices and add them to this recipe. In the end I used my rice cooker for ten minutes and my wok for ten minutes instead of my oven for an hour, and two stove top pans for the eggplant and the pork. We dished it up in the kitchen rather than putting it all on serving dishes in the dining room. Less cooking time, less to clean up and less energy used.

I've given you the vegetarian side dish recipe, but you can easily turn it into a main by adding tofu, or pork or chicken and serving it over rice or noodles.

Spicy Sichuan Eggplant

1 1/2 pounds Asian eggplant
1/4 cup chicken stock or vegetable stock
2 tablespoons chili bean paste
2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
2 tablespoons dark rice vinegar
1 tablespoon yellow rice wine
2 teaspoons sugar
2 tablespoons peanut or vegetable oil
4 garlic cloves, minced
1 tablespoon minced ginger
2 teaspoons Sichuan peppercorn, or 1 teaspoon ground Sichuan pepper
1 teaspoon cornstarch, dissolved in 1 tablespoon water
Scallions, thinly sliced, for garnish

  1. Slice each eggplant in half lengthwise, then slice each length into quarters.

  2. In a small bowl, mix together chicken stock, chili bean paste, soy sauce, rice vinegar, rice wine, and sugar. Set aside.

  3. In a wok, heat oil until just smoking. Add eggplant and stir-fry until outside become golden brown and insides begin to soften, about 3 to 4 minutes. Add garlic, ginger, and Sichuan peppercorns and stir-fry until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Pour in stock-sauce mixture and mix well. Allow sauce to simmer for 2 minutes and eggplant to absorb sauce. Stir in cornstarch mixture to thicken sauce. Remove from heat, plate, and garnish with scallions.

From the website Appetite for China.

Difficulty Level: Easy

Related Posts:
Re-Try a Vegetable: Eggplant and Potato in Herb Sauce
Make These Spicy Szechuan Green Beans
A Chinese Stir-Fry from Leftovers

 
  • email
  • digg
  • share
  • print
helpful article? vote for it
{ }
close window

CLOSE X

 

comments on this article

view all post a comment

 
 
 
 
Emeril Kelly and Supper Club Recipes by Category
 
 
facebook twitter rss
 
Reel Impact
 
Quiz
 
green diy projects
 
organic-az
 

tv schedule

view all

On Now

On Tonight

 

today on planet green

view all

Votes

recent
discussed

10 Unfairly Oft-Maligned Big Apple Inhabitants
POSTED  19 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Is Your Zen Lifestyle Green? 12 Ways to Live Low Stress and Low Impact
POSTED  21 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Online Course Takes Guesswork out of Green Wedding Planning
POSTED  23 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Meet Robyn Nietert of the Women's Microfinance Initiative: Building Businesses, and Lives, One Loan At a Time
POSTED  8 Nov 2009.  COMMENTS

{ }

Organic A-Z: Lemon
POSTED  7 Nov 2009.  COMMENTS

{ }

Ask Emeril Your Green Cooking Questions
POSTED  7 Apr 2009. 47 COMMENTS.

{477}

How To Go Green: Lighting
POSTED  23 Jul 2008. 7 COMMENTS.

{214}

Should You Get a Flu Shot?
POSTED  1 Oct 2009. 3 COMMENTS.

{19}

Renovation Nation FAQ
POSTED  7 May 2009. 13 COMMENTS.

{142}

More Fun with Urban Foraging: Crabapples!
POSTED  10 Oct 2009. 2 COMMENTS.

{19}

 
 
TLC Cooking
 

Ads by Google