Greek Baked Vegetables (Briam)

- Total Time
- 3 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1medium eggplant
- Salt
- 2medium red onions
- 4large garlic cloves
- 1½pounds potatoes, scrubbed, peeled if desired
- 1½pounds zucchini
- 2large bell peppers, seeded
- ⅓ to ⅔cup extra virgin olive oil, to taste
- 2pounds tomatoes, grated or peeled, seeded and chopped, or a 28-ounce can, drained (reserve liquid)
- Black pepper
- ½ to 1pound small okra, ends trimmed, optional
- ¼cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
- 2tablespoons chopped marjoram or oregano, or 2 teaspoons dried
Preparation
- Step 1
If the eggplant is thin and long, slice it about ¼-inch thick. If it’s fat, halve it lengthwise, then slice in ¼-inch-thick half-moons. Sprinkle with salt and put on paper towels for 30 minutes. Thinly slice the onions and mince the garlic. Cut the potatoes, zucchini and peppers into ¼-inch-thick slices. Squeeze excess water from eggplant and pat dry.
- Step 2
Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil over medium heat in a large, heavy skillet and add the onions. Stir often, until tender and translucent, about 8 minutes. Add a generous pinch of salt and stir in the garlic. Cook for another minute or two, until fragrant.
- Step 3
Lightly oil a deep earthenware baking dish or a heavy Dutch oven. Put the tomatoes in a bowl and season liberally with salt and pepper. Stir in the remaining olive oil. Spread a thin layer of tomatoes in the baking dish or Dutch oven and top with one-third of the onions and garlic. Top with half the potato slices. Season with salt and pepper. Layer half the zucchini slices over the potatoes and season, then layer on half the eggplant, half the peppers and half the okra, if using. Sprinkle on half the parsley, about a third of the marjoram or oregano and some pepper. Layer another third of the onions over the vegetables and top with half of the remaining tomatoes. Sprinkle with half the remaining marjoram or oregano. Repeat the layers with the remaining vegetables, ending with a layer of onions topped with the remaining tomatoes. Sprinkle with the remaining herbs. Pour the juice from the tomatoes over the mixture.
- Step 4
Cover with foil or a lid and bake for 1½ hours. Press the vegetables down into the juice and bake another 30 minutes, or until all the vegetables are thoroughly tender. Cool until warm before serving, or refrigerate overnight and reheat. If there is too much liquid, strain in a colander set over a bowl, reduce the juices over medium-high heat (place a flame tamer over the burner if you’re using the earthenware dish) and pour over the vegetables.
Private Notes
Comments
This is an old "Ghiveci" (Romanian sp. var.) from the Balkans and it goes by the season: zucchini and fresh tomatoes in the summer, eaten cold with crusty bread and yogurt on top; roots and whatever is in your crisper in the cold season, eaten piping hot with feta or sour cream and hot polenta on the side; as a stand-alone dish or as a side to when meat was available. Skip the okra if you want to, but add a lot more parsley than the 1/4 cup called for here, it's better and simpler
Delicious! To cut the time, I simmered the potato slices in the tomatoes, and added the eggplant and zucchini to the onions and garlic. (No okra, but I'll try to find it for next time.) With the ingredients already hot and partially cooked, one hour was enough in the oven. It was even better the next day :-)
never buy fresh okra. the stores don't sell enough for it to be fresh and tasty. instead, purchase a pkg. of frozen.
I know this recipe as Greek Tourlou. I use dill instead of parsley.
Very happy with this. The flavors blend nicely. It's a huge amount and there are only 3 of us in the house, but we didn't mind eating it 4 days in a row because I just added a different protein each day: tuna, cottage cheese, chicken breast, bratwurst. Also tastes great with grated parmesan on top.
Great recipe! Made it twice so far and love it especially room temp or cold, with or without feta and olives… the procedure of 1/3 of this then 1/2 of that can get a bit dizzying and I do wonder if one begins and ends with tomatoes, just how much the exact order matters to the end result?
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