Tomato Salad With Smoky Eggplant Flatbread
Published Aug. 10, 2022

- Total Time
- 30 to 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1large eggplant (about 1 pound)
- 4tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 2tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon lemon juice
- 2tablespoons tahini
- 2small garlic cloves, grated
- 2tablespoons plain whole-milk yogurt
- ½teaspoon toasted ground cumin
- Pinch of ground cayenne
- Pinch of ground cinnamon
- Salt and pepper
- 1small red onion, finely diced
- 2tablespoons pomegranate molasses
- ½teaspoon sumac
- 3cups chopped tomatoes, preferably a mix of larger multicolored tomatoes and cherry tomatoes (about 1 pound)
- ½cup chopped toasted walnuts
- Warm lavash or pita bread, for serving
- 3tablespoons chopped dill, for garnish
- 3tablespoons parsley, for garnish
- 3tablespoons chopped mint leaves, for garnish
Preparation
- Step 1
Set the whole, unpeeled eggplant directly over a bed of hot coals, over the open flame of a gas burner at full blast or under the broiler. With a paring knife or skewer, poke a few holes into the eggplant to allow steam to escape. Let the skin of the eggplant blacken and blister, turning the eggplant continuously until it is soft, collapsed and completely charred, about 15 to 20 minutes.
- Step 2
Set the cooked eggplant on a chopping board, and, when cool enough to handle, cut in half from top to bottom. Let cool to room temperature (about 15 minutes), then scoop out flesh with a spoon, discarding any large seed pockets. Tear or roughly chop eggplant flesh and put in a medium bowl.
- Step 3
Add 2 tablespoons olive oil, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, tahini, garlic, yogurt, cumin, cayenne, cinnamon, and salt and pepper. Beat mixture with a fork, leaving it somewhat rough. Set aside to let flavors meld at room temperature, then taste and adjust seasoning. Transfer to a serving dish.
- Step 4
Put diced onion in a medium bowl and season with salt and pepper. Add pomegranate molasses, sumac and 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Stir in 2 tablespoons olive oil.
- Step 5
Add chopped tomatoes and fold into onion mixture, sprinkling with a bit more salt, if necessary. Transfer to a serving dish and top with walnuts.
- Step 6
Spread eggplant mixture on pieces of warm lavash or pita, keeping the edges clear, and arrange on a platter. Spoon some of the tomato mixture onto each piece. Sprinkle dill, parsley and mint liberally over it all.
Private Notes
Comments
Condo here - no gas flame or grill - but a tip from Mark Bittman’s Baingan Bharta - use a preheated blistering hot cast iron skillet in the oven to get a similar effect.
Absolutely delicious, a keeper! Complex, fresh, mix of crispness, velvetiness, and choppyness. Used organic heirloom tomatoes of different colors that melted in the mouth. Avoid making the tomato salad too early as it'll leach more juices than optimal. Used garlic naan.
Reply to Jess - I do not use broiler but the Baingan Bharta recipe says you can do either once you put it in the super hot pan - roast or broil. It collapses just like on the grill - cool and scrape the pulp from the skin.
On Day 2, I took my day-old pita, diced it, and pan fried it into croutons; then I combined those with all leftovers for a quick fattoush. Delicious! Honestly better than the "flatbread pizza" approach on Day 1.
This was a little tricky to eat when stacked up the way the recipe calls for. I will definitely do the traditional small dice on the tomatoes next time.
I recommend Paula Wolfert's method of charring the eggplant stovetop: wrap it in heavy-duty foil and place directly on gas burner, turning it periodically with tongs for about half an hour. No longer a fan of cinnamon in most savory dishes, I found ground coriander to be a great sub. Mixed in lemon juice, garlic and seasonings before adding tahini and oil for flavors to penetrate. Delicious without the yogurt. Bright pink pickled turnips, olives, hummus, cucumber and feta on the side.
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