FRIED EGGPLANT
INGREDIENTS:
2 medium sized eggplants, peeled and circular sliced 1/4 inch thick
2 eggs, well beaten
8 oz. (2 cups) bread crumbs
Canola oil for frying
2 oz. Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, grated
2 cups buttermilk
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon fresh ground black peppercorns, preferably Tellicherry
peppercorns from India
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon dried basil
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon oregano
Extra virgin olive oil
Peel and slice eggplants into 1/4 inch thick circular slices and submerge in
water soaking for at least 4 hours to soften. You will need to place a
weight on top of the eggplant slices to keep them from floating and I used a
smaller pot filled with water on top of the eggplant slices. At the
end of the soaking time, remove eggplant slices and pat dry with paper
towels. In a bowl, beat two eggs and mix with 2 cups whole buttermilk.
Place two cups or 8 ozs. of bread crumbs onto a large shallow pan adding
salt, black pepper, paprika, oregano, dried basil and garlic powder and mix
thoroughly. Heat a large skillet on medium-high heat and add Canola
oil. Dip eggplant slices into the buttermilk egg mixture and allow
excess to drain off. Coat eggplant slices evenly in the seasoned bread
crumb mixture and place into hot oil and fry until golden brown, about 4 to
5 minutes each side and drain on paper towels. Once all eggplant
slices are fried, take a large cookie sheet or pan and line with aluminum
foil and place eggplant slices on pan. Drizzle a small amount of extra
virgin olive oil onto each eggplant slice and sprinkle a generous amount of
fresh grated Parmigiano Reggiano cheese onto each slice. Place
eggplant under broiler set on high heat and allow cheese to melt.
Serve while hot with your favorite main dish.
YIELD: 22 or more slices 1/4 inch thick.

The above eggplant slices served with Porter's Chicken Bog, marinated
slaw and fried cornbread.
Below sequence pixs taken on 04-05-09 while preparing the fried eggplant.
Click on thumbnails for a larger view:


The fried eggplant slices were excellent; soft and tender yet with a
little crunch and the combination of spices from the seasoned bread crumbs
came through wonderfully. Do not be frugal and use the Kraft
cheese in the green plastic container unless you just have to. The
real Parmigiano Reggiano cheese that you grate yourself is a must. A
little goes a very long way and doubt that I used two ounces of the grated
Parmigiano Reggiano.
NOTE: Some of the above sequence pixs were already in my
database and will be using some of my stock file pixs when applicable to
save on server file storage, bandwidth issues and to reduce camera
work redundancy.
Bill aka Mickey Porter 04-05-09.