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Monday 17 June 2024

Caponata : Somewhere between a stew and a salad : It's tasty

Caponata is a Sicilian dish consisting of chopped fried eggplant/aubergine and other vegetables, seasoned with olive oil, tomato sauce, celery, olives, and capers.

Today, caponata is typically used as a side dish for fish dishes and sometimes as an appetizer, but since the 18th century it has also been used as a main course.

Variants may add carrots, bell peppers, potatoes, pine nuts, and raisins.

This authentic caponata is somewhere between a stew and a salad. Sweet and sour aubergines mix with salty olives, capers and tangy tomatoes. Best eaten at room temperature or just warm. Many enjoy this served with some with crusty ciabatta. There are some lower carb bread recipe suggestions here and here and here


Ingredients
Serves Four
4 medium aubergines/eggplants, chopped into 2cm/1in cubes
salt and freshly ground black pepper
3-4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling
1 onion, chopped
2 celery sticks, chopped
400g tin chopped tomatoes
100g/3½oz green olives
3 tbsp capers, drained and chopped
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
1½ tbsp sugar, or to taste
handful flatleaf parsley, chopped
extra virgin olive oil, for drizzling

Method
1. Sprinkle the aubergines with salt and leave to drain in a colander for 30 minutes.
2. Heat some of the olive oil in a large frying pan and brown the aubergine on a moderate heat for 10 minutes. When softened and browned, set aside. You may have to do this in batches.
3. Heat the remaining olive oil in the pan and gently fry the onion and the celery until softened and translucent, but not browned. Add the tomatoes, olives and capers, season with salt and freshly ground black pepper, and cook for 20 minutes until the mixture has thickened.
4.In a separate bowl, mix together the red wine vinegar and sugar. Add this to the pan with the aubergine and cook for 10 minutes. It is ready when the red wine vinegar has been absorbed.
5. Transfer the caponata to a large bowl, add the chopped parsley and mix well. Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil to serve. Serve hot or at room temperature.
From original idea here

If you've seen Inspector Montalbano on television I'm sure he would enjoy this dish! LOL!

You will find a variety of recipe ideas within this blog, and not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter. If you have any concerns about your health, it is always advisable to consult your doctor or health care team.

All the best Jan

29 comments:

J.P. Alexander said...

Gracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.

Elephant's Child said...

It would make a fine main meal.

Mari said...

I've never heard of this dish but it sounds tasty!

Anonymous said...

Sounds like an interesting dish -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com

Carola Bartz said...

This sounds super delicious - I love eggplant/aubergine and some crusty ciabatta with it would be perfect! I'm hungry now!

Tom said...

...something to try when my eggplant are ready to pick.

Angie's Recipes said...

It looks healthy and tasty!

peppylady (Dora) said...

Never heard of it.

Katerinas Blog said...

Another very tasty recipe.
In Greece we make a variation of it with whatever vegetables we have and without frying them. We put all the vegetables in rings in a pan with very freshly grated tomato, salt, parsley, onion, vegetables and bake it.
It's called Briam and we eat it as a main dish!

Mary Kirkland said...

That sounds good.

Margaret D said...

Sounds good and looks nice, Jan.

jabblog said...

Lovely combination of vegetables - this makes a very nice main meal.

DUTA said...

Lovely name! Eggplants are my favorites for salads of any kind.

Victor S E Moubarak said...

Never heard of this. Must try it.

God bless.

eileeninmd said...

Sounds yummy, I like all the ingredients.
Take care, enjoy your day and have a great week!

roentare said...

A very good stew for sure

Bill said...

Sounds good and I like eggplant.

Ananka said...

Sounds intresting donno it though and I donno the TV show either.

Anne C said...

I make this occasionally, using my great grandmother's recipe that she brought from Palermo. This recipe is pretty close! When I was a kid, Grandma would always have jars of it in her freezer, and would bring one out before a festive meal so we could nosh on crackers with caponatina on top while the meal cooked.

Valerie-Jael said...

Never heard of it, time for something new! Have a great week!

Donna said...

This sounds very different! Looks good!
hugs
Donna

Divers and Sundry said...

Looks pretty, sounds tasty. I have the same problem with eggplant that I do with sweet potato in that trying to cut these hard-as-a-rock veggies brings me to tears 🤣 I've given up on eggplant and only eat sweet potato baked *sigh*

Hena Tayeb said...

Intriguing.. I hadn't heard of that before.

Back2OurSmallCorner said...

That looks a tasty recipe. Thank you x

happyone said...

This is a new one for me but it looks quite good.

Rose said...

I would try this...I always have to look to see what capers are. And they sound like something I would find tasty.

My name is Erika. said...

I haven't seen Inspector Montalbano on TV, but I think a lot of people would be happy with this dish. Happy new week.

Teresa said...

Una receta interesante.Me encanta la berenjena. Besos.

Conniecrafter said...

I haven't heard of this sounds interesting