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In the last week, I totaled my car*, almost gave myself a concussion by walking against a rather substantial tree branch and went all Lady Macbeth in my white silk nightgown this morning after slicing open my foot on a piece of glass in my kitchen (apparently, I must learn the hard way that you should never attempt to wipe down your counters before having your caffeinated morning beverage). Who knew a quarter-inch nick on a foot could bleed so much? I kind of wish I'd had the presence of mind to photograph the blood spatters on our white tile floor just now. They looked rather artful.

Let's not even talk about how I managed to bust my iPhone on Monday or about the fact that I thought I'd lost all my identifying documents earlier this week. Not even kidding. Is Mercury in retrograde or something? Am I supposed to be thinking of something I'm not? Or am I just on the rather klutzier side of humanity?

What I think is really going on is that the universe was balancing itself out in anticipation of my dinner last night. All this mayhem and in the midst of it, I had a stroke of very good fortune: discovering an eggplant sauce for my spaghetti that I loved so much I wanted to eat it with a spoon, out of the pan, with nary a taste for anyone else, spaghetti be damned. This is not to say that losing the car was worth the sauce, but it made the pain easier to bear. It really is something.

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The sauce comes from the esteemed Mister Lam, rice whisperer and food writer extraordinaire (seriously, click over to his original recipe and feast on his words, would you?). Last year, when Gourmet folded and I, in a momentary sizzle of panic, printed out all the web-exclusive recipes from Gourmet.com, this recipe made it to the top of the stack, only to languish there as I packed up my life in New York and moved to Berlin. And truth be told, it would have languished there further if a certain visitor, sitting at my table last night and hungry for dinner, hadn't told me that it was one of her very favorite things to eat.

It is, in the grand tradition of humble Italian peasant food, a very ugly sauce. Gray, slippery and rather limp. You cook cubed eggplant and some garlic in olive oil, with the addition of some stock or water, until it goes all melty and soft and the fibers just sort of collapse underneath gentle pressure. It takes just 20 minutes, long enough to get started on setting the table, eating all the olives in your fridge or just having a drink to unwind from all the stress of your week, whether it involved car crashes and bleeding feet or not. Then, using a fork or a spoon or whatever you have around, you mash up the eggplant until it's, well, saucy. And to brighten up each spoon-, er, forkful, in goes some sliced basil and good dollop of minced sun-dried tomatoes. And salt. Don't forget the salt.

The noodles, chewy and slippery, curl around the pockets of sweet, savory eggplant, the basil snakes between each bite and a pop of tomato here and there makes the water run together in your mouth as you eat. You don't even need a grating of Parmigiano. You've got all you ever needed on your plate, right there.

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Halfway through the cooking process, I realized that it was this very technique that kept me fed and happy years ago while living in Paris. Only instead of eggplants, I used zucchini – for a pea-green sauce as sweet as the day is long – or cauliflower. Both vegetables do stunningly well with long cooking times and a careful mashing, turning themselves into silky, toothsome sauces that you can brighten up with mint or parsley (for the zucchini) or a good grinding of hot red pepper flakes (for the cauliflower). Both do very well indeed with a judicious grating of Parmigiano on top.

In any case, it's a technique for your kitchen as indispensable as boiling eggs or mastering a very good, plain tomato sauce. Armed with just one eggplant, just a few handfuls of cauliflower florets or a zucchini or two, you can stew your way to spaghetti nirvana in the blink of an eye.

Did I mention the salt? Don't forget the salt. It's the difference between a sauce that makes you sit up and pay attention and a sauce that just hums quietly along instead of singing loud and clear.

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One last thing: the recipe below says that a one-pound eggplant will be enough for a pound of spaghetti, but we ate far less spaghetti than that (190 grams for the two of us, actually) and while there was more sauce than any of my Italian family members would have deemed acceptable on our plates, you might want to adjust your sauce-to-noodle ratio as you see fit.

*As a result, I missed the Food Blogger Connect conference, which really was the worst luck of all. I'm sorry to have missed any of you intrepid readers who made it there!

Oh, and in completely unrelated news, The Wednesday Chef now has a Facebook page! Come on over, let's be friends.

Spaghetti with Let-My-Eggplant-Go-Free! Sauce
Serves 3 or 4

1 pound eggplant, cut into ½ inch slices
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 cloves garlic, lightly smashed
2 springs thyme or oregano, chopped
1 cup chicken stock or water
2 tablespoons sun-dried or oven-dried tomatoes, minced
6 leaves basil, sliced thinly
Salt and pepper
1 pound spaghetti

1. Lightly salt the slices of eggplant, stack them back together and let sit for 20 minutes.

2. Put the olive oil in a wide, heavy saucepan, add the garlic cloves, and set over low heat.

3. Dry off the eggplant, cut it into chunks. When you start hearing the garlic sizzle a little and can smell it, drop in your eggplant and stir to coat it all with oil. Turn up the heat a little bit to medium high and add the thyme or oregano and stir. When the eggplant is turning translucent and softening, add the liquid, let it come to a boil, and turn it back down to medium-low. Let it bubble for a bit and cover it, leaving a crack for steam to escape. Stir once in a while so that the bottom doesn’t stick.

4. After about 20 minutes or so, the liquid in the eggplant pan should be mostly evaporated and the eggplant should be soft and melting. Mash it with a fork or spoon, and adjust the seasoning to taste.

5. Toss the eggplant purée with the spaghetti that you cooked al dente. Stir in the minced tomatoes and basil. You can gild the lily with drizzling on some more oil. Serve immediately.

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67 responses to “Francis Lam’s Let-My-Eggplant-Go-Free! Spaghetti”

  1. Kerry@Foodlovas Avatar

    I just made this for dinner tonight. Our first venture into the world of eggplant or aubergine as they call it here in the Netherlands. A great big yum from me and my husband! Thanks
    -Kerry

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  2. Meeta Avatar

    hey luisa, sorry to have missed you at the FBC but i think on that day presenters traveling to london were traveling under bad stars. my motor died traveling 180 kms/h on route to frankfurt trying to get to london that day. things could have gone so wrong!! when i heard what happened to you – i got goosebumps. WTF!
    hope things are better this week.

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  3. Denise @ Chez Danisse Avatar

    Excellent! You’ve inspired dinner tonight. Thank you.

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  4. Heena Avatar

    Hi Luisa,
    I’m sorry about your run of bad luck; seems to mirror mine – bad cold, big fall down the stairs, etc. I hope your week gets better; going by this sauce, it seems to be..
    However, there is another sauce that has haunted me since 2 years – it started with your Beef Bolognese post where you described your ragu – the one you’re proudest of, and then went on to give the recipe of a different one. Well, I made the ‘other’ sauce, altered it quite a bit to come up with ‘my’ ragu recipe and it was wonderful. But I’ve always wondered what your sauce which you said you liked better tasted like. Can you please put an end to the haunting (or direct me to a post where you did and I might have missed it)?

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  5. dave and rita Avatar
    dave and rita

    eggplant sauce was fantastic!

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  6. Kat Avatar
    Kat

    Looks delicious. I love how eggplant can be hearty and still fresh. BTW, are you able to find chicken stock in Germany? I can only find Bouillon cubes which have added herbs and (probably) msg.

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  7. zuza zak Avatar

    I made this last night for my brother and his veggie girlfriend, except i used those long thick tubes of pasta – bucatini i beleive they’re called – and added some red wine to sauce. it came out great, they loved it and will definitely be adding it to repertoire so thank you!
    zuza x
    http://cheesy-mash.blogspot.com

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  8. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Luisa, I was just happily cooking this and thinking about what a weird coincidence it is that you used to live in my apartment… you must have been cooking in our same tiny kitchen, although I think the guy we bought it from did some updating. Anyway, I’ve really been enjoying your posts lately–you’re obviously inspired, and you’re making me want to cook every single thing you write about and buy each cookbook you mention! Glad things are going well.

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  9. Luisa Avatar

    Heena – I never blogged about “my” sauce, actually. It’s quite similar to the plain ragu in Marcella Hazan’s Essentials of Italian Cooking.
    Kat – I complain about this in almost every post! 🙂 Some stores sell “fond” that costs a million bucks (I exaggerate but only slightly) a glass jar. I recently found Maggi’s Feiner Kochen Hühner Fond that comes in a little plastic bottle and is dilutable and more affordable. I use that in a pinch.
    Rachel – Thank you!! How funny, I was making this last night for dinner too! That kitchen on 7th Avenue was so tiny and definitely not updated – it reminded me of my garret in Paris. Electrical stove, no counter space. I think I only had one dinner party whilst there and it was for two! 🙂 Still, a lovely place.

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  10. Tracy A. Avatar

    Dear Luisa — another winner. Hubby and I are sitting in front of the tube, watching the World Cup and treating ourselves to this eggplant spaghetti. You have to carb up for these matches, you know. I went heavier on the eggplant-to-pasta ratio, being a sauce lover and an armchair athlete. Excellent! Thanks you again.

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  11. jenny Avatar
    jenny

    I’m so glad you suggested using zucchini. eggplant and I, sadly, don’t really get along. but I just made this with zucchini for lunch and it was INCREDIBLE. one of those dishes that’s definitely going in the permanent repertoire. thank you! 🙂

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  12. Sandy Avatar
    Sandy

    Never having had success with eggplant I was skeptical to say the least. And my husband was NOT pleased I was cooking with eggplant. But we were both pleasantly surprised by the result. My changes: I gave it a quick whirl in the food processor since the chunks of skin weren’t appealing to me and I added a LOT more herbs. After plating we topped it with extra sun-dried tomatoes, chopped black olives and parmesan. Next time I’ll remove half the sauce to freeze as it was way too much sauce for one pound of pasta. I still can’t believe my husband ate eggplant! Thanks for the great recipe!

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  13. Dino Romano Avatar
    Dino Romano

    You can’t kitchen sink eggplant. NEVER EVER, EVER, EVER, EVER, EVER, EVER, EVER oregano. That is for Pizza Sauce.
    Pasta with eggplant is a staple in Sicily where they revere the delicate flavor by doing just one thing to it — frying it a golden brown — before adding it to pasta, fresh garlicky tomato sauce and a good quantity of FRESH…read F-R-E-S-H basil, topped with grated Pecorino Romano cheese.
    There is one restaurant in Naxos, on the main street, one town over from glitzy Taormina on the east coast of Sicily that makes just one dish — pasta with fried eggplant.
    Try it without destroying it with oregano or dried tomatoes. You will think you never lived before.

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  14. Megan DeLong Avatar

    Luisa, made this 2 nights ago and am GAGA for it. Holy smokes, so good! I added roasted cherry tomatoes (from my garden) instead of sun-dried, but everything else I left alone and you are absolutely right: I could’ve eaten it right out of the pan. Mmmm…thank goodness my husband doesn’t like eggplant…it’s all for ME.
    Cheers,
    Megan

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  15. NOJuju Avatar

    I made and loved this dish. It’s definitely going into permanent rotation. Blogged it here: http://nojuju.blogspot.com/2010/07/pasta-with-eggplant-puree.html
    Thanks so much!

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  16. Susana Iribe Avatar

    I came across your blog last night after I searched for an eggplant sauce recipe. I made this last night and loved it! I’m looking forward to spending some time reading through your archives.

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  17. Renee Avatar
    Renee

    Like you, it took me a while to make this recipe. It was there in the back of my mind, quietly humming, until yesterday when I had half an eggplant to use up and a tube of sun-dried tomato paste in the cupboard. Next thing I know I’m licking the bowl and calling my mother asking her if I can come cook this for her and my step-father for their 6-year anniversary next month…..

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