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My aunt Laura, my mother's sister, was with us for most of our holiday in Italy. This was a good thing for several reasons, not the least of which was the guarantee of good meals every single day. I don't say this to knock my mother, mind you. She, too, freely admits that with Laura around, the level of dining in our house rises several notches at least.

Laura made us juicy bistecca alla Fiorentina and insalata di riso (cold rice salad) and the very best roasted vegetables I've ever had (more on those in another post soon). We had four different kinds of ricotta and really delicious bread and peeled almonds for breakfast, and she taught me to stir an egg into Hugo's evening pastina and made meatballs that he would have happily eaten every day for the rest of his life.

Laura also proved the usefulness of a ridged grill pan, which I now am coveting and need to add to my arsenal right away. Laura used it for grilling meat, of course, but what really opened my eyes were the vegetables she grilled with it. Thick slices of parboiled potatoes, for example, to dress with olive oil and herbs like dried oregano, or long strips of zucchini and eggplant.

And best of all was the salad she made with the grilled vegetables. After the grilled vegetables (eggplant and zucchini sliced lengthwise, then grilled on the hot pan with no oil on both sides) cooled, she cut them into thickish strips and put them in a salad bowl. She added two garlic cloves, slightly crushed (not entirely smashed – the aim is the perfume the salad without making anyone eat raw garlic), a good amount of salt and a healthy glug of peppery olive oil.

You know how raw eggplant soaks up olive oil quickly and in cooking can turn sodden and greasy? Well, if you grill the eggplant first and then dress it, the olive oil can't penetrate it anymore. It simply coats the eggplant pieces and leaves them still delightfully chewy and toothsome.

The salad is perfect summer fare – easy to make ahead of time, best at room temperature, hearty and cooling at once. It goes very well with grilled sausages, but also with a cool ball of mozzarella leaking milky fluid alongside.

Once I've got a grill pan in my possession, I'll be making this all summer long.

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33 responses to “Laura’s Grilled Eggplant and Zucchini Salad”

  1. Veronica Avatar
    Veronica

    Ooh that salad sounds wonderful!

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  2. NantucketDaffodil Avatar

    Thanks so much for the grill it first tip!

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  3. deborah Avatar

    Yes, before reading the rest of your post I could see that the eggplant would have have the lovely toothsome quality you miss when it’s fried.
    I too have been coveting a grill. I’m looking forward to procuring the le creuset double sided griddle – the flat side pikelets and the other for char-grilled meat and fish … and now eggplant!

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  4. Harriet Avatar

    That salad looks amazing – I love how inspiring other chefs (especially family or friends) can be (and especially for little tips and tricks!).
    The idea of perfuming the salad with the garlic is delightful. On my to-make list for sure!

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  5. Becca @ Amuse Your Bouche Avatar

    This looks soo good! I love the idea of adding the raw garlic but leaving it in big chunks so that you can taste it without having to eat it 🙂

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  6. Katie Avatar

    I’ve often wondered whether a grill pan would be a good addition to my fairly minimal arsenal. Given this salad, the answer seems to be a resounding “Yes!”

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  7. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    No oil at all–not even on the pan? And grill the vegetables until their soft, slightly charred? Sounds excellent.

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  8. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    *they’re

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  9. Kristine in Santa Barbara Avatar
    Kristine in Santa Barbara

    I look forward to hearing more about roasting vegetables! I have a grill pan that I bought 4 years ago and have never used it. It sits in the cupboard and has become a tray of sorts that holds our collection of small flower vases. Hardly its best and highest use. Never thought of roasting/grilling the vegetables dry. Going to try it this week. Thanks for the inspiration.

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  10. Luisa Avatar

    Nope, not even on the pan because as it heats up, oil would scorch. Just let the pan get very hot and then grill the veg slices until they’re getting soft. (Also wilting at the edges.)

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  11. Sheena Avatar

    Hooray, a reason to pull out my grill pan! Thanks, Luisa! 🙂

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  12. carla Avatar
    carla

    This looks delicious! Would you also mind saying more about adding the egg to Hugo’s pastina? My little boy would eat pasta for every meal if he could, but I always think I need to get more protein into him!

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  13. Denise | Chez Danisse Avatar

    Great tip about eggplant and oil. I just bought eggplant at the market yesterday. Now I need a grill pan.

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  14. Luisa Avatar

    Yes, will do a Cooking for Hugo on it – Wednesday, hopefully!!

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  15. Dan from Platter Talk Avatar

    This looks amazing – what a beautiful and delicious looking salad. Thanks for the post!

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  16. Julia Avatar

    Wow this looks incredible, and just the excuse to buy those jewel like aubergines that have started appearing at the market…

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  17. Sissy Avatar
    Sissy

    I got a wonderful fennel green Le Creuset square grill pan and love using it — it’s perfect for grilling meats and vegetables. I especially like it for grilling teriyaki chicken from the Japanese Farm Food cookbook as posted by David Lebovitz last year….

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  18. Alexia Avatar

    The food sounds amazing! My daughter likes soba noodles with soy sauce, a little rice wine vinegar, and a raw egg stirred in. Beware the grill pan: i have a cast iron one and cleaning it has really made me never want to use it.

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  19. Luisa Avatar

    That teriyaki chicken is INSANE. Total perfection.

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  20. Elizabeth Mars Avatar

    I haven’t got a grill pan but now see I will have to get one. Thanks for the tip about the oil. Your Aunt Laura sounds awesome.

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  21. bea Avatar
    bea

    This looks absolutely lovely, a perfect change from our endless sumery tomato side-dishes!

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  22. Kim Avatar
    Kim

    Did you salt eggplant slices to pull out the bitterness before grilling them or does this method of cooking it eliminate the need to do so?

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  23. Luisa Avatar

    I don’t salt the slices beforehand. I didn’t notice any bitterness.

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  24. carla Avatar
    carla

    yay! thanks!!

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  25. theodora Avatar

    nice and appetizing

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  26. Kristen Avatar
    Kristen

    Thanks for the eggplant tip, Luisa! I didn’t lube up my eggplant before roasting it and it turned out lovely. I topped it with last night’s bolognese sauce. Yum. 🙂

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  27. devon Avatar

    This photo is way more drool-inducing than any cake I’ve ever seen. I really appreciate how you come through with the savory. There are a lot of great food blogs out there filled with baked goods. But I am hungry! I want to EAT! It is ages til eggplants are at our market, and when they finally arrive I am always nervous. No longer! I thought you’d appreciate my friend Jim’s grilled vegetable manifesto. He is just as bossy as you want him to be: http://realgoodfood.com/the-grilled-vegetable-manifesto/

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  28. orcagna Avatar
    orcagna

    I can confirm that a grill pan is one of the best food items to have. I have a Le Creuset pan (round, not square) and use it for eggplant and zucchini for salad (or melanzane alla parmigiana), but also love it for tuna or swordfish steaks, just seared, raw in the middle, but with that delightful criss-cross pattern outside. I also have a no-name square version with smaller ridges which is on duty as second-in command when I have to do bigger quantities. And I very much ogle the Italian grill pans with a fold-in handle – if I hadn’t two already, that’s what I would buy!

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  29. Luisa Avatar

    Love that post!! Put it in my Friday round up.

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  30. Annika Avatar

    I made this last week (and again over the weekend) – so easy and amazing.
    One of my favorite take away’s from this recipe is the garlic clove: It perfumes perfectly but gives no biting raw garlic taste.
    My only addition was a tiny bit of lemon juice.
    Thanks so much for sharing.

    Like

  31. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    I’m interested in the pastina, too! And the rice salad – I love rice salad but mine never turn out quite right. Would you consider letting us in on how your aunt prepares it?

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  32. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    I’ve been wanting a grill pan, but knowing I can use it in this way for vegetables puts it on the must-have list! Thanks, Luisa. Can’t wait to make this.

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  33. Sarah G. Avatar
    Sarah G.

    I would love to know more about your aunt Laura and how she’s acquired such a large arsenal of genius cooking methods.

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