SAVOUR WHAT VEGGIES CAN DO
With veteran chef, you won’t miss meat
EGGPLANT GRATIN
Serves: 4 to 6, gluten-free 2 lb (907 g or a bit more) small globe or larger oblong eggplants Olive oil
1 small red onion, finely diced 1 plump clove garlic, minced 1/2 tsp (2.5 mL) herbes de Provence or 1 tbsp (15 mL) marjoram leaves, chopped
2 1/2 lb (1.13 kg) ripe full-sized tomatoes peeled, seeded and chopped or 2 cups (500 mL) crushed canned tomatoes Sea salt and ground pepper 2 eggs
1 cup (250 mL) ricotta
1/4 cup (60 mL) milk
1 good pinch saffron threads, crumbled and soaked in 1 tbsp (15 mL) hot water
1/2 cup (125 mL) freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
10 large basil leaves, torn into pieces
1. Heat the oven to 400 F (205 C). 2. Cut the eggplants in half, lengthwise. For one large eggplant, cut it in quarters. Slice each piece crosswise about
1/2 inch (1.25 cm) thick. Brush the slices lightly with the oil, set them on a sheet pan, then bake until the bottom sides have browned, about 15 minutes. Turn them over and brown the second side; this often takes less time, so check after about 8 minutes. When the eggplant is done, remove it from the oven and reduce the heat to 350 F (175 C).
3. To make the tomato sauce, peel, seed and chop the tomatoes. Warm 2 tbsp (30 mL) of olive oil in a wide skillet. When hot, add the onion, garlic, and herbes de Provence (crushed first between the fingers) or the marjoram.
4. Stir to coat the onion with the oil, then reduce the heat to medium-low, and cook slowly until it is soft, 12 to 15 minutes.
5. Add the tomatoes, raise the heat and cook, stirring occasionally, until the liquid has cooked off and the sauce is fairly thick. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
6. To make the custard, whisk the eggs and stir in the ricotta, milk, saffron and ParmigianoReggiano. Season with a few pinches of salt and pepper.
7. Choose an earthenware casserole with 2-inch (5-cm) sides and an 8-cup (2-L) capacity. An oval dish 8 inches (20 cm) wide at the centre and about 12 inches (30 cm) long, allows the ingredients to spread to a thin layer.
8. Spread a cup of the sauce in the dish and then set down a layer of eggplant. Season with salt and pepper. Scatter half the torn basil over the surface. Dab about 1/4 cup (60 mL) of the sauce over the eggplant and then make another layer of eggplant, season with salt and pepper and the torn basil, and cover with the rest of the tomato sauce.
9. Pour custard over and bake until it has swelled, about 40 minutes. Remove from the oven. Let stand 10 minutes.
LAURA BREHAUT
Vegetable-focused cuisine has come a long way during acclaimed chef Deborah Madison’s nearly 40-year career.
She’s the author of 14 influential cookbooks.
Madison worked with Alice Waters in the early days of Berkeley, Calif.-institution Chez Panisse. She opened Greens, one of the first farm-to-table restaurants in San Francisco. When she began cooking vegetarian food in the 1970s, it was ripe with connotations.
“We were very sincere, but we didn’t know anything. The food was stodgy and heavy; it had no basis in cuisine or anything for quite a while,” Madison says. “If you were vegetarian, that’s what you were. Today, it can be on Mondays and (the rest of the week) you’re an omnivore … you can be whatever you want. I’m glad to see that actually. It’s loosened up in a lot of ways.”
In her latest collection, Madison looks back at just how far vegetarian food has come.
In My Kitchen features more than 100 recipes, some new and others revised to better reflect how she cooks today.
Ingredient lists are pared back, preparations are simpler and tastes are lighter.
As an example, she offers her eggplant gratin. At Greens, she included a layer of Gruyère cheese, concerned that guests “wouldn’t feel fed” without it.
Today, the golden-domed dish stands on full-flavoured, latesummer eggplants and ricottaParmesan custard.
The richness of the late 1970s and early ’80s is a relic of the era, she says. As values have changed over the decades, so has access to a wider variety of ingredients.
Madison advocates establishing a connection with the food we eat and she writes that growing her own produce has renewed her enthusiasm in cooking.
“It just brings everything into focus in a way that it doesn’t if you’re just getting it at Whole Foods in a big plastic tub. You don’t know who grew it, you don’t know anything about it, how old it is, what chemicals are making it stay fresh,” she says.
While Madison follows a “mostly meatless diet,” she stresses that she doesn’t think of her food as being vegetarian or not vegetarian.
“I think it’s hard when you get really tight about a pattern for yourself. ‘I only eat this’ or ‘I’m gluten-free’ … To me, it’s about opening doors instead of closing them. And that’s really what I’ve always been interested in: ‘Hey, it’s just vegetables,’” she says with a laugh. “It’s beautiful, it’s lovely, it’s delicious and you can have it, too. And you don’t have to call yourself a vegetarian.”