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“ENGRYAH (ARABIC MEAT AND EGGPLANT)” IS IN:

ENGRYAH (ARABIC MEAT AND
EGGPLANT)
 
3/4 cup olive oil
1 lb. lean stew beef or lamb
1 large onion, finely chopped
pinch of black pepper
large pinch of turmeric
1 large eggplant
salt (to sprinkle over eggplant slices)
1 large tomato, thinly sliced
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice (or tamarind syrup)
2/3 cup tomato juice
3 tablespoons sugar

A Baghdad specialty made with eggplant and stew beef or lamb.

Cut beef or lamb evenly into 1 inch cubes, removing any fat.

In a heavy bottomed skillet, brown meat cubes in 1 1/2 tablespoons of the olive oil with onion, pepper and turmeric. When meat has browned, add enough boiling water or beef stock (if available) to cover; reduce heat and simmer for 2 hours, or until meat is tender. Add more water/stock occasionally throughout the cooking if needed, having about 1 1/2 cups of liquid remaining in pan when the meat is done.

While the meat is simmering, remove the peel from the eggplant, leaving on 5 unpeeled lengthwise strips of skin. Slice the eggplant into 1 inch thick circles; sprinkle generously with salt and stack the slices. Set on a paper towel and allow to stand for 1-2 hours. Rinse off salt and pat dry.

Heat the remaining olive oil in a skillet and brown the eggplant slices, turning once. Drain on paper towels or napkins.

After the meat has cooked, layer the fried eggplant over the meat. Place tomato slices on top of the eggplant and sprinkle with lemon juice (or tamarind syrup, if available). Sprinkle with sugar and pour over the tomato juice. Season with salt and pepper.

Simmer over medium heat for 20-30 minutes.

Serve with white rice.

Submitted by: CM

recipe reviews
Engryah (Arabic Meat and Eggplant)
 #62857
 Jim (New Hampshire) says:
I needed to use some eggplant and wanted a main dish not in the eggplant-parm family. This seemed like a great idea. I followed the instructions, using steak not lamb, and it is a very different take on our normal meat and vegetable fare - but I am surprised by how much lemon juice (I don't have Tamarind sauce) was needed. In the end, I would have cut that to about 1/4 cup at most, or about 1 medium lemon's worth of juice or a bit less. The finished sauce as written is extremely "bright" with the lemon and tomato, and not as savory as it was before I added the lemon. Personally, I would also like to add some sliced onion or green pepper when adding the tomato slices for color or variety, no matter how non-traditional that would make the presentation.
   #74068
 Bobfrombristol (District of Columbia) says:
Alternatively. this is an excellent way of using leftover lamb chops or leftover roasted leg of lamb. Just place the cooked lamb in a shallow baking dish and add the fried onions, turmeric, salt and pepper. Then layer on the fried eggplant, fresh (summer preferably) tomatoes and so on as described in the recipe. then bake in the oven - don't think that stove top would do the job correctly. It 's simple but like many good recipes and the combination of lamb, eggplant and tomatoes is classic! Try it!

 

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