I thought I had used the recipe from Dakshin by Chandra Padmanabhan – a fabulous vegetarian cookbook for South Indian recipes, btw (buy in US or India) – but looks like I took some inspiration from her recipe and then used my own variations. I am sounding a bit clueless because I share recipes here about 2-3 months after cooking them so often forget making it. But don’t worry, before I share anything, I make sure the recipe is complete :). So, let’s go make us some brinjal chutney, shall we? Looking for more Variety Chutney Recipes?
INGREDIENTS:
1 large eggplant or long Asian brinjal (or use 4-5 small Indian brinjals) 2 green chillies 1 tsp + 1 tsp + 1 tsp of oil 1/2 tsp of black mustard seeds 1/2 tsp + 1/4 tsp of urad dal, ulutham paruppu, uzhunnu parippu A pinch of hing, kayam, asafoetida 1 dry red chilli 3/4 tsp of tamarind paste or small piece of tamarind 3-4 minced shallots or 2 tbsp minced onions A few curry leaves
INSTRUCTIONS:
- Chop the eggplant into 1″ cubes and set aside in a bowl of water. Heat 1 tsp oil in a pan and add the mustard seeds.
- When they pop, drain water and add the eggplant pieces. Saute until the pieces soften and turn light brown. Remove to a plate and set aside to cool.
- In the same pan (because we don’t like washing up, do we?), add one more tsp oil, slice and add the green chillies, dry red chilli, and 1/2 tsp urad dal. Saute until the dal turns golden brown.
- Transfer the cooled eggplant, the roasted ingredients from above, tamarind, and some salt to a mixie and blend to a smooth paste.
- Heat the last tsp of oil in the same pan as before (this is clearly a one-pan chutney recipe) and add the sliced shallots/onions, hing, and 1/4 tsp urad dal.
- When the dal turns golden brown, add the curry leaves and the blended chutney paste.
- Mix well and add more salt if needed. Serve warm with dosa, adai, pesarattu, rice, idli, even chapati. Notes: