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Moussaka - daft question?

17 replies

Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 13:05

home made moussaka for tea tonight - first effort and question is---do I need to peel the aubergines before I fry them in olive oil? some recipes say yep and some no! advice purlease, while I go and brown the lanb!

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suzywong · 21/10/2005 13:06

no don't peel the aubergines

Enid · 21/10/2005 13:06

no dont peel them

and I brush a baking sheet with olive oil, put the sliced aubergine on, drizzle with more olive oil and bake for 25 mins or so, turning once. Easier than standing over a frying pan and they soak up less fat.

JanH · 21/10/2005 13:06

Not, I think.

(Am not a cook but whenever I've had it the peel has been on.)

auntymandy · 21/10/2005 13:06

no
What a waste of time!!
Do the easiest.
Never heard of peeling it.

auntymandy · 21/10/2005 13:07

INGREDIENTS

700 gr. (1 ½ lb.) shoulder of lamb. (boneless weight)

700 gr. (1 ½ lb.) aubergines

175 gr. (6 oz.) onions

225 gr. (½ lb.) tomatoes

150 ml. (Ό pt.) olive oil

5 ml. (1 teaspoon) ground allspice

15 ml. (1 tablespoon) chopped parsley

425 ml. (Ύ pt.) bιchamel sauce

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Coating

1 large egg

large pinch grated nutmeg

75 gr. (3 oz.) Cheddar cheese

Preparation

  1. Wipe, top and tail, but do not peel the aubergines. Cut them into slices about 6 mm. (Ό in.) thick. Put into a colander with a light sprinkling of salt between the layers and leave to drain for half an hour.

  2. Peel and slice the onions; peel, de-seed and chop the tomatoes.

  3. When ready to cook, pat the aubergine slices dry with paper.

  4. Heat 45 ml. (3 tbsp.) oil in a frying pan over a low heat and, when hot, fry the aubergine slices gently until tender, in batches, turning once. Lift out and drain on absorbent paper. Add extra oil between batches as necessary.

  5. When all are fried, make the oil in the pan up to 30 ml. again. When this is hot, fry the onions gently for about 5 minutes, until soft and pale gold.

  6. Add the meat and fry. Add the tomatoes, allspice, parsley and salt and pepper to taste. Stir well, cover and cook very gently for 25 to 20 minutes.

  7. Heat oven to 180-C. (350 F.), gas mark 4.

  8. In a deep, ovenproof dish, arrange alternate layers of aubergines and meat, finishing with aubergines.

  9. Warm the sauce over a low heat. Separate the egg and, off the heat, stir the yolk, nutmeg and salt and pepper to taste, into the sauce. Reserve the egg white for use in another dish.

  10. Pour the sauce evenly over the surface of the dish. Grate the cheese over the sauce.

Bake in the oven for 45 minutes until the topping is golden and bubbling.

The popularity of ?Moussaka? has deservedly spread. It is a delicious combination of meat, vegetables and a thick, rich sauce. It?s the most traditional Greek dish and also absolutely delicious!

auntymandy · 21/10/2005 13:08
  1. Wipe, top and tail, but do not peel the aubergines
suzywong · 21/10/2005 13:09

what is "coating"?

God this is making me drool for Waitrose Vegetble moussaka, all I ate when PG

Hell fire I miss Waitrose

Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 13:12

Many thanks - must say I was going down the do not peel route - trouble is when I used to eat it in Greece on holiday it was usually after several Amstels and I couldn't remember!!

shall go and carry on crying at the onions now!

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auntymandy · 21/10/2005 13:37

think coating is just the crumby top! I just copied and pasted!!!

Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 13:56

OK basic moussaka made, I roasted the aubergines as Enid suggested and they look great - I've worked out that I can make 2 huge ones for the price of one of Tesco's finest ones! Just hope we like it!

Sauce can go on later, time for a cuppa!

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aloha · 21/10/2005 13:57

Oh Enid, why didn't I think of that. Fantastic. Will make moussaka at the weekend - perfect food for two adults, one teenager, one four year old AND a baby!

auntymandy · 21/10/2005 13:58

never mad mousakka. Is it just lasagne with aubergine instead of lasagne sheets?

Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 14:16

use lamb mince and the finished 'product' should be firmer than lasagne, especially the top. God knows what mine will taste like though!

dh finishes school for half term and he's been like a zombie for the last few days, thought I'd make the effort and cook a nice meal!

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auntymandy · 21/10/2005 14:19

sure it willbe yummy

Medea · 21/10/2005 14:47

I'm of Greek background and follow a traditional way of dealing with the aubergine that my aunties & grannies did. Whiile you don't strictly need to bother peeling them, I do peel them in strips lengthwise. So you have a inch of peel and then a inch of no peel, then an inch of peel and an inch of no peel etc. When it comes time to eating it, you're not overwhelmed with peel. And it takes no time to peel off a strip here, a strip there.

I also fry (or actually, I grill them on a baking sheet as Enid does) the aubergine in slices of lengthwise cuts instead of widthwise. . .it works a bit better when it's time to put the slices in the baking dish. But basically there are no real rules, as you've dicovered from so many varied recipes.

By the wayk I think the biggest pitfall with moussaka is making it too greasy, so the business of frying the aubergine slices is risky. . .better to grill them brushed with minimal oil.

Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 22:46

Just to let everyone know it was gorgeous!! along with a couple of cans of stella and a botle of wine!

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Lucyfercat · 21/10/2005 22:47

bottle oops off to watch jonny woss in bed now - can' type bit yiddly

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