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The Kitchn: How to make eggplant bacon

By Megan Splawn on

TheKitchn.com

Eggplant is a nightshade often used as a substitute for meat in a number of dishes -- from bolognese to burgers -- so it only seems natural that we try our hand at transforming it into bacon. The web is littered with recipes for baking eggplant in the oven in attempts to pass it off as a pork replacement, but this eggplant bacon is different. We're taking eggplant back to the skillet, seasoning it for bacon success, and frying it up -- just like the real stuff.

Picking and prepping eggplant

Long, skinny varieties, such as Japanese or Chinese eggplant, are ideal for turning into bacon. A sharp mandoline easily turns them into narrow strips for flavoring and frying into bacon. Since most mega-markets carry globe varieties, we're using a vegetable peeler to whittle down these plumper specimens into nice, narrow strips that mimic the shape of pork belly bacon.

Use a sharp vegetable peeler to thinly and efficiently cut the eggplant into long, thin strips. First peel a strip of the eggplant's skin away and discard. Then peel a few strips from the unpeeled area -- these strips will be seasoned and fried up as faux-bacon. Give the eggplant a quarter turn and begin the process again. The idea is to leave a small strip of peel on some pieces and work around the eggplant's spongy center. Save the eggplant center for roasting later.

Why we fry

 

Frying thin eggplant slices in a bit of olive on the stovetop beats the pants off of oven-frying eggplant for bacon. Pan-frying gives you complete control over the cooking of the eggplant, which means you're far less likely to burn the bacon. It is also dramatically faster than baking. Pan-frying also contributes a fair amount of fat to the eggplant, crisping it while giving it a satisfying, unctuous quality. Perhaps you're wondering how to avoid a soggy, oily mess. There's a trick for that too.

Single-sided seasoning

You'll notice that the eggplant bacon is only seasoned on one side and fried first on the unseasoned side. Quickly seasoning one side of the thin strips just before frying keeps the eggplant from expelling excess moisture, therefore preventing steaming in the hot oil. Frying seasoned-side up first keeps the seasoning from burning while the eggplant crisps.

How to use eggplant bacon

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