Cordoba Beer-Battered Eggplant
- 1- 1/4 cup White Flour
- 1/2 bottles Beer (preferably An Amber Ale), 12 Ounce Bottle
- 1/2 teaspoons Baking Powder
- 1 teaspoon Paprika
- 1 clove Garlic, Minced
- 1 whole Eggplant
- 1 whole Egg
- 1/4 cups Milk
- 1/2 teaspoons Each Of Salt And Pepper
- 1 teaspoon Salt
- 1/2 cups Flour In A Bowl For Dredging
- Canola Oil, For Frying
- Make the batter first.
- Combine the flour, beer, baking powder, paprika and minced garlic in a medium sized bowl and let it sit for an hour to bubble up.
- (You can add a little extra beer if necessary.
- It should be the consistency of a thick pancake batter.)
- Meanwhile, peel and thinly slice the eggplant.
- Each disc should be no more than 1/3 in thickness.
- (A tip for peeling the eggplant: using a sharp vegetable peeler towards your body, with a gentle zig-zagging motion works best for the slick rind of an eggplant.)
- Spread out the eggplant discs on a large cookie sheet and salt both sides.
- Let the salted eggplant sit for about 30 minutes.
- Then rinse each disc well (youll see brown liquid forming on the eggplant as its drawing out bitterness and moisture.)
- Dry each slice of eggplant with a paper towel, before deep frying.
- Preheat your oil (whether in a deep fryer or deep skillet) to medium hot.
- If you dont own a deep fryer, you can certainly cook them in a deep skillet with about an inch of canola or olive oil.
- This takes a little fine-tuning and I usually do a couple of test slices in the oil first.
- When the oil is ready, the test slice should quickly bubble but not spoke.
- Whisk together the egg and milk in a small bowl.
- Put the 1/2 cup of flour in another bowl.
- Soak each eggplant slice in the egg and milk mixture, and then dredge it in the flour.
- This helps hold the batter on the eggplant.
- If you skip this step, the batter will just slide off and end up in clumps in the hot oil.
- Lastly, dip the eggplant in the batter until well coated, but not too thick.
- Let the excess drip off before you put it in hot oil.
- The frying process takes a bit of time so I usually set a cookie sheet with a couple of layers of paper towels next to my deep fryer to place each slice there after frying.
- They can be kept hot in the oven at 250 F while youre making the rest.
- They usually stay fairly hot even if you dont put them in the oven, if you work fast and orderly.
- Put the eggplant into the fryer or skillet in a single layer (you should do this in small batches).
- Be sure to let the eggplant get golden brown on one side before flipping it over.
- Serve hot with honey drizzled over the top.
- The honey really adds an extra element of amazing!
white flour, bottles, baking powder, paprika, clove garlic, eggplant, egg, milk, salt, salt, flour, canola oil
Taken from tastykitchen.com/recipes/appetizers-and-snacks/cordoba-beer-battered-eggplant/ (may not work)