How to fry eggplant with less oil?

How to fry eggplant with less oil? - Crop unrecognizable chef pouring oil in frying pan

Frying eggplant is somewhat tricky, as it absorbs oil like a sponge. I read some tricks like brushing egg white or flour on the eggplant slices before frying. None of these tricks are good enough to avoid oil soaking into the eggplant body.

Is there any practical way to fry eggplant using minimal oil?



Best Answer

I had the same problem before, but I learned this great trick from Larousse:

Try sprinkling slices of your eggplant with plenty of salt on both sides and let rest for about fifteen minutes. The salt will draw out a lot of water from the vegetable, making it less spongy.

Then, dry off the slices before adding them to very hot oil in a frying pan. The hot oil should help make a nice sear, sealing off the eggplant, so it doesn't soak up anymore oil. If you need to, turn down the heat after the eggplant is browned to let it finish cooking.




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Oil free golden fried eggplants/aubergines healthy \u0026 delish




More answers regarding how to fry eggplant with less oil?

Answer 2

I've had the best luck using the following method:

  1. Gently rub some salt on the eggplant and leave for a few minutes

  2. Dab the eggplant pieces with a paper towel to absorb the excess moisture.

  3. Microwave (I know, it sounds awful, but give it a shot) the eggplant for couple of minutes. This will partially cook the eggplant and also collapse the air pockets in the eggplant, reducing the amount of oil that it will absorb when frying

  4. Fry with a bit of oil

The result is some of the best fried eggplant I've had.

Answer 3

Spray them lightly with olive oil on both sides, add your choice of fresh herbs¹, put them on an oven shelf and bake them in the oven at 150°C (300°F) until you get the texture you want.

Don't go above that T° as the smoke point for olive oil is 160°C.

Disadvantage: It's not really frying, it's baking
Advantage: no extra sodium! :-)

¹: I like a mix of oregano and thyme myself, but YMMV...

Answer 4

I experimented with salting and brining. Brining the cut-up pieces of aubergine for a few hours gives by far the best results. This methods gets rid of the bitter taste, and even takes care of the slightly allergic reaction I always get eating aubergines. The brine becomes quite brown. They will hardly take up any oil like this, cook quickly and evenly.

I brine in water about a salty as sea water, more or less.

This website agrees with me, check it out!

http://www.seriouseats.com/2015/02/how-to-make-sichuan-hot-and-sour-eggplant-vegan-experience-food-lab-fish-fragrant-eggplant.html

Answer 5

i have grilled egg plant before with a little brush of oil and it came out fine. i think this could work with frying if you fried it on a gentle heat for a longer time so the water was released,and so it steams in its own juice. they are very juicy when they are cooked. i have also baked with minimal oil, just a drizzle and tossed, and into a medium oven. i think keeping the heat down is key as it allows time for the moisture to be released.

Answer 6

According to other answers I read "rub some salt on the eggplant and leave for a few minutes" is great, but it might not be the way to reduce its absorption of oil, I guess !?

My way is :

1) Use round pan

2) Pour some oil (a small amount - but enough amount to fry the eggplants) into the pan

3) Shake the pan after the oil has been cooked. (make sure oil are all over the pan and not gathering in the middle)

4) Fry those eggplants.

Preparations before above steps

  • You can cut the eggplants into round shape (slicing horizontally) or stick shape (slicing vertically).
  • Don't cut into very big size.
  • And yes, rub it with a little salt together with water in a bowl for 10~15 minutes before getting started to fry.

Hope it helps! ;-)

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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