Best Imam Bayildi - Greek Eggplant in tomato and mint sauce

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  • Опубліковано 19 лис 2020
  • Imam Bayildi is an excellent vegetable side dish. It certainly shows the Ottoman influence over Greek cuisine. This is a dish with a legend behind it... google it for a fun look at this story. Excellent served hot, warm, or even at room temperature.
    Ingredients:
    2 lg eggplant
    1/2-1 6 oz (157) ml can of tomato paste
    1 lg onion
    2 sprigs of mint - basil is another option
    3 cloves garlic
    salt & pepper, to taste
    olive oil for frying and cooking
    water, as needed
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 47

  • @jimmydemetriou7847
    @jimmydemetriou7847 3 роки тому

    Lovely recipe, thanks. X

  • @momowhatagwaan5970
    @momowhatagwaan5970 3 роки тому +4

    Made the recipe! It was good 👍 😋

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  3 роки тому +2

      I am so glad you liked it!! It is one of my favourite ways to have eggplant. Thank you very much for the comment!! :)

  • @MSS726
    @MSS726 2 роки тому +3

    This version looks delicious!

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Hi Mari... thank you very much for the compliment... I hope you try it!!

  • @KitchenGrannyHeike
    @KitchenGrannyHeike 3 роки тому

    mouthwatering
    i love Eggplant.Very good sharing like 2 full watch..

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  3 роки тому

      Me too... love this recipe!! The combination of flavours is very good, in my opinion. :)

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому +2

    My mom always used both spearmint and parsley for the filling. Plus green bell pepper and one large tomato diced.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Again, sorry for the lateness - no notification.
      Sounds like your mom was making a different dish than my moms, since I see in the other comment that she stuffed her eggplant. That is not this dish, however. Mom did a stuffed eggplant too, but we call those gemista ie: stuffed. No bell pepper or parsley in mom's version... and she did do it with fresh tomato for the sauce when they were ripe but I prefer the richness of the tomato paste and it is available all year round.

  • @GreenWitch1
    @GreenWitch1 Рік тому +1

    That looks amazing!

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  Рік тому +1

      Hi Michele.... thank you for the kind words... it tastes even better.... do try it and let me know what you think.. It's an awesome dish!!

    • @GreenWitch1
      @GreenWitch1 Рік тому

      @@MomsGreekKitchen I tried a variation tonight with olives & capers, but the flavors were so incredibly strong, I couldn’t eat it. Tomorrow, I’ll add some chicken breasts & some stock to it. We’ll see. I cooked all day 🥲 I roasted the garlic, sautéed the onion, did the eggplant just like you did & added some fried mushrooms. It seemed like it would be perfect, but it was so flavorful, I could only eat a few bites. I’ll let you know how it tastes tomorrow after I tone it down a bit. Thanks for getting back to me 😊

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  Рік тому +1

      @@GreenWitch1 Mom's recipe is not overpowering... olives and capers would totally change the delicate balance of flavours in mom's dish.. I wish you luck with trying to modify the recipe you made... all mom's recipe needs is some great bread to dip in it... nothing else is missing or needed. Good luck!! ;^)

    • @GreenWitch1
      @GreenWitch1 Рік тому

      @@MomsGreekKitchen Yep! I made it too salty for sure, but the flavors were so overpowering, I couldn’t eat but a few bites. My bad. I tried mixing a couple of recipes together. I’ll fix it & then make another attempt next week. You’re the best!

  • @johnnycee888
    @johnnycee888 2 роки тому

    Outstanding video. Thx. Actually I'm amazed at so few comments. I guess everyone is too busy eating Imam Bayildi.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Hi Johnny... thank you for the kind words.... and the funny... hahaha...
      Thanks again!!! :)

  • @khadijahalharshani7001
    @khadijahalharshani7001 3 роки тому

    Yuum gonna make it

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      I am so sorry Khadijah.... I never received a notification of your comment... :(
      I hope you tried the recipe and you liked it as much as I do!!

  • @rinanorich6322
    @rinanorich6322 2 роки тому

    so tasty! what do you traditionaly serve it with ? just bread or some other sidedish like rice ?

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому +1

      Hi Rinanorich... This would be one dish mom would put on the table... so a side-dish of its own, really. Bread was ALWAYS on the table...haha.. most Greek tables, at least of my mom's time, would be a meat, grilled, roasted, or cooked in sauce, with at least one vegetable dish, such as this eggplant dish, olives, cheese, pickled vegetables or cured meats or fish...and lots of bread to go with all of that. As a kid, I loved the flavour of the sauce, so would dip bread in it, but the texture of the eggplant was too much for me, so never ate that until I got older. Still love to dip bread into it, that's for sure... hehehe
      Thank you for the kind words... :)

    • @rinanorich6322
      @rinanorich6322 2 роки тому

      @@MomsGreekKitchen all of the food sound simply amazing 😍 would love to try a full greek lunch sometimes 😊 i will check your other recipes for the inspiration, thank you!

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому +1

      @@rinanorich6322 Please do... and thank you again...

  • @lizavartanian281
    @lizavartanian281 3 роки тому

    Imam bayildiii

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  3 роки тому

      I'm sorry... I do not understand your comment. Please clarify. Thank you.

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому

    My mom always rinses the salted eggplant in col running water quickly and patted them dry with a kitchen towel nefore drying in olive oil, staarting with skin side down. for 10 minutes then the cut sides for 5 minutes each. The skins should turn brown and the cut sides should also form a brown crust. Use plenty of olive oil. The egg plant should become warm butter soft, or like brie cheese soft.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      I am so sorry for the late reply.... I did not get a notification for this comment....
      Thanks for the information of your mom's version. Interesting to see who the same dish, at least in name, can have so many variations.

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому +1

    My mo cut her eggplant in halftop to bottom and then cut each half into quatyrtds. fry them skin side down first then the cut sides. and set aside to cook one the filling is done cooking she would split each piece darefully so as not to cut through the skin. then stuff each piece with a tablesppon of four of the filling. The eggplant pieces she placed in a baking tray and bake for a half hour at 350F. She sould sreave it with pilaf and a green saladm abd some pita bread to dip into the sauce.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Again, sorry for the lateness.... yes... it seems your mom was not making this dish, but a stuffed eggplant dish... something my mom would call gemista...but with a meat filling. Regional variations of the same name, perhaps. But since this channel is a tribute to my mom's Greek cuisine, the way she cooked it... I present HER versions here.
      Thank you for the comments.... :)

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому

    My grandmother was Armenian and she spoke turkish and it is spelled Imam Bialdi but is pronounced Imam Bindy. I hope that helps. :)

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Oh?! Interesting... bindy?? Not bialdi... how can it be pronounced so differently from the spelling... hahahaha...
      Thank you!!

    • @johnnycee888
      @johnnycee888 2 роки тому

      @@MomsGreekKitchen Have been to Greece several times. My relatives rarely say both words. Usually they just say Imam. Everyone knows what they mean.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      @@johnnycee888 That's interesting... language does change, doesn't it...
      You said that was in Greece where the language is constantly changing, as all languages do... but in the diaspora, the traditions tend to stay more stagnant. Case in point, I have heard from quite a few Greece-living Greeks who say my mom's version of a recipe is NOT traditional... what they don't realize is that the recipe in GREECE has gone through changes... whereas mom has made hers the way she always did while living in Greece... and then have other diaspora Greeks confirm that their moms made the recipe the same or very close to mom's version. It was an interesting and fun discovery for me....

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому +1

    The water steams the onion instead of caramelizing them. You want them to become transluscent.

    • @Shaden0040
      @Shaden0040 2 роки тому +1

      dice the bell pepper. use black pepper to season, and use a little salt.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      The water does steam the onions, preventing burning when you saute them later on. Gives them time to caramelize nicely without a chance of burning. At least, that is what I think the reason for the water is. And NO bell pepper in mom's version... and there is salt and pepper in the recipe, if you check again... thanks for the comments. :)

  • @antonellamaddy8685
    @antonellamaddy8685 Рік тому +1

    There is no way mama told you to burnt it🥴

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  Рік тому

      Correct... mama did not tell me to burn it... and I didn't burn it. Eggplant tastes best when dark brown, if you ask me. Everyone who has tried this or my moussaka, again where I like my eggplant dark, have raved about them. If you don't like yours that dark, that is the nice thing about cooking...you can make it the way you like. I prefer my eggplant well done because the flavour is so much richer.
      Kali Orexi!! :)

  • @nikintinia1732
    @nikintinia1732 4 дні тому

    It is not a Greek recipe, it’s a Turkish recipe which we Greeks adopted.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  4 дні тому

      Thank you for the comment, but if I am not mistaken, I SAY that it is a Turkish recipe and even detail the legend of where it gets its name. Did you not watch the video?
      We adopted/perfected many recipes of our Turkish oppressors... 400 years... you would think us 'borrowing' their cuisine is at least a small part in exchange for being oppressed, no?

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 2 роки тому

    I have noticed that female eggplant have 3 times the seeds of male eggplant.

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  2 роки тому

      Thank you for the comment. I have not noticed this... could be where I am located and the eggplant maybe picked underripe but I have checked both male and female eggplants and they don't seem much different, but that is just my experience... thanks again for the info and comment. :)

  • @eradgz0924
    @eradgz0924 Рік тому +1

    Man that’s Turkish

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  Рік тому

      And Greece was Greek before the Turks 'borrowed' it for 400 years. The Greeks 'borrowing' Turkish recipes is the MINIMUM that is owed to them....no??

  • @Sevil2024
    @Sevil2024 Рік тому +3

    NOT Greek! The name itself is Turkish. Imam is a Muslim clergy and Bayıldı means fainted (from pleasure in this case, swooning is a good description).

    • @MomsGreekKitchen
      @MomsGreekKitchen  Рік тому +1

      Thanks for the comment.... and yes, I know it is not Greek, per se, but a lot of the food of that area is intermingled, as it would be with 400 years of Ottoman rule over Greece... much of Greek food is Turkish influenced... this is one of those. This is what my mom called it and how she made it. This channel is a tribute to her.

    • @nadineissa4277
      @nadineissa4277 3 місяці тому

      We dont care most of turkish food are influenced by greek and middle eastern (syrian and lebanese) mongols didnt have cuisine or traditions 😂