She’d wait until they were meltingly tender before recruiting me to carefully peel them, and then she’d mix them up with lemon juice, tahini, garlic, and olive oil. The resulting dip was simultaneously smoky, savory, bright, and creamy.
Could I say it was the best thing I’d ever had? No. Could I even say it was the best baba ganoush I could have imagined? Uh-uh. But what I had in that first bite was the promise of greatness, and I’ve been seeking that greatness ever since.
Like many great dishes, baba ganoush is extraordinarily simple in concept: Roast some eggplants; scrape out the flesh; mix it with some garlic, lemon, tahini, and olive oil; and serve. It’s in the details where things get a little more complicated.
Choosing and Cooking the Eggplant
First things first: the type of eggplant. Big ol’ globes are usually the eggplant of choice, but I find that smaller Italian eggplants tend to be more intensely flavored, have fewer seeds, and are smaller, and therefore quicker to cook, to boot.