Honey Garlic Grilled Eggplant

A few months ago, a Beyond Salmon reader asked me why she couldn’t find a single eggplant recipe on my blog. I have nothing against eggplants, I assure you, but they have fallen out of favor with Jason way before I knew him, so I’ve avoided cooking them ever since we met. But my knight in shining armor has been conquering all the weird veggies at a frightening speed. There are so few left that I am not sure what I am going to do once he starts eating them all. It’s always been a bit of a sport for me to get him to eat asparagus, cauliflower, beets, and other denizens of the vegetable kingdom, and I will miss the challenge of inventing the most irresistible, mouth-watering dishes to get certain veggies on Jason’s good side?
Getting an eggplant in our CSA share gave me excuse to use try the cooking technique I picked up from Chef Ruth-Anne Adams during my internship with her. Jason bravely ate a bite. And then another one. And then eggplant was no longer on the forbidden veggie list. In fact, it is now welcomed in our house with open arms.
What makes this recipe so good is the honey-garlic marinade. Honey on eggplant? Let me explain. You won’t really taste the honey, but it helps the eggplant caramelize on the grill. The results are musky and succulent. I am sure that when you try this eggplant you won’t have any shortage of ideas for serving it, but here are a few to get you started:
- With garlicky-minty yogurt as an appetizer
- With goat cheese in a sandwich
- With lamb as a side dish
- With pasta or pizza as a topping
Honey Garlic Grilled Eggplant
Note: Aleppo chili that this recipe calls for is available in Middle Eastern markets. It’s not spicy at all, but sweet and musky. If you don’t have it, substitute it with a pinch of Spanish smoked paprika, or skip it all together.
Serves 2
1 eggplant (2 if using small Italian eggplants)
1 Tbsp honey
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 mashed garlic cloves
1 tsp aleppo chili (optional)
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
Salt and pepper
- Peel stripes of skin off the eggplant to create a zebra like pattern of skin and no-skin. This is not only decorative, but makes the skin easier to bite. Slice eggplant into ½ inch thick circles.
- Lay out a large sheet of paper towels. Sprinkle eggplant generously with salt on both sides and lay out on paper towels. The eggplant will release a lot of liquid. This will help get rid of bitterness (if any) and make the eggplant more succulent and less watery after it’s cooked. Let sit for 15 minutes, then dry both sides well with paper towels.
- In a large bowl, mix honey, olive oil, garlic, chili, balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper to taste. Dunk both sides of each eggplant slice into this marinade.
- Preheat the grill to high. Grab a wad of paper towel with tongs, dip it in oil, and brush it on the grill.
- Place the eggplant slices on the grill, cover, and turn down the heat to medium. Grill until marked, about 3 minutes. Turn 90 degrees to make cross-hatch grill marks. Grill until marked, about 3 more minutes.
- Brush the slices with remaining marinade, flip and repeat the grilling procedure on the other side. Regulate heat so that the eggplant is browning, but not burning. Remove to a plate, and drizzle with olive oil.

20 comments:
Lovely flavors in this.
Sounds like a definite candidate for my grill. BTW, you can order Aleppo peppers from Penzeys.
Looks beautiful & delicious. Thankfully it's cooling down a bit here so firing up the grill won't make the entire area feel like a furnace!
Hi Kalyn,
Thanks for letting me know about Penzeys. I haven't tried them yet because I live next door to 3 Armenian and Middle Eastern Markets, but it's good to know that it's possible to order more obscure spices on-line.
Cheers,
-Helen
Deliciously looking! Can't wait to share this to my mom. :)
I love eggplant, and this looks so beautiful! The lazy cook in me loves the simple and available ingredients (apart from Aleppo, which you say can be skipped). Thanks!
I LOVE eggplant. I usually just grill it with olive oil, salt and pepper, but I'll have to do it this way. It's hardly any more effort. I liked reading about your Jason trying new veggies. My husband is a very adventurous eater, but it has been fun to see him grow to love eggplants, beets and squash as much as I do.
Thanks for the eggplant recipe! I've been dying to make something (anything!) with eggplant. Perhaps I'll go to the Farmer's Market near work tomorrow and pick up an eggplant or two to make this.
Hi Helen - you know, I've never been a big eggplant fan but this recipe still really beckons to me... I think I'll have to try it and break free of my non-eggplanted-existence. hope all is well!
Yum, what a great way to prepare eggplant- very unique.
Being addicted to grilled eggplant (and grilled zucchini....:-) - I will definitely try this recipe very soon
Thank you!
I'm back. Just letting you know that I am spotlighting this recipe as one of my South Beach Recipes of the Week where I feature SB friendly recipes from other food blogs. It includes your photo (with a photo credit for you, of course) and a link back to the recipe. Looks fantastic!
We tried this recipe a few times and served it to guests - everyone loved it. We don't own a grill (yet), but just did it on a Forman's grill and it still worked out beautifully.
I think the drying it out first is what makes a big difference.
Thanks!
I am getting people (my boyfriend is one) to eat eggplant the never eat eggplant. This is great and let me use a host of Chinese eggplant that I didn't know what to do with.
Thanks for the recipe!
Svetlana
http://sarsmis.livejournal.com/27479.html
great recipe! my husband loved it so I am making it again. I don't have a grill where we are so I grill in the oven--just be sure to use nonstick spray! I got stuck on carmelized juices last time and had to run to the store for brillos pads!
Heidi
Excellent recipe. I made it tonight and we enjoyed it thoroughly.
BTW - I substituted in the smoked paprika and it was excellent.
I just tried this tonight, it was awesome!
This was really good. We didn't have the Aleppo peppers so we used three parts sweet paprika and one part cayenne. I also added that to the rice we served it with. Great idea for something new to do with eggplant!
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