Prep Time: 1 hours, 20 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Ingredients:
- For the filling:
- 12 small eggplants (3 pounds)
- Minced herbs (parsley, mint etc)
- Pepper
- 1/3 cup olive oil
- 1/4 pound bread crumbs
- 2 ounces black olives from Gaeta (youll want mild black olives), pitted
- 1 smoked herring of the kind preserved in oil, boned and minced
- 4 anchovy fillets, minced
- 1 clove garlic, minced (optional)
- 1 tablespoon salted capers, well rinsed.
- For the sauce:
- 1 3/4 pound ripe plum tomatoes, blanched, peeled and chopped
- 1 clove garlic
- Parsley, minced (to taste)
- 1/2 cup dry white wine
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- Basil to taste
- Salt
- Pepper
Preparation:
Wash, and cut the tops off the eggplants (dont peel them), setting the tops aside. Using a sharp knife, scoop out as much of the inside of the eggplants as you can, setting the pulp in a bowl of water to keep it from darkening.When you are done scooping, squeeze the pulp dry and sauté it in the oil with the minced herbs and garlic and pepper. After a few minutes stir in the bread crumbs, then the olives and the fish. Blend the filling, then mix in the capers and check seasoning.
Use the mixture to fill the eggplants, cap them, and arrange them in an oiled baking dish. Next, prepare the tomato sauce by sautéing the remaining clove of garlic in just a little oil, then stirring in the remaining ingredients and cooking the sauce for a few minutes.
Carefully pour the sauce over the eggplant, add the wine, and cook in a moderate oven, adding more liquid if necessary to keep the sauce from drying out, until the eggplants are easily penetrated by a fork.
Note: Ms. Francesconi, who included this recipe in La Cucina Napoletana, notes that the herring is a substitute for tarantello, a kind of fish thats almost impossible to find today. Should you prefer, you can use an equivalent amount of tuna packed in oil.
A wine? I would go with a fairly rich white, along the lines of a Falanghina del Taburno.


