This roasted eggplant is made with rosemary and olive oil for the best tasting roasted eggplant ever. An ideal side or appetizer.
The other week my sister and brother-in-law got a sitter for their kids and came over to cook us dinner, at our place.
It was quite a treat! They made the main course and we supplied the dessert. Honestly as a food blogger this was no trouble, I had like 3 different kinds of desserts on hand.
Anyway, one of the things they cooked for us was roasted eggplant.
Now if you’ve spent any time as a vegetarian or vegan, then you have probably been served some oily eggplant at a fair few events. In fact this is often the go-to thing to serve vegans/vegetarians when various non-vegan chefs have no idea what else to serve. But this eggplant is different.
I can tell you that I had never had roasted eggplant quite this good!
This roasted eggplant is made with minimal oil, it’s infused with rosemary and roasted to absolute perfection. It will seriously be the best roasted eggplant you’ve ever tasted too! You’ll also love our roasted garlic recipe.
How To Make Roasted Eggplant
You will find full instructions and measurements in the recipe card at the bottom of the post. This is a summary of the process to go along with the process photos.
So it’s really easy, you just take 2 eggplants and cut them in half. Then you take a knife and cut deep diagonal lines from one side to the other and diagonal lines the other way so that they intersect each other.
Then you sprinkle salt all over the tops, and squeeze them on each side to open up the diagonal grooves and get some salt down there as well. Then you let them sit (face up) for 30 minutes for that salt to draw out some excess moisture and any bitterness from the eggplant.
After 30 minutes, you squeeze off the excess water, blot any excess salt off the tops with a paper towel (just a light blotting, no need to try and wipe salt off, some saltiness is good!)
Then you brush with olive oil and sprinkle with dried rosemary.
Transfer to a parchment lined baking tray and bake (upside down) for around an hour.
The eggplants will collapse as you see above when they are cooked.
Then you take them out of the oven, and let them cool for around 20 minutes before flipping them over with a spatula and serving!
The cubes of roasted eggplant are perfectly roasted and ready to be grabbed with a fork.
This makes an ideal appetizer or side dish.
Choose Good Eggplants
Just a word of warning about eggplants though. Sometimes even putting salt on and letting them sit for 30 minutes doesn’t draw out all the bitterness. The trick is in getting really fresh good eggplant to start off with. Older, less fresh eggplant tend to be more bitter.
The very large eggplant are also more likely to be bitter than smaller ones.
A little bitterness is no train smash though! It’s usually still delicious, because the other flavors (from the saltiness and dried rosemary), counteract any remaining bitterness that they might have.
The ones you see pictured before you were simply delicious, perfectly roasted with the perfect blend of flavors from the eggplant, olive oil, salt and rosemary – not a hint of any bitterness (and they were very large eggplants too).
More Delicious Eggplant Recipes
Did you make this recipe? Be sure to leave a comment and rating below!
Roasted Eggplant (Aubergine)
Instructions
- Slice the eggplants in half and then take a knife and cut deep diagonal lines from one side to the other and then cut diagonal lines the other way so they intersect each other.
- Sprinkle with salt all over the tops and squeeze the eggplants on either side to open up the diagonal grooves and get some salt into the grooves as well. Don't use a huge amount of salt, around 1 teaspoon in total is enough.
- Leave the eggplants lying face up for 30 minutes, allowing the salt to draw excess moisture and bitterness out.
- After 30 minutes, squeeze off the excess water and blot with a paper towel to remove excess salt.
- Brush with olive oil and sprinkle with dried rosemary and then place face down on a parchment lined baking tray.
- Bake in the oven for around 60 minutes at 400°F (200°C).
- When the eggplants look sort of collapsed, then they are ready.
- Remove from the oven and allow to cool for around 15-20 minutes before using a spatula to flip them over and serve with an extra sprinkle of dried rosemary.
Robinakagoatmom says
A friend sent me home with fresh garden eggplant and wanted to try something new. Delicious, amazing, how can I make it any other way now? Thanks for sharing.
Alison Andrews says
So glad you enjoyed it! 🙂
Amanda says
This was really good! I put the roasted cubes on top of a salad and it was perfect. Thank you for sharing.
Glynis Caesar says
Absolutely divine. Thank you, for my new, 3 ingredients meal! Mmmmmkisss!
Alison Andrews says
Awesome! You’re very welcome! 🙂
Tam says
Can you please post the baking degrees with your recipes? Thank you!
Tam
Alison Andrews says
Hi Tam, we definitely do! At number 6 in the instructions it says bake at 400°F.
Lisa Kuppens says
Thank you for this delicious recipe! Eggplant is one of my favourite vegetables and this recipe gives them all the credits they deserve. We cook them on the BBQ, first upside down to grill and then on the skin untill they are tender. It gives them a lovely smoked taste which combines very well with the rosemary.
Alison Andrews says
That sounds divine! Thanks so much for sharing Lisa and the awesome review. xo
JOC says
Thank you for this eggplant recipe and it is without tomato sauce which is what I was looking for. I only made one large eggplant but had my non-vegan eating son try it and he couldn’t believe how good it tasted.
Alison Andrews says
So glad it was good! Thanks so much for sharing and the wonderful review. 🙂
Karen says
Didn’t change a thing! Delicious. Actually had it for dessert after my meal.
Alison Andrews says
Wonderful! 🙂
ALISON ROSS says
sounds so lovely and would like to try it ….could you please tell me what setting the oven should be on?
Alison Andrews says
Hi Alison, it should be on bake, and it should bake for 60 minutes at 400°F (200°C). 🙂
ALISON ROSS says
Hello Alison,
Thank you very much for forgetting back to me. I`ve actually tried them already. Unfortunately didn`t have Rosemary so used Basil instead! It was really delicious …so thank you for that!
Nandalee says
Love this recipe! Is the carb count correct at 34? That seems a bit high.
Alison Andrews says
Hi Nandalee, so glad you like the recipe! 🙂 I use cronometer.com for my nutrition information and this was the carb count, they are fairly large eggplants. 🙂 If you have a nutrition counter you prefer to use then enter the size eggplant you’re using and your exact ingredients for the most accurate results.
Lana says
Simple and delicious! I should have removed more salt though. My husband loves salt so didn’t mind it.
I didn’t have dried rosemary so I substituted herbs d Provence which has rosemary in it. Will add garlic powder next time! I think an hour was a bit too long in my oven. Will try fifty minutes. We loved the delicious skin too! Thank you for sharing??
Alison Andrews says
Awesome Lana, thanks for sharing, glad you liked it! 🙂
Amanda says
This should be called “Elegant Eggplant”. It’s known as the “king of vegetables” in India (even though eggplant is a fruit), and rightfully so! This dish was so full of flavor and beauty – it truly is fit for a king. Thank you for helping me see eggplant in a whole new way! The recipe is en pointe. No bumps or hurdles. Very straight forward. Thank you so much, Alison!
Alison Andrews says
So glad you liked it! Elegant eggplant it is indeed! Thanks for posting! 🙂
Sue R. says
I just found this recipe,and it reminded me of the way I grill eggplant — but with the cut side up and with glugs of olive oil.
This is so much healthier, and the eggplant was more uniformly cooked. Plus its creamy, rosemary infused flavor just can’t be matched.
My only hitch was that I used a mortar and pestle to crush my dried rosemary, and the rosemary discolored the finished eggplant gray in places. Maybe I will try fresh next time.
Alison Andrews says
So glad you liked it! 🙂 Oh I see about the dried rosemary, I have usually bought it already crushed and it’s been fine in that respect. But I think fresh rosemary would be great too!
Marida says
When I first saw this recipe I thought what a simple recipe. But I had some aubergines and tried this and oh my this is so delicious. It has totally changed my mind about aubergines, before I didn’t really like them, now I crave them!
Alison Andrews says
That’s brilliant Marida! So glad you enjoy them now! 🙂
Anna Andrews says
Lovely, easy and tasty starter
Karen says
Simple and delicious, oh my word!