This Eggplant curry is not for the faint hearted! Eggplant (Brinjal) is roasted rather than fried for a healthier yet equally delicious alternative (high temp does the trick here), then simmered in an intensely spiced Indian curry sauce so it sucks up the flavour and partially collapses to create a big pot of juicy (delicious) mush.
Low cal at 250 calories and incidentally vegan. Yay vegans!
Eggplant Curry
This is a curry inspired by the famous Sri Lankan eggplant curry we love at New Shakthi Sri Lankan in Homebush (Sydney, Australia). It’s one of those “hole in the wall” places where the servers get grumpy if you dare to take the time to mull over which 3 curries you want in your lunch pack.
“Hurry, hurry, people are waiting!” they say, gesturing at the queue forming behind you.
And, flustered, I quickly jab my finger at a bunch of curries – because really, it doesn’t matter what you choose because everything there is good (and cheap).
Their eggplant curry (Brinjal curry) is particularly famous – it has an intensely deep, smoky and sweet taste we suspect comes from deep frying the eggplant to get massive caramelisation and rich, oily goodness.
This recipe is a more achievable and healthier home version, and because we can’t replicate the same Sri Lankan curry flavour without deep frying, we’ve had to head to a more general South Indian style.
But the results are no less tasty! And much less oil!
What’s the difference between North and South Indian curries?
India is a country of 1.3 billion people, with a deep, rich and complex food history that is highly regional. I do not pretend to be an expert, but this is a super-generalised attempt to explain features of northern versus southern Indian food!
North Indian cuisine is historically influenced by the Arabs and Middle East, so tends to use more meat and dairy, with foods based on yogurt, ghee, and nuts – like Butter Chicken, Tikka Masala and Rogan Josh. Wheat is the staple crop, so you find flatbreads such as chapaati, paratha and naan are the more traditional meal accompaniments. The tandoor also originates from the north, hence dishes like Tandoori Chicken come from the north.
South Indian food tends to be less meat-oriented, with vegetarian or seafood dishes made without dairy most common — such as this Eggplant Curry. Tropical produce naturally features heavily – coconut, tamarind, curry leaves, local vegetables distinct to the region — and the food can also be spicier. Rice and legumes are also the staples in the south, and from this part of the country hail legendary Indian dishes like dosa, vada and idli.
What goes in eggplant curry
Here’s what goes in the Eggplant Curry.
Don’t fret if you can’t get all the spices – I have solutions for you! See the recipe card notes.
The two ingredients in this eggplant curry that makes it stand out as a truly authentic South Indian Curry are black mustard seeds and curry leaves.
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Eggplant – small to medium eggplants are best so every piece has a bit of skin which helps them hold together when simmering in the sauce, rather than turning into a big pot of eggplant puree. Asian eggplants (the thin ones) will also work here;
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Black mustard seeds – they look like poppyseeds but have a slight wasabi-like bite to them. And they smell Indian, not Japanese! 😂 Not spicy, more a fresh zing. It’s about $1.50 in small packs at Indian grocery stores – I go to Indian Emporium in Dee Why on the Northern Beaches, Sydney. Also sold in the Indian food section at some Woolworths (Australia) $1.70, and also sold online – small, light pack so postage should be minimal! Also used in Dal and in this Vegetable Samosa Pie which is to-die for!
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Curry leaves – it smells like curry powder, but in fresh curry leaf form! (Though just so you know, curry powder isn’t derived from curry leaves 🙂 ) Curry leaves add incredible curry perfume into anything it’s used in. Fairly accessible nowadays for Sydney-siders, sold at Harris Farms, most Coles and Woolworths. I intend to find a plant! They keep for ages in the fridge – as in several weeks – or can be frozen. This too is used in Dal and the Vegetable Samosa Pie. Throw in 10 or so when cooking Curried Rice, or into this Indian Chickpea Curry or Vegetable Curry – it will really take it to a new level! Substitute: dried curry leaves (not quite the same, but it’s the best sub) or Garam Masala powder;
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The other spices – nothing out of the ordinary here, everything you find at local grocery stores;
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Coconut – coconut milk or cream is fine here. Only 3 tablespoons – it doesn’t make it taste of coconut, but it’s remarkable what a difference it makes to add a touch of luxury to the mouthfeel of this curry. Leftover coconut milk: Freeze the rest in ice cube trays and use in recipes that call for a splash of coconut. Otherwise, do a recipe search for “coconut milk” and select “Using this ingredient” and it will bring up a list of recipes that have coconut milk in the ingredients. Most recipes won’t suffer if you are short just 3 tbsp. Partial can uses: Gado Gado peanut sauce, scaled down batch of Thai Satay Peanut sauce.
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Tomato – anything is fine here, pulp or passata (base recipe), or canned crushed tomato (crush it more by hand to make it more fine) or even a dollop of tomato paste;
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Garlic and ginger – as with most Indian curries, a good wack is essential for a good curry experience!
How to make it – Roasted Eggplant for curry
Here’s how to roast the eggplant – cut into thick batons (they shrink a lot), then roasted at a high temperature with just 2 tablespoons of oil so the outside is nicely caramelised, the inside is soft and juicy, and it holds its form rather than collapsing into mush. Simply the best way to cook eggplant in the oven!
Notice how the eggplant pieces are beautifully browned on the outside and still holding their form, rather than being a soggy pile of mush (which is what happens if you roast at a lower temp). Just holding in the juicy insides!!
How to make Eggplant Curry
And here’s how the curry is made:
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Fry off the mustard seeds and curry leaves – your house is going to smell insane!
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Cook off the ginger and garlic (your house will smell even more incredible!);
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Add the spices (your neighbours will catch a waft and start salivating);
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Then tomato and water, mix it up into a very intensely flavoured curry sauce;
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Add eggplant and simmer so it absorbs the flavour (neighbours will come knocking at this point);
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Then lastly, stir in the coconut milk (neighbours will be camped out on your door step, refusing to leave without a taste).
What it tastes like
This is not one for the faint hearted – it’s not mild and creamy like Butter Chicken. It’s a very intense authentic Indian curry flavour, as opposed to a generic flavour like those recipes you see made with a load of just “curry powder” and maybe some Garam Masala.
The dominant flavour here are the curry spices – you can’t taste the tomato (for thickening the sauce) nor the coconut milk (for slight richness to mouthfeel).
Also, another specific characteristic with this curry is that it’s not saucy. It’s one big pot of juicy (I’m going to say it!) MUSH. You don’t need a separate sauce!
Healthy! 250 calories per serve.
Indian food actually uses a LOT of oil in cooking. You would fall off your chair if you knew how much your friendly local Indian restaurant is using for his curries!
Yes there’s still 5 tablespoons of oil in this, but it’s a vegetable curry so lacks all the additional fat that the meat in a meat curry would drop and so has to compensate to be tasty.
But it’s not so unhealthy – in fact, it clocks in at just 250 calories per serving!
Though if I had my way it would be 1/2 cup of oil ….😂 – Nagi x
PS. Pictured here with basmati rice and dollop of yogurt. Naan or this simpler flatbread for stuffing wouldn’t go astray as alternatives. For a fresh side, try this South Indian-style Cabbage & Carrot Salad with Coconut, this Minted Yogurt Tomato Salad, this fresh creamy Cucumber Salad or even plain roasted Broccolini (skip the Tahini sauce in the recipe). More Veg and Salad Sides here. And if you’re going low carb, use Cauliflower Rice instead (the sauce is so strong, you won’t care).
Watch how to make it
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Eggplant Curry - South Indian Brinjal Curry
Ingredients
Roasted Eggplant:
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola)
- 700g / 1.2 lb eggplant (aubergine) , 2 medium (Note 1)
- 1/2 tsp each salt and pepper
Curry:
- 3 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola)
- 3/4 tsp black mustard seeds (Note 2)
- 14 curry leaves, fresh (Note 3)
- 1 red onion , quartered and thinly sliced
- 3 tbsp passata or tomato pulp (or canned tomato) (Note 4)
- 1 tbsp garlic , grated (4 cloves approx)
- 1 tbsp ginger , grated (1.5cm piece approx)
- 1 1/4 cups water
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 3 tbsp coconut milk or cream, full fat (Note 5)
Curry Spices:
- 1/4 tsp cardamom powder
- 1/4 tsp ground clove
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 1/2 tsp chilli powder or cayenne (NOT US Chilli Powder)
- 4 tsp coriander powder
- 4 tsp cumin powder
Serving
- Basmati rice
- Yogurt , highly recommended
- Coriander/cilantro leaves , optional
- Easy flatbread (as naan!) , optional
Instructions
Roasted Eggplant:
- Preheat oven to 240°C / 450°F (220°C fan). Line tray with parchment/baking paper.
- Cut eggplant into 2cm / 4/5" slices, then cut into 2cm / 4/5" batons.
- Place in large bowl, toss with oil, salt and pepper.
- Spread on tray, roast 20 minutes. Turn, roast for a further 10 minutes - edges should be caramelised, soft inside, but they're not shrivelled up and dismal. Use per recipe.
Curry:
- Heat oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add mustard seeds, let them sizzle for 15 seconds.
- Add curry leaves, stir, leave to sizzle for 15 seconds - seeds might pop, Indian cooking is very dramatic!
- Add onions, cook 5 minutes until golden brown.
- Add tomato, cook for 1 minute, stirring.
- Add garlic and ginger, cook 2 minutes.
- Add Curry Spices and salt, and cook for another 3 minutes - it will be a thick paste and might stick to the bottom of the pot, don't let it burn (if it starts to, remove from stove and quickly add splash of water to loosen).
- Stir in water, and then add the eggplant.
- Gently stir, partially cover, reduce heat to low and simmer 30 minutes. Stir carefully once or twice (so the eggplants don't break up completely), add more water if it dries out.
- Stir in coconut milk, taste then add more salt if needed.
- Your result should be a very thick, juicy, strongly flavoured curry with eggplant partially intact but half collapsed.
- Serve with basmati rice and a dollop of yogurt and fresh coriander leaves, if you want.
Recipe Notes:
- Brown mustard seeds
- Yellow mustard seeds
- 1/2 tsp mustard powder*
- 1/2 tsp Garam Masala* (different flavour, but is intended to make up for absence)
- dried curry leaves (not quite the same, but it's the best sub);
- 1 tsp Garam Masala powder (add it with rest of spices).
Nutrition Information:
More Eggplant recipes
For fellow carnivores who love how “meaty” eggplant is!
More Curry recipes – for fellow curry monsters!
Life of Dozer
There’s a Dozer under there somewhere… This is how he spent half of Sunday after a big beach play with his mates!
jim says
Made it today. I don’t have an oven apart from a small electric pizza oven and this is what I frequently use to roast Brinjal or Eggplant, works a treat. The dish turned out really tasty Nagi, so thank you! I will defenitely make it again, I did add some Ghee and used Kushmiri Mirch red chili powder, also added some toor dahl (as did the cook in the video from Village Food Factory I think. Thanks for that link btw) I can understand and see how you came up with this recipe.:)
Although I’m shocked about the amount of animals The King of Goat Heads prepares !!! (Singalese are mostly Buddhist while Tamil are Hindus, both belief systems promote a somewhat vegetarian lifestyle). The veg lifestyle lately seems to have traveled west more and more while in the east meat consumption seems on the rise. How long before we wake up and make evolutionary wise choices? The industry is too powerful but the world can’t keep up with our unsustainable meat production and consumption. The time is now to understand we do not need what is not beneficial; Rainforests cut down to provide for hungry lifestock. (and hey usually GMO monocultures of soy) will make the global poor hungry in the near future!
Sorry for the rant a little.
How are the temperatures down under and what does it mean to the water supply?
Rebecca Kalakota says
Totally agree! I don’t eat meat ( 30 years) and there are so many other ways to get your protein! Beans, Dahl, nuts, and a whole bunch of meat substitutes that taste great now.
Ernst says
in the description I guess you forgot to mention where the onion is added
(just cooking this right now)
Nagi says
Hi Ernst, nope it’s definitely there at step 3! N x
Ernst says
In the “instructions” you have it, yes, but not in the runthrough with images earlier in the post (headline: “And here’s how the curry is made:”.
Sorry for not being precise right away.
Anyhow – thanks for the recipe, the result was great!
Sue says
This recipe was a huge success and my partner who loves curries thought it was fabulous. Roasting the eggplant first was a winner! Will definitely be making it again. Wish I could attach the photo I took.
Rebecca Rose Kalakota says
Yeah a photo of mine would have been great but it disappeared too fast!
Nagi says
Yes it definitely brings out the flavour here Sue – I’m so glad you enjoyed it!! N x
Linda says
I used dried curry leaves and followed the recipe exactly, using the saute function on my slow cooker (once eggplant had been roasted). To be honest, I wasn’t sure if I liked it when it was ready, but flipped it onto ‘slow cook’ for a couple of hours as I was going out and wanted it ready for my return. Amazing. One of the best curries I’ve ever made/eaten. Takes a lot for food to excite me, but I’m looking forward to the leftovers tomorrow. Superb.
Hana Perkins-Simonova says
Both my partner and myself loved this recipe! Thank you Nagi
Eileen says
Wow, this is the nearest curry I’ve made that has that South Indian tang and punch to it. Thank you so much for this. It’s perfect for my Indian nights and cuts through the richness of other dishes I do on the same night like your butter chicken or a lamb rogan josh. Love South Indian recipes… can’t get enough of them. Thank you!
M-R says
My favourite vegetable in my favourite setting !!
Nagi says
They are like flavour sponges aren’t they M-R! N x
Grant says
Dark and earthy. The perfect accompaniment to a curry night.
Salima says
I made it and did like it but thought it was a bit too rich with all the spices. At the end added some water and some brown sugar. Tasted really nice
Shaalyn Monteiro says
This came out brilliant!! I added more chilli and pepper to spice It up.. And I used low fat coconut milk but it still was soo delicious..
Thank u so much…
Heidi says
Ok, I do a fair bit of Indian style cooking so have experience with powerful flavours. When I do this again I shall double the amount of eggplant. If keeping the same quantities, would suggest reducing the salt ;add more later if required), plus up the amount of coconut cream.
Made keto naan, plus steamed basmati, served yoghurt on the side. A success!
On the side perhaps some cubed cucumber (raita).
Sasha says
I wanted to to make this for ages and tonight I finally did! I was wondering what Nagi meant by “strong flavored curry”… I’m not scared of strong flavors and often increase spices and aromatics to make flavors stronger in recipes. I’d have to say this curry is an acquired taste. It is balanced and the texture is fantastic but the overall flavors aren’t my cup of tea. This review isn’t to detract anyone from making this but for those who are “um-ing” and “ah-ing” about making this like I did maybe this feedback will help… perhaps if I was more familiar with this curry and/or South Indian food in general I may enjoy it more. Definitely have it with yoghurt!
Ashley says
Very delicious!! Followed all instructions, no curry leaves unfortunately! But I added a bay leaf and used the masala substitute- tastes great. I think the roasting of the eggplant is critical- adds so much flavour. I used a large one, but I think with smaller ones, it would be even more flavourful than it is. Thank you so much!! Will definitely make again 🙂
Nagi says
Bay leaves are used in Indian cooking all the time, Ashley! Glad to hear you found clever subs that worked for you. – Nx
Jess says
Long time listener, first time caller here… I’ve been cooking and baking your recipes for close to 5 years now – big fan :). Just a comment for this recipe, the cook time is incorrect in the blue header – should be closer to 1 hour with the eggplant roasting time (I write this as my stomach grumbles during the simmering time). Smells amazing tho, will be worth it!
Mimi Tam says
Wow!! This is superb and so authentic! So much flavour.
I have been using only your recipes ever since having great success with your Christmas Ham some years back, and just love how if I follow your instructions and video exactly, everything always turns out perfect. Thank you Nagi!!
Heather says
All I can say is OMG good! I don’t comment on a lot of recipes but this was so authentic and tasty that I had to give it 5 stars. If you can, try to source all the authentic ingredients if you have a local Indian store, it is worth it (as you will probably make it again and again!) Non vegetarian hubby loved it too!
Heather Fradette says
All I can say is OMG good! I don’t comment on a lot of recipes but this was so authentic and tasty that I had to give it 5 stars. If you can, try to source all the authentic ingredients if you have a local Indian store, it is worth it (as you will probably make it again and again!) Non vegetarian hubby loved it too!
Nagi says
I’m so glad it was a hit Heather, that’s great to hear!! N x
Ailie says
Making this for the fourth time today. Such a brilliant recipe. Thanks Nagi! 🙂
I roast all my aubergine this way now – it’s a great way to cook them for bags of flavour and without them becoming an oil slick. 👍
Laurie says
This recipe is fantastic!! Great flavour, great info on substitutions. It’s worth the roasting step. I’ve made it twice now.
P says
This is the recipe that made me decide I can like eggplant!