Eggplant Rollatini. (Photo by Tom McCorkle for The Washington Post)
First things first, says Lidia Bastianich. Before I can even get the first question out of my mouth when I call her to talk about one of my favorite Italian dishes, she wants to make sure I know something very important. "Rollatini is not an Italian word,” she says.
No, it’s not. In Italy, eggplant rollatini - the dish I’m interviewing her about - is known as involtini di melanzane, right alongside all the other involtini: di pollo, di carne, di vitello, di pesce, to mean little bundles of chicken, meat, veal or fish, "anything you roll,” she says. "Rollatini is an Italian American invention.”
Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Bastianich, a longtime public television cooking show star, cookbook author and restaurateur, has always celebrated the glories of Italian American cuisine, often dishes that immigrants adapted to use local ingredients. In the case of eggplant rollatini, though, the name is the only thing that changed. Italians, especially south of Rome, have historically depended on eggplant as an alternative to animal proteins out of a need for economy, making it a staple of Italy’s cucina povera.
"I think eggplant became so beloved originally because when there was no meat, it kind of acted like meat,” she tells me in our phone interview. "In the north, we used cabbage for the same purpose.”
In fact, she never tasted involtini di melanzane until she opened her first restaurant in 1971 in Queens, with an Italian American cook, and they put it on the menu. "It’s a favorite,” she says.
If you’re not already acquainted, what makes the dish so special is the simple interplay of soft eggplant, creamy ricotta and a slightly sweet marinara sauce - store-bought or homemade. It has all the beauty of eggplant parmesan but with its own unique appeal. Most of the cheese is in the filling, not on top of the dish, so rather than a gooey melted mozzarella blanket over and in between layers of fried eggplant that you cut like a lasagna (I’m not complaining), you get discreet parmesan-dusted eggplant bundles with a milky filling oozing out into the marinara - and onto the plate. What’s not to love?
Bastianich’s tips include picking a firm, fresh eggplant, cutting it in thick slices, dredging them in flour and panfrying before draining, cooling, rolling, nestling in the sauce and baking until bubbly. Thankfully, before I could confess to her my own shortcut adaptations to her recipe, she volunteers: "There’s also the method of grilling the eggplant slices - or of baking them,” both popular with modern cooks interested in lighter dishes.
However you cook the eggplant initially, she says, "You don’t have to worry about whether it’s fully cooked or not, because you’re going to bake it again.” In other words, there’s virtually no chance the eggplant will end up with that unpleasant spongy texture that has unfortunately turned way too many people off.
As Bastianich says, this is the time to go for the best ricotta you can find: whole milk and as fresh as possible. Of course, you can make your own. Bastianich says she would often bake rollatini for her mother, Grandma Erminia, who remembered the childhood joys of ricotta made fresh from her family’s goats. Or, if you’re vegan, you can use one of my other adaptations: a filling built on artichoke hearts, cashews and seasonings, the same one I use for Baked Stuffed Shells.
No matter how you adapt it - and whatever you decide to call it - eggplant rollatini delivers a pan of pure, Italian-style comfort.
Each eggplant slice gets a generous amount of ricotta filling. (Photo by Tom McCorkle for The Washington Post)
Eggplant Rollatini
This classic Italian dish, called involtini di melanzane in Italy, consists of eggplant slices rolled around a ricotta mixture and baked in marinara sauce. The eggplant slices are often floured and fried, but this simpler version broils them for just a few minutes per side until they soften. Be sure to use high-quality, whole-milk ricotta for the best results; for a vegan version, use the artichoke-cashew filling from the related recipe for Baked Stuffed Shells. Using eggplants that are about 4 inches wide ensures that they’re big enough to easily roll and small enough to make tidy packets. If you’re concerned about sodium, see Substitutions for ways to reduce it.
Servings: 6 (makes 12 rollatini in sauce)
Active time: 45 minutes. Total time: 1 hour 10 minutes.
Substitutions: To make it vegan >> use the filling from the related Vegan Baked Stuffed Shells recipe and vegan parmesan, such as Follow Your Heart brand. To reduce the fat and calories >> use part-skim mozzarella. To reduce the sodium >> look for low-sodium or no-salt-added marinara sauce, such as Sprouts or Silver Palate brand, or make your own. Store-bought marinara sauce >> homemade tomato sauce, such as the related Rao’s Marinara Sauce recipe.
Storage: Refrigerate for up to 4 days or freeze for up to 3 months.
INGREDIENTS
2 to 3 medium eggplants (2 pounds total), about 4 inches wide
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided
1/4 teaspoon fine salt
12 ounces whole-milk ricotta
6 ounces fresh mozzarella cheese, shredded (1 1/2 cups)
4 ounces parmesan cheese, grated (1 2/3 cups), divided
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1/4 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves
1/4 cup water
2 1/2 cups store-bought or homemade marinara sauce (one 24-ounce jar; see related recipe)
1/4 cup chopped fresh basil leaves, plus more for serving
DIRECTIONS
Position one rack in the middle of the oven and another about 6 inches away from the broiling element. Preheat the broiler to HIGH. (If your oven is too small for this arrangement, position a rack 6 inches away from the broiling element, then once you are done broiling, use oven mitts to move it to the middle of the oven.)
Trim the stems from the eggplants. Slice off a thin layer of skin and flesh from one of the long sides of each eggplant so that they lie flat on the cutting board. With the bottom end facing you, cut the eggplants lengthwise into 1/2-inch-thick slices, to get about 12 slices. Chop the pieces you trimmed off, and reserve them for the sauce.
Arrange the eggplant slices on a large sheet pan (overlapping them slightly, if necessary), brush both sides with about 2 tablespoons of the oil and sprinkle with the salt.
Broil the eggplant for 3 to 6 minutes, or until golden brown on top. Flip the slices over, and continue broiling for another 3 to 6 minutes, or until golden brown and soft. Transfer the slices to a plate to cool, turn off the broiler and set the oven to 400 degrees.
While the eggplant is broiling, in a large bowl, stir together the ricotta, mozzarella, half of the parmesan, the egg and parsley until well-combined. You should get about 3 cups of the filling.
In a large (12-inch) ovenproof skillet over medium-high heat, heat the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil until shimmering. Add the reserved chopped eggplant and the water, cover and cook until the eggplant is tender, about 4 minutes. Uncover and cook, stirring constantly, until the water has evaporated, 2 to 4 minutes. Add the marinara sauce, stir in the basil and bring to a simmer. Remove from the heat.
When the eggplant slices have cooled, scoop 1/4 cup filling onto one short end of an eggplant slice, roll the slice around the filling and nestle the roll, seam side down, in the sauce in the skillet, spooning a little of the sauce on top of the roll. Repeat with the remaining eggplant slices and filling.
Sprinkle the remaining parmesan over the eggplant rolls. Bake on the middle rack for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the sauce is bubbling. Garnish with more basil and serve hot.
Nutritional information per serving (2 rolls with sauce): 431 calories, 27 g fat, 13 g saturated fat, 28 g carbohydrates, 867 mg sodium, 100 mg cholesterol, 19 g protein, 7 g fiber, 17 g sugar.
This analysis is an estimate based on available ingredients and this preparation. It should not substitute for a dietitian’s or nutritionist’s advice.