Aubergine fatteh

Aubergine fatteh

While it tastes wonderful all year round, fatteh is for many a part of Ramadan. Served either as a starter or main course, it makes for a flavour-packed eating experience that is delicious on its own or with other classic iftar dishes. Made with aubergines and either minced beef or lamb as well as a selection of wonderful toppings and an easy tomato and cream sauce, this traditional dish takes little time and effort to make.
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Instructions

Step 1
  • Wash aubergines, slice off the stem and using an apple corer and a small teaspoon, remove the flesh, taking care not to damage the skin of the aubergine. Set aside the skins and dice the flesh.
Step 2
  • For the aubergine stuffing, heat oil in a frying pan over medium-high heat. Add the diced aubergine flesh and cook until golden.
  • Add mince and spices and cook until the meat is cooked, and any liquid has evaporated.
  • Remove from heat and stir in the 3 tablespoons of toasted pine nuts. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Step 3
  • Using a small teaspoon, fill the aubergine skins with the meat filling and place in a deep, frying pan with a lid.
  • Pour over the tomato sauce and stir in the pomegranate molasses (optional).
  • Place the lid on the pan and cook over medium-low heat for 45 minutes, turning occasionally, until the aubergines are very soft.
Step 4
  • Chop the bread in small squares and fry it in a little oil.
  • Once fried, spread it on the base of a serving platter, and spoon over the aubergines and sauce.
  • Combine yoghurt and tahini and add on top of the aubergine fatteh.
  • Garnish with fried onions, pomegranate seeds, and the extra toasted pine nuts.
Enjoy!
Top Tip

If you want to, you can prepare aubergine fatteh ahead of time. While you could cook the entire dish and reheat it when you are ready to enjoy it, we recommend instead to prep the components beforehand and store them in the fridge and roast the aubergine fatteh fresh. This keeps the bread base crispy and the textual integrity of the aubergine fatteh intact. Store the meat filling and aubergine skins separately in refrigerated airtight containers and fried bread on the countertop.

Questions about aubergine fatteh

With an easy aubergine fatteh recipe like ours in your repertoire, you always have something delightfully tasty and irresistible at hand. You can learn more about aubergine fatteh below where we have answered the most frequently asked questions about this tasty dish.

What is aubergine fatteh?
Fatteh is a dish made with fried, toasted, or grilled bread. Popular across Northern Africa and the Middle East, it usually has plenty of fresh and crunchy toppings, a creamy dressing, and, of course, a sauce with meat and/or various vegetables. aubergine fatteh then is, as the name would suggest, a hearty version featuring aubergine. The popular dish fattoush, which is a bread salad often made with pieces of pita bread, is also part of the fatteh family of bread dishes. This dish, too, can be made as a roasted aubergine fattoush.
How to make aubergine fatteh?
Though it contains many different components, tastes, and textures, a traditional fatteh with aubergine and meat is not difficult to make. To start, prepare the aubergines by removing the flesh while keeping the skins intact. Cook the spiced meat and diced aubergine filling with pine nuts. Fill the skins with this meat filling, place them in a deep pan, and pour in the easy tomato sauce. As they cook, prepare the dressing, and fry the bread. Served on a decorative platter layered with fried bread, stuffed aubergines in tomato sauce, yoghurt, and crispy toppings, this roasted aubergine fatteh is sure to delight.
What dressing to use for aubergine fatteh?
Aubergine fatteh is traditionally served with a yoghurt dressing. This dressing is most often flavoured with tahini paste. Tahini, which is made from roasted sesame seeds, has an intense earthy flavour with nutty and salty qualities. The dressing may also be seasoned with salt and pepper, lemon juice for additional brightness, or crushed garlic for a flavourful and pungent inclusion.
How to fry bread for aubergine fatteh?
As no aubergine fatteh is authentic without fried bread, you will need a few tips for how to make fatteh bread crispy. Cut Arabic flatbread into squares as you heat some vegetable oil in a pan. Toss the bread pieces into the warm pan and fry them for a few minutes or until they are golden and crispy. If you want to, the warm, fried bread can be seasoned with your spices of choice.

Ingredients

Aubergine fatteh:
Tomato sauce with cream
500 ml
Aubergines
8
Olive oil
1 tbsp
Lean beef or lamb mince
450 g
Cinnamon
1 tsp
Allspice
1 tsp
Toasted pine nuts
3 tbsp
Pomegranate molasses (optional)
1 tbsp
Salt and pepper
Arabic bread
1
Yoghurt dressing:
Plain Arla® Skyr
500 g
Tahini
2 tbsp
Garnish:
Fried onion
175 g
Pomegranate seeds
2 tsp
Pine nuts, toasted
1 tbsp

Aubergine fatteh with meat filling and tasty toppings

Flavoured with aromatic, warming allspice, sweet-spicy cinnamon, as well as nutty and slightly sweet pine nuts, this aubergine fatteh with meat has a lot of depth and flavour. Made with lamb, the earthy qualities of the spices are more pronounced as the taste of this gamey meat enhances them. With beef, the umami flavour of the meat itself is more prominent. Regardless of which juicy, tender minced meat you choose to use, this classic dish with fried bread is filled with flavour as well as different textures to make it interesting.

Decorative, jewel-like pomegranate seeds, fried onions, and toasted pine nuts adorn the tahini yoghurt atop this aubergine fatteh and make for crispy, crunchy toppings. The pairing of sweet-tart fruitiness, umami, and nutty goodness makes for a delectable combination that complements the spiced aubergine, meat, and savoury, yet sweet-tangy, tomato sauce.

If you are looking for more great recipes that feature some of the same lovely ingredients, check out our recipes for Middle Eastern aubergine spaghetti bolognese, lamb moussaka pasta bake, and rocca salad with pomegranate.

Delicious yoghurt tahini dressing

To complement the crunchy toppings, an aubergine fatteh must be topped with a velvety yoghurt-based dressing. Flavouring it with a Middle Eastern classic like tahini is incredibly tasty. The intense sesame paste's nutty, salty flavour pairs well with the round, mild-tasting neutral yoghurt.

Together, these lovely ingredients create a creamy, flavourful aubergine fatteh yoghurt to slather on top of the dish. The nutty flavours of this dressing also serve to highlight the taste of the toasted pine nuts used both in and on top of it.

Crisp, fried Arabic bread

The best aubergine fatteh recipe is, of course, not complete without the crispy bread. Arabic flatbread is an ideal choice for this obligatory fatteh bread base. Though some recipes will suggest toasting or grilling the bread, we believe the best, crispiest result is by frying it. 

Flatbread lends itself well to serve as a base and garnish for an aubergine fatteh as layering the dish with this type of bread is easier than with more voluminous kinds. Flatbread also becomes incredibly delicious and crispy when pan-fried.

Put a spin on the classic Middle Eastern dish

A tasty way to experiment with this traditional aubergine fatteh is to add warm chickpeas. Soaking dry chickpeas and boiling them yourself allows you to flavour them any way you like. Try boiling them in spice-infused water with bay leaves, ground cumin, sliced garlic cloves, and a bit of sumac for spiced chickpeas with earthy and citrussy notes as well as plenty of depth.

If you enjoy crunchy textures and want to introduce even more into this lamb or beef and aubergine fatteh, you can fry the boiled chickpeas in a bit of olive oil to make them slightly crispy.

For additional freshness, you can use fresh parsley as a garnish. This mildly bitter and peppery herb, together with the pomegranate seeds, serves to brighten the dish. In addition, the play of colours created by the mix of ruby-red seeds, bright green herbs, and white tahini yoghurt, makes for a stunning display that is sure to impress your family and iftar guests.