Szechuan Eggplant or sichuan eggplant refers to eggplant cooked the Chinese (specifically Szechuan province) way in a delicious Szechuan sauce. This Szechuan Eggplant recipe makes a very quick side dish for vegetable fried rice or noodles.
Making a side dish for Vegetable Fried Rice (or noodles) usually leaves me in a cloud of flour dust, crankiness due to the heat of the oil I need to deep fry stuff in (you know, for gobi manchurian and such) and the humidity in Singapore doesn’t help matters much.
While I would definitely agree that a finished Gobi Manchurian or Chilli Paneer is a thing of beauty and deliciousness, it’s not something I would make often simply because of the number of steps and the chances of messing up the kitchen and my hair.
This Szechuan Eggplant Recipe is a boon on such days. It’s so very easy to put together and tastes great and takes all of 20 mins to cook up. If you are not a fan of eggplant, may I take a few mins and try to convert you? No? Ok then, try Mushroom Szechuan or Tofu Szechuan or oh, a Paneer Szechuan.
Table of Contents
- What is Szechuan or Sichuan cuisine?
- Tips and Recipe Notes
- Related Recipes
- Jump to Recipe Card
- Step by Step Pictures to Make Szechuan Eggplant
What is Szechuan Cuisine?
It originates from the Sichuan province of China and is characterised by the bold flavours and pungency from garlic, pepper, and specifically, Sichuan peppercorn. If you haven’t tried Sichuan peppers, it’s quite a treat and very different from regular black pepper.
They look similar and are red in colour, and have a numbing spiciness to them which hit your tongue quite differently. If you do intend to use it in this recipe, do so sparingly. I omit Sichuan peppers when making Szechuan eggplant at home because we prefer the Indian-Chinese variation of Sichuan cuisine.
The Indian-Chinese take on Szechuan cuisine has a liberal use of garlic as well, and pepper too. They are usually sauce-based and quite delicious!
Szechuan Eggplant Recipe
Ingredients
- 3 cups eggplant cut into 1" wide wedges or cubes use the large, purple variety
- 5-6 shallots or pearl onions
- 1 teaspoon minced garlic add more if you can tolerate it
- 1 teaspoon red red chilli sauce Sriracha, Maggi, or even chilli flakes will work
- 2 tablespoons of soya sauce
- 1 teaspoon white vinegar
- 1 teaspoon cornflour or corn starch
- 1/2 teaspoon brown sugar or jaggery
- A fistful coriander leaves / cilantro
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper powder adjust to taste
- 2 tablespoons of sesame oil Indian gingelly oil or peanut oil
- 1 cup water
Instructions
- Heat the oil in a wide pan and when it starts to smoke, add the eggplant in 2 batches, frying until sticky and brown.
- Add salt and pepper to this, drain, and set aside
- In the same pan, more oil if required and fry the shallots until soft
- To this, add the red chilli sauce (or flakes) and minced garlic. Saute for a few seconds
- Meanwhile, mix the soya sauce, vinegar, corn starch, sugar, and some salt in a bowl to make the Szechuan sauce
- Add this to the shallot mixture and cook on medium-high heat until it starts to bubble
- Tip in the fried eggplant and mix well until the sauce coats the eggplant
- Garnish with chopped coriander leaves and serve hot with fried rice or noodles. Goes great even with plain steamed rice
Notes
- You can coat the eggplant in some plain flour or rice flour before frying, for a more crisp coating around it
- You can also deep fry the eggplant instead of pan-frying
- Don’t skimp on the pepper. To make an even more authentic version, use szechuan pepper powder
- Adjust the heat to your preference, I generally don’t make it too spicy
- If you don’t have coriander leaves in hand, you can also use spring onions to garnish, or even toasted sesame seeds
- You can use spring onions or regular purple onions (scallions, green onions) instead of the shallots too, for a different flavour
- Use the Asian eggplant for best results. They are long and purple. If not available where you live, use the regular fat eggplant or smaller purple Indian brinjal
Step by Step Pictures for Szechuan Eggplant
1. Heat oil and fry the eggplant in 2-3 batches
… until soft, browned, and sticky. Add salt and pepper, drain and set aside.
2. In same pan, add more oil if needed, and fry the shallots.
3. Add chilli sauce and minced garlic and saute some more.
4. Meanwhile, make the Schezwan Sauce by mixing the corn starch, soya sauce, vinegar, brown sugar, and some salt
5. Add water to the shallot mixture and top off with the Schezwan Sauce
6. When it boils and starts bubbling, add the eggplant
7. Mix well and cook through until sauce coats the eggplant fully.
Tips and Recipe Notes
- You can coat the eggplant in some plain flour or rice flour before frying, for a more crisp coating around it
- You can also deep fry the eggplant instead of pan-frying
- Don’t skimp on the pepper. To make an even more authentic version, use szechuan pepper powder
- Adjust the heat to your preference, I generally don’t make it too spicy
- If you don’t have coriander leaves in hand, you can also use spring onions to garnish, or even toasted sesame seeds
- You can use spring onions or regular purple onions (scallions, green onions) instead of the shallots too, for a different flavour
- Use the Asian eggplant for best results. They are long and purple. If not available where you live, use the regular fat eggplant or smaller purple Indian brinjal
- Add lots more garlic to the recipe for a distinct, Sichuan kick. Add as much as you can tolerate
- Try adding 2-3 crushed Sichuan peppercorn to the recipe for a very distinct and interesting flavour
Christy
Where do I you use one cup water?
nags
please check step 5
anubhavati
I love this recipe a lot nags…I remember when we went to Vegas about 8 years ago, I stepped in to the Panda Express on the strip and they had this amazing fried rice with Schezwan Eggplant. I have never ever tasted something that yummy and strangely no other branch of Panda Express had it since. I was craving for it many years and your post reminded me of that amazing trip!!!Shobha
fatcai
Hi I just made this and it was wonderful! I wanted to make it for my lunch at work though so I used a really big pan doubled the amount of sauce, let it coat the aubergines and then added rice and fried the rice with the aubergines and the sauce, the rice soaked up all the flavour from the pan so I will be having really nice lunch at work this week. Thanks for this recipe, I love discovering new things to do with aubergine!
uma shankar
looks perfect!
Alexandra
Delicious! Made this wuth basmati rice and Sriracha mushrooms and was in heaven. The only tweak I will make to this next time I cook this would be to exclude any added salt as the soy, vinegar and Sriracha provided enough taste.
A ridiculously easy recipe with beautifulresults:)
Vanamala Hebbar
Sounds nice..new to me
RAKS KITCHEN
My favorite veggie and wow, what a clarity of the picture!! 🙂
Shema George
This looks super good. Love how the sauce is coated over the eggplants. Looks very yummy
Kadhyaa
lovely and innovative for a eggplant lover like me Nags…bookmarked
Hari Chandana
Looks delicious !