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Why the world loves and hates eggplants equally? The secret lies in the cooking

Eggplant, brinjal, aubergine or baingan can be anything from bitter and greasy to meaty and rich. If you don't like eggplant, you've probably just had it badly cooked.

October 13, 2023 / 21:18 IST
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Unlike most vegetables in India, the baingan is truly Indian.

“Very well. I will marry you if you promise not to make me eat eggplant,” says a languid Fermina to the smitten Florentino in Gabriel García Márquez's Love in the Time of Cholera (1985). It’s astonishing how much abhorrence a humble vegetable can generate. People either love it or hate it. Count me among the lovers.

Baingan basics

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Stuffed eggplant with yogurt and salad.

Unlike most vegetables in India (chillies, tomatoes, potatoes, etc.), the baingan is truly Indian. It’s a vegetable born and cultivated in the country and even finds a mention in our ancient texts and epics. The first ever name for it was the Sanskrit vrantakam from which the Hindi name baingan came. And though most of us think of this purple gem as a vegetable, technically, it’s a fruit since eggplants grow from a flowering plant and contain seeds. Along with disguising themselves as vegetables, eggplants are also hiding a lot of nutrients. “Mainly fibre which helps to move food through the digestive tract. They also contain antioxidants which protect against cell damage. The potassium content helps maintain healthy blood pressure. Even Ayurveda recommends eggplant for Vata and Kapha imbalances,” says nutritionist Shweta Shah, Founder of EatFit 24/7. And if you are wondering why it’s called an eggplant that’s because the first eggplants to arrive in the US was the white variety that looked like an egg hanging from a bush. That is, perhaps, what made the Americans give this outlandish name to the vegetable.