Sweet roasted red pepper & eggplant dip

59 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure for more info.

red pepper and eggplant plant dip in a small white bowl from above and on a red and white checked cloth

Any kind of eggplant dip is never going to win any awards in the good looks department, and I’m afraid this one is no exception, really – but what this dip definitely could get top marks for is its taste and ‘healthiness factor’!

As I tend to pepper my posts with Greek (or Greek-ish) recipes from time to time anyway after my many years spent living here, I wasn’t particularly thinking that I’d go crazy cooking all things Greek on this latest trip to Greece. Or at least I wasn’t until a couple of days ago when I had my first wander around the local market that’s held every Monday pretty much at the end of my street. But once there and standing before the array of fresh Mediterranean produce piled high on the stalls, feeling the weak but still warming winter sunshine on my face, exchanging pleasantries with the market sellers (‘Get your lemons here, nice and bitter!’ yelled the man on the citrus stall with a cheeky wink …), Mr. Scrummy and I were soon struggling up the hill to our apartment with plastic bags bursting with plump tomatoes, eggplants, olives and cucumbers (1 euro for 5 cucumbers? Seriously? Then I’ll take 5 …)

roasted eggplant & peppers
Tuck those garlic cloves into the eggplant so that it roasts along with the veggies – then you can squish it into the dip for some roasted garlic magic.

The first thing we did when we got home was make a big, fat Greek salad and gobble it up with lovely fresh toasted bread on our balcony with the mountain view. Mmm … bliss! And then I found myself thinking about all the beautiful things I could make with all the yummy produce I’d just picked up … hmm, I could make this, or I could make that …

Now it didn’t take too long for me to decide on this sweet roasted pepper & eggplant dip. The previous day, I’d eaten in one of mine and Mr. Scrummy’s favourite tavernas and ordered something fairly similar. Usually, eggplant dip (‘melitzanosalata’, found all around Greece) is delicious but quite an unappetizing-looking shade of grey-ish beige. This one looked much brighter with sweet roasted peppers added along with what I thought was a dash of tomato and a fair bit of chopped fresh parsley.

Sweet roasted red pepper & eggplant dip

The dip was so incredibly sweet and smoky that I honestly could have scooped up the whole plate with the yummy warm pitta bread served on the side. As I’m a nice polite girl, though, you’ll be happy to know that I did save some for my friends! What made this so delicious, in my opinion, was that it was made with just a few simple but really, really high quality ingredients. There were only five, possibly six, ingredients in it altogether, but it really didn’t need anything else added. Each ingredient shone and harmonized perfectly together with the others.

I’m sure that my version isn’t exactly the same as the dip I ate in the restaurant, but it really doesn’t matter because it got two thumbs up from both myself and Mr. Scrummy. All I did was roast an eggplant (aubergine to me!) with cloves of garlic and a couple of red peppers (the long thin kind – just roast one if you’re using the bigger, fatter ones), then I scooped out the aubergine flesh, peeled, deseeded and chopped the peppers, mashed the garlic and mixed all this together with a bit of nutty tahini, a squeeze of lemon juice and a tablespoon or so of tomato paste. Oh, and then I topped it with some fresh chopped parsley and drizzled it with a bit of extra virgin olive oil.

Sweet roasted red pepper & eggplant dip

The end result is a smoky, sweet, creamy, super healthy and very fresh-tasting dip that is absolutely beautiful spread thickly onto toasted fresh bread and topped with slices of feta cheese. Mmmm … oh my goodness, it tastes divine! Eating it this way makes it more of a crostini-topper than a dip, of course, but it would be just as fabulous scooped up with pitta bread or pitta chips, tortilla chips, bread sticks or even crackers. I could even see it tasting wonderful stirred through pasta. The addition of feta is optional, but I would highly recommend not missing that part out!

The other thing you could do is blitz the dip to a smooth paste. I don’t have a food processor over here, but I’m planning to try that when I get home.

Sweet roasted red pepper & eggplant dip
Spread the dip on toasted fresh bread and top with feta for a yummy & nutritious lunch ... mmmm!
Spread the dip on toasted fresh bread and top with feta for a yummy & nutritious lunch … mmmm!

So, I make no apologies for presenting you with ‘yet another’ Greek recipe this week. I really hope you give this a try and, and if you do, I’d love to know what you think!

Want to save this recipe?
Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
5 from 1 vote

Sweet roasted red pepper & eggplant dip

A sweet, smoky and vaguely nutty dip made from roasted peppers and eggplant and tahini paste. Delicious spread on bread and topped with feta cheese.
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 55 minutes
Total: 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 4

Ingredients 
 

  • 1 eggplant, aubergine, sliced in half length-ways
  • 2 garlic cloves, peeled and left whole
  • olive oil
  • 2 long thin red peppers or 1 big fat one
  • 1 tablespoon tahini, sesame seed paste
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • a squeeze or two of lemon juice
  • 3 tablespoons fresh chopped parsley
  • salt & pepper

Instructions 

  • Pre-heat the oven to 200C/390F. Put the eggplant (cut side up) on the baking tray along with the peppers. Score a few lines down the cut side of the eggplant halves (without cutting through the skin), then poke a garlic clove into each. Brush the eggplant with olive oil and bake for about 40 to 45 minutes or until the peppers are soft and charred and the eggplant is soft.
  • When ready, remove the eggplant from the tray and cover the peppers (still on the tray) with some aluminium foil. Leave the peppers to steam and cool for a while (this will help the peel come off easily). Meanwhile, remove the garlic from the eggplant, scoop the eggplant flesh out of its skins with a metal spoon and put it into a medium bowl.
  • Mash up the garlic with a fork and add that to the bowl, along with the tahini, tomato paste, lemon juice, parsley and salt and pepper. Then pull the peel off the peppers, slit them open with a sharp knife, scrape out the seeds and chop them into small pieces. Add these pieces to the bowl as well.
  • Mix the ingredients together well, then tip the dip into a serving bowl and garnish with a little more chopped parsley. Serve with toasted bread (or pitta bread) or tortilla or pitta chips.

Notes

This is really good spread thickly on toasted fresh crusty bread and topped with slices of feta cheese. Alternatively, you could crumble some feta cheese into or onto the dip.
You could also mix it through pasta for a quick, tasty and nutritious meal.
Feel free to leave the tahini out if you don’t have it/can’t find it easily (health food stores should have it if you can’t find it in a local supermarket). The tahini just makes the dip slightly creamy in texture and gives it a faint nutty taste. The dip would still be delicious without it.

Nutrition

Calories: 77kcal, Carbohydrates: 12g, Protein: 2g, Fat: 2g, Sodium: 55mg, Potassium: 482mg, Fiber: 5g, Sugar: 7g, Vitamin A: 2235IU, Vitamin C: 84.3mg, Calcium: 27mg, Iron: 1mg
Like this recipe? Rate and comment below!

About Helen Schofield

Don't expect to find anything fussy or complicated here. Just QUICK, EASY & (mostly!) HEALTHY recipes from the Mediterranean and beyond. ENJOY!

You May Also Like:

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

59 Comments

  1. There is a similar dip people in Bulgaria make. It is made in larger amounts and canned!
    Looks absolutely delicious and so easy to prepare Helen!
    Pinned for later!

    1. Thanks so much for pinning, Mira – once again there is something similar in Bulgaria! So glad you like it!

  2. Helen, I adore your eggplant dip – I made one recently too – but mine didn’t have tahini in it – yours sounds wonderful! I can just imagine those flavors mingling – oh so yum!

    1. Do try a spoonful of tahini when you next make an eggplant dip, Shashi … the slight nutty taste works wonderfully!

  3. I love eggplant, and this looks so good. What a romantic story, I almost felt like I was at the market, and then walking up hill with my groceries. Lovely!

    1. Hello, Linda … thank you so much for passing by and taking the time to comment. You have made me realise that this is actually vegan … well, if you omit the cheese, anyway.
      So glad you enjoyed the story – I guess it is a little romantic 😉

  4. I made an eggplant dip last night and thought the same thing, if I put this on the blog how am I going to make it look pretty. Yours looks lovely and I love the use of peppers. Great recipe.

  5. I really love roasted red pepper dips – especially when in hummus. I just love the flavour of peppers roasted.

    1. Me too! They’re so sweet – almost like candy! Glad you like this, Dannii 🙂

  6. Helen, I always love your stories. I have never been to Greece, but it’s definitely way up there on my list! I love eggplant dips and I think it’s fantastic that you added roasted red peppers – what a fabulous compliment! And I think your photos look mighty delicious too.

    1. Thanks so much for the nice words, Kathleen. I would definitely recommend making the trip all the way over to Greece some day – you wouldn’t regret it, certainly when it comes to the food! 🙂

  7. The eggplant dip looks great enough for me! I had the best pepper and eggplant dip in Istanbul (never had it in Greece before, but I think the flavor is pretty similar), and I couldn’t believe the eggplant can be this good! We have eggplant appetizer here, but the eggplant is usually steamed. I really need to try out roasting them next time. Btw, love the picture of a piece of bread with the dip, looks so delicious! 🙂

    1. Oh, thanks Maggie so much for the compliment on the photo – feel like I’ve been struggling with the light lately when photographing 😉
      So happy you like this! Greek versions are indeed quite similar to the Turkish … so yummy!

  8. I used to make something very similar to this, but in soup form, as a go-to for dinner. It was seriously the best. Throw in some goat cheese and heaven.

    I remember living in London with the markets there. I’d go “just to browse” and then have to carry loads of veggies and fruit back to my flat on an hour hike. Ah well, totally worth it!

    1. Wow, I can imagine this is so good in a soup! With goat cheese … mmm! Same idea as mixing it with the feta I guess. So glad you like this, Chrissy!

  9. What an awesome dip flavor! I love roasted eggplant, it’s always so creamy and flavorful (with the proper spices, of course) 😀 Totally good for some crackers and cheese 🙂