 |
Eggplant Parmesan, parmigiana
di melanzane in Italian, is one of the classic preparations of southern
Italy. It is a preparation associated
with the cooking of Naples, but it is popular in the Campanian countryside and
Calabria and Sicily too. Eggplant
Parmesan is a casserole dish made by slicing eggplant thinly and frying it in
olive oil. Some cooks dip the eggplant
slices in batter or egg before frying, some just fry it, and many flour it
first and fry it, while others more concerned with making the dish light, will
bake or grill the eggplant slices. The
eggplant is layered successively in a baking casserole with tomato sauce,
mozzarella cheese, parmigiano cheese, basil, and hard-boiled egg slices.
There are several theories
about the origin of eggplant Parmesan.
The most obvious is that the name of the dish derives from parmigiano
cheese, the predominate cheese used in the dish. Many food writers have voiced suspicion of
this explanation because parmigiano is not native to Naples or other regions of
southern Italy where eggplant Parmesan is found. They argue that, in fact, the dish originates
in Parma in northern Italy, because either Parmesan refers to the city of Parma
(which it does) or because the Parmesan cheese is from Parma (which it
is).
I’ve never been persuaded by
this line of thinking because from at least the fourteenth century parmigiano
was a widely traded cheese and found throughout Italy. Furthermore, the eggplant made it’s first
appearance in Italy in Sicily and the southern regions, not in the north and it’s
likely that a dish for eggplant would be invented in the south. Second, the dish is famous in the Campania
region in general, Naples in particular, as well as in Sicily and Calabria and
not in Parma.
Another suggestion concerning
the origin of the dish is offered by the Sicilian food authority Pino Correnti
who argues that the word parmigiano actually comes from damigiana, a
sleeve made of wicker where you put a wine bottle, or in this case, the hot
casserole. Another explanation to the
origin of the name of this dish is reported by cookbook authors Mary Taylor
Simeti, Vincent Schiavelli, and several others.
They suggest that the name has nothing to do with parmigiano cheese or
Parma the city, but derives from the Sicilian palmigiana not parmigiana,
meaning “shutters,” the louvered panes of shutters or palm-thatched roofs that
the layered eggplant slices are meant to resemble. Simeti suggests that since the Sicilian have
a “probrem” pronouncing the “l” it became parmigiana. Another Sicilian food writer, Franca Colonna
Romano Apostolo, suggests that the name is parmiciana, the equivalent in
Sicilian dialect to “Persian,” and not parmigiano, a cheese that is not
important to the original dish. These are speculative suggestions not supported by the evidence.
Let’s dig a little deeper
here. The first mention of something
resembling an eggplant parmesan is from Il saporetto by Simone
Prudenzani (1387-1440), where the recipe refers to parmigiano cheese. Prudenzani was from Orvieto and his Il
saporetto is a rhyming poem about food and not a cookbook. But foods are mentioned including “parmisciana.” The eighteenth-century Neapolitan chef
Vincenzo Corrado mentions in his book Il cuoco galante published in
1786, that eggplant can be cooked alla Parmegiana, meaning the eggplant
was seasoned with butter, herbs, cinnamon and other spices and grated
parmigiano cheese and covered with a cream sauce made with egg yolks before
being oven-baked.
I believe the version we know
today, with its parmesan cheese and tomato ragu first appears in print in
Ippolito Cavalcanti’s Cucina teorico-pratica published in Naples in
1837. Given that Corrado’s recipe was
published in 1786, this isn’t a huge amount of time, so it looks like it sprung
into existence in Naples in the intervening time, which is incidentally the
time that tomatoes were becoming more popular for the first time in Italy.
|