Tonight is ratatouille. REAL ratatouille, not the imitation Julia Child kind (she changed the traditional recipe from a stew to a braise of individual vegetables), but the traditional french peasant stew. If you've only had the Julia Child vegetable dish or the "confit byaldi" that Chef Keller created for the Disney movie called ratatouille, you have no idea what you are missing. Both dishes are lovely vegetable dishes, but they are not ratatouille.
The original was made with bacon drippings, but the owner of a hippy vegetarian restaurant in Houston, called The Hobbit Hole, wanted my mom's recipe, so he changed the bacon drippings to olive oil.
I'll repeat the recipe here in case anyone wants to try it.
One of my favorite vegetable dishes where it can be a main course and you don't miss the meat is Ratatouille. I got the recipe from my French mother and it is simple. In a deep soup pan,
Sautee one diced onion and 3-4 cloves of garlic in olive oil, just until translucent,
add one large chopped (traditional) eggplant (medium small cubes), I leave the peel on
1-2 zucchini (sliced or chopped),
1 large seeded bell pepper (chopped),
add a 15oz can of diced tomatoes (2 cans if you like more tomatoes) (you can use fresh chopped), I use Hunts petite diced because it has a pleasant acidity, which is needed.
stir, add a large drizzle of olive oil, salt to taste, and cook until done, stirring occasionally (vegetables should be soft), this can take up to 3 hours (the longer it stews together, the more the flavours develop). Finish with a generous drizzle of olive oil.
This is heavenly stuff eaten hot or cold. Some people add herbs, but to me herbs overpower this dish, trust me, it doesn't need them.