Aloo Baingan Recipe
Updated: May 2, 2023, By Swasthi
Aloo Baingan is potatoes (aloo) and Eggplants (baingan) cooked to perfection with basic spices. Make it on the stovetop or in the Instant pot with my easy recipe and tips. With fresh and contrasting flavors in one dish like Baingan ka Bharta, this spicy Aloo Baingan is yet another tasty side for your flatbreads and rice. This semi-dry vegetable dish made with eggplant and potato is a quick and effortless option for weekday meals as well as the lunch box.
Unassuming yet delectable, plant based Indian sides usually feature one star vegetable. They also follow standard cooking techniques that include a simple tempering, a ground and spiced up paste, or a base gravy. This dish is cooked in much the same way but is unique in the use of two vegetables — one of which (eggplant) has a distinct taste of its own. Add a Dal or Raita to your menu along with this, and you have a satiating and flavorsome meal ready for the family.
About Aloo Baingan
Aloo Baingan is a delicious Indian sabji (vegetable dish) made with diced potatoes and eggplant that have been simmered in a spiced onion tomato masala. You can make it dry or cook it into a gravy. Potato is a versatile tuber that adapts flavors from different ingredients and complements other vegetables in a particular dish. No wonder this vegetable is a popular ingredient found in many Indian sides.
Eggplant or brinjal, on the other hand, has a strong and distinctive savor. When you combine the two together and immerse them in a spiced and tangy gravy, you have an exciting dish that screams succulent.
You’ll find numerable versions of aloo baingan including regional and family variations. Many families have a signature style of using spices, herbs and aromatics for the masala as do home cooks from different parts of the country.
Want a secret tip on the best way to enjoy your dish?
Save some for the next day and serve it hot. The flavors intensify in the fridge overnight to create an unbeatable mouth feel.
More Potato Recipes
Bombay Potatoes
Aloo matar
Aloo methi
Dum aloo
Potato curry
My Recipe
My aloo baingan recipe is inspired by this Aloo Gobi which I shared a few years ago. This simple and tasty option for everyday meals comes together rather quickly. You don’t need a long list of ingredients other than the standard tempering and spices.
You can make this either a aloo baingan sabji (dry curry) or a gravy dish following the same recipe. This time I used bottled tomato puree but I usually make it with fresh pureed tomatoes and it works the same way. But the bottled puree has a deeper flavor so use whatever you have on had.
I have a couple of suggestions in the Pro tips section below, to help you get the texture right and make a perfectly cooked dish.
Ingredients
Potatoes: You can use any kind of potatoes like russet or Yukon gold. If using newly harvested potatoes they take lesser time to cook and can turn mushy faster. So note that.
Eggplants: You may use any kind of potatoes – green or purple. Long, globe or Indian variety eggplants can all be used. Try choosing young eggplants as they don’t have a lot of seeds.
Ginger and Garlic: You can use store bought ginger garlic paste or simply crush garlic and ginger in a mortar pestle. If you want you may use garlic and ginger powder, but make sure you add it at the last step before finishing the dish.
More Brinjal recipes
Eggplant Bharta
Stuffed brinjal fry
Gutti Vankaya
Bagara baingan
Bharwa Baingan
Photo Guide
How to make Aloo Baingan (Stepwise Photos)
Prep the vegetables
1. Peel 250 grams (2-3 medium) potatoes. Slice them lengthwise of ½-inch thickness (for faster cooking). Keep them immersed in the water until ready to cook.
2. Rinse 250gms of eggplant (use 3-4 small eggplants or 1 medium globe eggplant ). Slice the eggplants lengthwise of 1-inch thickness. Add the slices to a bowl of water & stir in ¼ teaspoon salt.
3. Prep the other ingredients:
- Fine chop or puree 2 medium tomatoes (150gms) in a blender or grinder.
- Fine chop 1 large onion (110 to 120 grams) to make 1 cup
- Chop the green chili (Indian/ Thai/Serrano)
- Mince 3 cloves of garlic and ½-inch of ginger if you’ve run out of the paste. We will need ½ tbsp. (or 1½ teaspoon paste)
- ½ to ¾ teaspoon salt
- ⅛ teaspoon of turmeric
- ¾ to 1 teaspoon of Kashmiri chili powder
- 1 to 1¼ teaspoon of garam masala
- 1 to 1½ teaspoon of coriander powder
Cook the potatoes and eggplants
4. Add 2 tablespoons of oil to a pan on high heat. Reduce the heat to low and add ½ to ¾ teaspoon of jeera/cumin seeds. Stir to prevent the seeds from burning.
5. When the cumin seeds start spluttering and sizzling, add green chili & onions. Skip the chili if you want a dish with low pungency and heat levels.
6. Sauté onions for 2-3 minutes until translucent. Add ½ tablespoon of ginger garlic paste. Sauté for 1-2 minutes and be careful not to burn it.
7. Remove the potatoes from the water and add to the pan. Mix to combine with the aromatics. Stir fry the potato slices on medium high flame for 3 minutes, until they turn slightly transparent.
8. Cook covered for 3 to 4 mins on a low to medium flame.
9. Remove the eggplant slices from the salted water and add them to the pan. Stir fry for 2 to 3 minutes until eggplant skins begin to change color or sear a little.
Make the semi-dry vegetable or gravy
10. Stir in salt, turmeric, Kashmiri chili powder, garam masala & coriander powder.
11. Mix well to combine and pour ½ cup water. Cook covered until the aloo and baingan are soft and tender. The potatoes should be well-cooked and tender but not mushy. Stir frequently to ensure the food doesn’t stick to the bottom.
12. Add ¾ cup tomato puree to the pan.
13. Saute aloo baingan until the raw smell from tomatoes has gone. The masala will thicken up and coat the vegetables.
14. Pour ¼ cup water to make a semi-dry dish. [If you want to transform it into a gravy, add 1¼ cups hot water. Stir well to let the ingredients mix together & simmer until the curry turns thick.]
15. Taste test and add more salt if required. Simmer uncovered on low heat for a few minutes to let the flavors blend and the curry to thicken up. If you want mushy eggplants simply overcook the aloo baingan to the point the eggplants disintegrate in the curry.
Remove from heat and garnish with 1 tablespoon of finely chopped coriander leaves. Serve hot with roti, paratha, chapati, pulao or other mixed rice dishes.
How to make Instant Pot Aloo Baingan
At home we are not fans of overcooked and mushy veggies and this is what you can expect with most of the Instant pot eggplant dishes. However a lot of times I had to follow this method of cooking Aloo baingan in an instant pot simply for the reason, you are hands free and don’t need to baby sit.
But also note that eggplants like mushrooms release a lot of moisture when pressure cooked, which you will need to evaporate on the saute mode at the last step. Here is how to do it.
- Press Saute button on your Instant pot and pour oil to the steel insert. When the oil turns slightly hot (not super-hot), add the cumin seeds.
- Soon they will sizzle, add the fine chopped onions and green chilies. Saute until golden, you don’t need to brown them.
- Stir in the ginger garlic paste and saute for 30 to 60 seconds. Stir in all the ground spices – turmeric, red chilli powder, garam masala, coriander powder and salt.
- Quickly add the potatoes and egg plants. Saute for 1 to 2 minutes. Immediately pour the tomato puree.
- Mix well to deglaze and press cancel. Secure the Instant pot with the lid and position the steam release valve to sealing.
- Press the pressure cook button and set the timer to 2 minutes. When the Instant pot pressure cooking is done, let wait for the pressure to release for 3 to 4 mins.
- Release the rest manually by carefully moving the steam valve from sealing to venting. Open the lid and bring all the veggies to the center so all of the liquid moves to the sides. Press saute button.
- Let cook on saute mode without stirring or mixing, until most of the moisture is evaporated. It only takes a few minutes. To thicken the curry faster, you may mash down some of the potatoes.
- When the aloo baingan looks almost dry, mix and saute for 1 to 2 mins. Sprinkle coriander leaves and adjust salt to taste.
Pro Tips
Chopping aloo and baingan: First off – cube the potato and eggplant into uniform, medium sized pieces. How does this help? The vegetables cook evenly and faster. And don’t forget to soak chopped potatoes and eggplant in water until you’re ready to use them. The reason for this is simple – to prevent oxidization.
You’ve probably noticed apple slices turning brown when left uncovered and exposed to the elements. The same process occurs in certain vegetables, especially tubers. Soaking eggplants in water, especially salted water, prevents them from darkening.
Cook the potatoes first before you add the eggplant. The root vegetable takes longer to cook on the stovetop. When you add both to the pan at the same time, you risk ending up with either an unevenly cooked or a mushy and overcooked dish.
Always add tomatoes later for faster cooking: Adding tomatoes too early before or along with potatoes and eggplants will hinder them from cooking. The acids in the tomatoes will lengthen the cook time of potatoes. Even more, the potatoes may take forever to cook unless you use a pressure cooker.
Related Recipes
Recipe Card
Aloo Baingan Recipe
For best results follow the step-by-step photos above the recipe card
Ingredients (US cup = 240ml )
- 1 cup (110 to 120 grams) chopped onions
- 250 grams (9 ounces) potatoes (sliced lengthwise to ½ inch thickness)
- 250 grams (9 ounces) eggplants (sliced lengthwise to 1 inch thickness)
- ¾ cup (150 grams) tomatoes (chopped or pureed in a grinder)
- 1 green chilli (optional)
- 2 tablespoons oil
- ½ to ¾ teaspoon cumin seeds
- ½ tablespoon ginger garlic paste (or ½ inch ginger, 3 cloves of garlic chopped)
- ⅛ teaspoon turmeric
- ½ to ¾ teaspoon salt (adjust to taste)
- ¾ to 1 teaspoon red chili powder (adjust to taste)
- 1 to 1 ¼ teaspoon garam masala (adjust to taste)
- 1 to 1 ½ teaspoon coriander powder (adjust to taste)
- ¼ cup water for semi dry (or 1¼ cups hot water for gravy)
- 1 tablespoon coriander leaves fine chopped
Instructions
Preparation
- Peel and slice potatoes lengthwise to ½ inch thickness and keep them immersed in a bowl of water until used.
- Add ¼ teaspoon salt to a large bowl of water. Rinse and slice eggplants lengthwise to 1 inch thickness and add them to the salted water.
How to Make Aloo Baingan
- Pour oil to a hot pan and add cumin seeds. When they sizzle add onions and green chilies. Saute them until lightly golden. Don’t brown them.
- Add ginger garlic paste and saute just for 30 to 40 seconds, do not brown it.
- Remove the sliced potatoes from the water and add them to the pan. Stir fry for 3 minutes until they look slightly transparent. Cover and cook for another 3 to 4 mins until slightly tender.
- Remove the eggplants and add them to the pan. Stir fry for 3 minutes until the skin of eggplants discolor.
- Sprinkle salt, turmeric, red chili powder, garam masala and coriander powder. Gently mix and pour ½ cup water. Cover and cook until the potatoes are fully cooked yet not mushy.
- Turn the flame to medium, pour the tomato puree and mix well. Fry the aloo baingan until all of the raw smell from tomatoes has vanished.
- Pour ¼ cup water to make a semi dry aloo baingan. For a gravy version, pour 1 to 1¼ cup hot boiling water and mix. Taste test and add more salt if required. Simmer for a few minutes without covering until the curry becomes thick.
- Turn off the heat and garnish with coriander leaves. Serve aloo baingan with plain rice, roti, chapati or any flavored rice.
Video
NUTRITION INFO (estimation only)
© Swasthi’s Recipes
About Swasthi
I’m Swasthi Shreekanth, the recipe developer, food photographer & food writer behind Swasthi’s Recipes. My aim is to help you cook great Indian food with my time-tested recipes. After 2 decades of experience in practical Indian cooking I started this blog to help people cook better & more often at home. Whether you are a novice or an experienced cook I am sure Swasthi’s Recipes will assist you to enhance your cooking skills. More about me
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Comments
Fantastic recipe. I love your recipes they are both detailed and precise! I have a question, you have written that when using ginger and garlic powder to use them at the end. Is that how to use ginger and garlic powder in all Indian recipes & why?
Thanks Vasudha. Yes add it at the end. But ground versions are not real substitutes for fresh. But it is alright to use them sometimes when you don’t have the fresh ones.
Your recipes are fantastic and I really appreciate that offer substitutions for ingredients and ideas to change the flavor or heat. I would buy your cookbook.
We love this aloo baingan. Made it for the third time and it’s delicious.
I am so glad we found your site. This is the second recipe we’ve tried (first was a fantastic cauliflower curry) and this was equally delicious, and authentic tasting. Thank you!
You are welcome Elizabeth. Happy to hear that! Thank you so much
Delicious aloo baingan and so easy to make. The flavors, texture and the heat levels were perfect for us. It took me about 40 minutes from start to finish and I am so glad I made this. Thanks for a great recipe
That’s nice to know Yeshu. Appreciate sharing back!
I love this recipe! I have been wanting to make this for a while because my husband is a big fan of baingan. My house smells lovely and this tastes divine.
Thank you Zara. Happy to read this!
Tried 3 of your Indian vegetarian recipes and they were flavour bombs!! Truly delicious!!
So glad to read this Dana. Thank you
I was a little skeptical about adding tomatoes at the end but it turned out better than I expected. Perfect spice level for our taste buds.
Thank you Priya
Made it today . It was super delicious ?. Thanks so much!!
Glad you like it Rashmi. Thank you
This is my go-to aloo baingan! Well it’s the only one I’ve really liked so far because it tastes delicious and the flavors are spot on. I love recipes with fewer steps like this one. Next time going to try your coconut eggplant potato curry.
Thank you so much Paula. So glad you like it.
Can I use peas? Also will long baingan go well in this recipe?
Yes peas can be used and also long eggplants go well. Just that they cook too fast and can become mushy.
I made this recipe twice. Delicious and easy. This time I used a few curry leaves and mustard seeds. Loving the flavour of curry leaves in aloo baingan. A winner for sure!
Glad you like it Paula. Yes curry leaves can be added. Thank you
Your baingan bharta and the aloo baingan are the only Indian eggplant dishes I enjoyed so far. For the third time I was gifted some home-grown eggplants by my Indian neighbor and she told me to look into your recipes. I’m so glad I did. This aloo baingan was delicious and my wife was happy to carry the leftovers to work. I have a question. What kind of tomatoes do you use for this recipe? Canned or fresh?
Hi Daniel,
Thanks for writing. So glad you like the recipes. I am accessible to fresh tomatoes, all-round the year and that’s what I use. Rarely like in the pictures here, I use bottled puree like passata (from Mutti). Hope this helps
Our aloo baingan I learnt from my mother is always plain. We basically stir fry aloo and baingan. No tomatoes and onions. But this was delicious and I make this every fortnight. I’m yet to make your eggplant potato with coconut milk. That sounds delicious too. Thank you.
Parveen, thank you so much for trying and sharing back. I too know the Punjabi version which the chefs make just by stir frying the aloo baingan and later that is seasoned with spices. That’s also great and faster to make. Yes! Give the eggplant potato with coconut milk a try . I’m sure you will love that too.
Yum, a little spicy for me and would prefer the potatoes a little softer but they are definitely cooked through. Very easy to follow tasty and easy recipe, will definitely make again with some minor tweaks. Thank you
Hollie, In the recipe card, I have given options to cut down the spices and also mentioned to adjust the spice level to taste. It also mentions to add more water if you want mushy curry. Next time cut down the chili powder and add more water if you want more softer potatoes. Hope this helps.
Delicious! Next attempt I’m going to add a can of chickpeas and some broth.
Thank you! Glad you like it.
Good and simple – I enjoyed my dinner.
Thanks Victor
I always refer your recipe however leaving a comment for the first time i made this with roti n it was yummy thank u so much
So glad to know Shabnam. Thank you so much for leaving a comment.
I made this today n it was so yummy with roti thank you always refer your recipe
Great eggplant and potato recipe. Both veggies often turn hard if you add the tomatoes early in the cooking. They take forever. Always add the tomatoes at the last stage as shown in the recipe. This recipe turns out great every time. We prefer a bit mushy eggplants, so let it cook a little longer. This also makes a thick sauce. I have also experimented with coconut milk and it turns out fab. Your recipes are delish. Thank you.
Dan, Glad you like it. Yes this is what works out for me too. Thank you!
I made this recipe twice and turns out delicious. Can I substitute tomato puree with canned tomatoes?
Hi June,
Glad to know! I have no experience with canned tomatoes. I know bottled tomato puree works and that’s what I have used here. You can try out with a smaller quantity.