Egg Plant, Aubergine or Brinjal - all are same.
Aubergine is the British name given to this fruit, from the French aubergine, derived from Catalan albergínia; from Arabic al-bãdhinjãn and from Persian Bâdinjân.
The aubergine is called the eggplant in the United States, Australia, and Canada. This name developed from the fact that the fruits of some 18th-century European cultivars were yellow or white and resembled goose or hen's eggs
Numerous other names are used, many derived from the Sanskrit vatinganah, which has given birth to a number of names for this plant in various languages and dialects: brinjal, badingan, melongena, melanzana, berenjena, albergínia, aubergine, brown-jolly, and mad-apple (a misinterpretation of the Italian melanzana as mela insana).-
2007-01-30 23:01:35
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Aubergine Eggplant
2016-12-14 17:00:21
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
difference between egg plant and aubergine?
2015-08-24 04:56:30
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answer #3
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answered by ? 1
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They are the same thing. The word Eggplant is used by Americans and Australians, Aubergine is used by British and French.
The original word was aubergine, derived from the Sanskrit word 'Badinjan'. It was called eggplant when it was introduced to America as the plants most commonly grown were ones with white, egg-shaped fruit
2007-01-30 21:43:53
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answer #4
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answered by Velouria 6
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No difference - it's a country thing - Americans call it egg plant, British and French call it aubergine.
2007-01-30 22:54:57
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answer #5
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answered by Florence-Anna 5
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Egg Plant is 2 words and spelt differently to Aubergine.
2007-01-30 21:57:39
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answer #6
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answered by Bex 3
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Baked stuffed aubergines (melanzane al forno) Serves 4 Preparation time 30 mins to 1 hour Cooking time 30 mins to 1 hour Ingredients 2 large or 4 small aubergines weighing about 750g/1lb10oz total 150g/5oz minced beef 60g/2½oz pecorino or parmesan cheese 30g/1oz stone in black olives 100g/4oz sliced bread from a crusty dense loaf 3 vine-ripened tomatoes 2 garlic cloves 1 tbsp concentrated tomato paste 2tsp dried oregano 2 eggs 2 tbsp olive oil salt and pepper Note: for the cooking time, adjust the time downwards if you are using 4 small aubergines rather than 2 large ones. Method 1. preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6 and bake the whole aubergines for 12-20 minutes according to size, till softened. 2. When you take out the aubergines, put your sliced bread in the oven and leave to toast till quite dry, about 5-7 minutes. 3. Remove - but leave the oven on - and break into smaller pieces then place in the food processor. Whiz till you have fine breadcrumbs. 4. Once the aubergines are cool, cut each in half horizontally, also through the stalks if possible. With a small sharp knife scoop out the flesh, leaving a shell about 5mm/¼in thick. Chop the aubergine flesh scooped from the centre into very small dice (see tips). 5. Cut the garlic in half and remove the green shoot if any. Crush one of the cloves lightly and chop the other very fine. Peel and de-seed the tomato then chop the flesh into small dice. Slice the flesh from the olives in slivers (see tips). 6. Place the crushed garlic clove in a frying pan with the cold olive oil and colour till palest gold on low heat. Discard the garlic clove, add the beef mince, turn up the heat and brown well. Add the tomatoes, aubergine, oregano, tomato concentrate and the minced garlic clove, season and simmer uncovered for 10-12 minutes or till well-reduced. 7. Add a little water if needed to keep the mixture simmering rather than drying out. While it simmers, grate the cheese and mix with the breadcrumbs. Slice the olives into very small slivers. 8. Separate the two eggs, reserve the egg whites, and mix the two yolks into the meat aubergine mixture after it has been left to cool a little, making sure they are very well amalgamated. 9. Tip about 2/3 of the breadcrumb/cheese mix into the aubergine mixture with the sliced olives. The mix should be a little wet but not sloppy or runny - if it is, add more breadcrumbs and/or cheese, if too dry add a little water. 10. Fill the aubergine shells with the mixture and flatten the top. Whisk up the egg whites on a plate using a knife or fork, till they are a little frothy, then take each filled aubergine in your hand and press filling-side down into the egg whites. 11. Sprinkle with the remaining breadcrumb mixture, pressing down so it sticks well, place in a lightly-oiled baking dish and bake for 30-40 minutes. Flash under a hot grill for 3 minutes until the topping is brown and crisp. Leave to cool for 5-10 minutes before serving (see tips). Tips: Dry peeling tomatoes: if the tomatoes have ripened on the plant in strong sun, they have a thick peel that is easily removed without blanching. Just rub all over the tomato with the back of a knife to loosen the skin from the flesh, then use the pointed tip to lift off the skin. Removing the smell of garlic from your hands: use a safe stainless steel utensil or spoon as if it were a bar of soap and 'wash' your hands with it under cold running water. Works like magic! Removing the aubergine fleshymay prefer to use a spoon to scoop out the flesh, a grapefruit spoon is ideal. The smaller you chop the dice, the better amalgamated your filling will be.
2016-04-03 02:08:02
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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i think an egg plant is an aubergine
2007-01-30 21:44:01
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Now I feel really foolish, Recently in China I tried Eggplant and didnt like it, well I never did like aubergines. I knew it looked familiar but didnt cotton on. ohhhhhhh I am stupid
2007-01-30 23:59:40
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answer #9
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answered by freckle 3
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Eggplant is also called aubergine because of its dark purple color.
2007-01-30 21:47:22
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answer #10
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answered by lanisoderberg69 4
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