Roasted vegetables
Sometimes I say to myself, I say, Luisa, does the world really need another recipe for and then I fill in the blank with whatever thing I'm about to tell you about, cookies or soup or roasted vegetables, say. And then I hem and I haw with myself for a good while, feeling alternatingly dejected and enthusiastic and, er, also slightly mad, before I make a decision.

For example: A batch of oatmeal cookies with chocolate (milk chocolate!) and raisins I made a few months ago? I decided against them. (Even though they were pretty good!) Because I kind of feel like I'd just be adding to the internet bedlam. These cookies are the best! No, make these cookies over here! No, no, my cookies are the be-all and end-all! Gah. Sometimes a girl just gets a little tired of all the noise. You know?

And so it was with these roasted vegetables. I mean, I love them and I think they are lamination-worthy (anyone reading here who still remembers that? ha!), but chances are you already roast your vegetables your very own way and is my little blog post really going to get anyone into the kitchen when it's hot and sticky out and everyone would rather be eating popsicles and swilling cold cocktails after hours and so on and so forth?

(It was a self-doubt kind of day, friends.)

DSC_1510

But ultimately, the deliciousness factor made me change my mind. I mean, even if just one person starts to make their roasted vegetables this way, I guess I will have won (what contest I couldn't even say) and so that was enough deliberating for me. Besides, my aunt Laura made us these vegetables the first day of our vacation and then was obliged to make them four more times over the course of the two weeks because none of us, not me, not my mother, not Hugo, not Max, could stop eating them. That's how good they are.

(SO GOOD.)

DSC_1512

Okay, so I don't know about you, but when I roast vegetables, I always just take the vegetable I'm going to roast (asparagus, say, or parsnips or Brussels sprouts or whatever), cut them into pieces (or not!), put them on a sheet pan with a little bit of oil and salt and stick them in a hot oven. I try not to crowd the vegetables so that they have space to brown and blister and get crisp, and I turn the heat up way high. And that's it.

But Laura did everything differently. First, she mixed a whole bunch of vegetables together. An eggplant, a zucchini, an onion, two carrots, a bell pepper, a few small potatoes and a couple of tomatoes. Tomatoes! She cut everything into little pieces, much smaller than I usually do (so small that about 3 pieces could fit into Hugo's (admittedly) widely-opened mouth once cooked). Then she piled all the vegetables into a baking dish. The vegetables were layered a few inches thick, squished willy-nilly on top of and next to each other. Laura also used way more olive oil than I usually do (which left a gorgeously hued puddle of delicious cooking juices at the bottom of the pan that we battled over, armed with pieces of bread, at the end of the meal). And finally, she turned the heat a little lower than I usually do and let the vegetables cook for much longer. Close to an hour, I'd say.

DSC_1522

For seasonings, she used this herb mixture (garlic already included) and a bit more salt and some pepper. Since then, I've done some experimenting, using herbs like thyme or rosemary or wild fennel, and I have to say that all of them work deliciously. Just make sure you mince your rosemary or else you will have poky little pieces strewn throughout your soft, fantastic vegetables and they will make you feel a little stabby. (Or is it just me?) What's important is that you include garlic in some form (either minced or left whole or in the herb rub), use plennnnnty of olive oil, crowd the vegetables as best you can into a dish (the more crowding, the better!) and let them cook for as long as you can stand.

What you will get, at the end, are vegetables that have sort of contracted and shrunk and sweetened. They get wholly infused with the flavors of the herbs, garlic and oil. The potatoes turn into potato candy – all chewy and sweet and incredible. The tomatoes lose all their moisture to the pan, but miraculously retain their shape, so you get little bombs of tomato flavor now and then. The onions snake their way throughout, perfuming every bite. The eggplants soften into silk. And all together, ooh, it's just so good that it's worth every bit of interest noise I might herewith create.

Ready? Here we go:

THE BEST ROASTED VEGETABLES EVER!!!!!!!

Roasted Vegetables
Serves 6 as a side dish

1 medium onion
1 medium or 2 small carrots
1 zucchini
1 eggplant
2 small potatoes
5 small tomatoes
1 red or yellow pepper
2 cloves of garlic
Salt and pepper to taste
Dried herbs (sage, thyme, rosemary, wild fennel are all good choices – either individually or combined in some form)
4 to 5 tablespoons of olive oil, plus more to taste

1. Preheat the oven to 375 F (180 C). Quarter and slice the onion thinly. Dice all the vegetables into pieces that are approximately the same size (no larger than 1/2 inch). Pile the vegetables into a baking dish so that the vegetables lie a few inches thick. Season with salt, pepper and herbs to taste and then pour the olive oil over the vegetables. Mix thoroughly but gently – you don't want to destroy the tomatoes before the dish goes into the oven. Now check the vegetables to make sure they are well-coated and glistening with oil. If need be, add more oil.

2. Put the dish in the oven and cook for 45 minutes to an hour. Halfway through the cooking process, remove the dish from the oven and very gently stir the vegetables so that the ones at the bottom come to the top. Towards the end of the cooking process, stir a second time. Remove from the oven and let cool slightly. Check for seasoning and serve.

Posted in , , ,

112 responses to “The Best Roasted Vegetables Ever”

  1. worldlypost Avatar

    I still need to try this amazing recipe. Also, I cannot tell you how much I adore your book. I cannot stop re-reading it! Your story is beautiful, and your recipes are equally as enchanting. 🙂

    Like

  2. Luisa Avatar

    No, you can leave them out (though I love them!).

    Like

  3. Luisa Avatar

    Oh, oh, oh, thank you!!! So happy to hear that.

    Like

  4. Anna Avatar

    I never thought that overcrowding vegetables was the way to roast them but I’ve been shown the error of my ways! Thank you so much for this recipe Luisa. It is divine. I’ve made it four times since you posted it (and generally get through it in just a couple of sittings). Each time I’ve used different vegetables (sweet potato is especially delicious) and once I didn’t have any tomatoes and it worked just fine (though I missed how the tomatoes go kind of candy like – so good!).

    Like

  5. anne Avatar

    someone must have written this already, but in case not: you DO have the one convert: me! empty plate is still next to me on the couch (i unexpectedly had dinner by myself tonight but decided to make this anyway)- and i just had to comment right away. so very delicious. thank you!

    Like

  6. stacey Avatar
    stacey

    Oh my, this recipe was incredible. I added some goat cheese on top of each serving (both servings my husband and I had) and it was melty deliciousness. Never going back to the sheet pan roasted vegetables. Thanks for this!

    Like

  7. devon Avatar

    I did this as soon as you told me to, with all the random marvelous veg in my fridge between market on Saturday and camping on Wednesday, and scarfed a bowl as I packed the cooler for a five day trip (!) … and on the very last morning at camp I pulled out a sealed glass container from the bottom of my watery, otherwise very un-promising cold storage and warmed all the smushy, wonderful veg and all the glorious orange fat with it, and we fried eggs and bacon and ate and EXCLAIMED in the woods. Thank you. VERY worth mentioning.

    Like

  8. Carrie Avatar
    Carrie

    It sounds like you were over-thinking what to share! Even if I don’t get a chance to try a recipe you post, I always enjoy reading your words. When I read your blog, it’s not just for the recipes (which, by the way, are always marvelous when I do get a chance to try them!)–I always immensely enjoy my visits to your corner of the internet 🙂

    Like

  9. Christine McC. Avatar

    YUM! So glad you posted, and glad I flagged them in my reader. I am a bit disappointed by you, though… serves 6 as a side?! True, I did only put in one medium tomato but I also used a couple more carrots and extra zucchini, and still managed to eat nearly half of the pan by myself for supper. No guilt though- this is a great way to get those summer veggies in. So pretty, too- I’m calling it “Summer Confetti” in my head. 🙂 Thank you!

    Like

  10. theo's cook Avatar
    theo’s cook

    I’ve made a batch of these every three days since you posted the recipe. Always different. We’ve used gorgeous fresh veggies from the farmer’s market, horrible old ones from the bottom of the crisper, some tomatoes that got frozen by mistake, some commercially frozen stuff that we didn’t know what to do with. Fabulous every time. I’ve varied the oil — a glug of sesame oil is great. Parmesan rinds, cut up fine. Lemon peel. Basil. It’s all great, and it’s even better the next day. Our vegetable consumption has increased by about 1000 percent, our vegetable waste has decreased to nothing, and suddenly we have tons of room in the fridge. This really is the best. Thank you, Luisa.
    PS I gave your book to my partner, who also had a multi-continental childhood. His parents were German, he was born in Philadelphia, and he spent his school years in Switzerland. He loves to hear how other “third culture kids” have dealt with such complications — especially ones with Berlin and Boston connections. Thanks for that, too.

    Like

  11. Poornima Avatar
    Poornima

    This is The Best veggie roast ever. Period.

    Like

  12. Ken Stewart Avatar

    Wow. Looks great. Going to try this tomorrow. Always looking for the best roast vegetables! Thanks. Ggreat post.

    Like

  13. Luisa Avatar

    I’m thrilled to hear this, thank you!!

    Like

  14. Luisa Avatar

    Ha, yes, it can disappear quickly!! Three of us polished off a batch with rice for lunch the other day. If you’re making it the star of your meal, then it definitely serves less than 6… 🙂

    Like

  15. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you, sweet lady.

    Like

  16. Luisa Avatar

    That sounds fab-u-lous.

    Like

  17. Kaffiknopf Avatar

    I am so glad you posted this! As you see, I will be one of MANY folks who are gonna cook this soon. 🙂 Thanks

    Like

  18. Dani Avatar
    Dani

    Just made this and it came out every bite as delicious as you promised. I ended up not putting potatoes because I thought they wouldn’t fit in the pan. I think they would have helped absorb some of the moisture and give a little sweetness, so next time I will definitely include them. I think I also had to roast for longer, maybe almost two hours, but perhaps my oven is not calibrated right?
    I must say I’m a roasting nut and I don’t usually try variations on my favorites, but this recipe is definitely going into the regular rotation!

    Like

  19. Stuart Avatar

    The missus and i always put a punnet of baby tomatoes in our roasted vegetables. Some of them split and burst during the roasting process and this creates a lovely kind of sauce that goes really well with the other vegetables. The ones that don’t then exlpode in your mouth when you eat them. There are often fights and wild accusations over who’s got the most tomoatoes.

    Like

  20. The Kitchen Magpie Avatar

    This looks delicious!

    Like

  21. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    I made this tonight and we loved it! I also loved the process of making this dish – the chopping (but not too much :)), the stirring which I did by hand, the fact that I had time to pour myself a glass of chilled white whine with everything in the oven within minutes… So thank you for sharing, I needed this recipe! Our carrots (even though cut into small dice) still had quite some bite after one hour. Is that how they’re supposed be to be?

    Like

  22. Leah Avatar
    Leah

    This was amazing! I’ve made it twice this week. I will say, I think the tomatoes are obligatory because of the delicious, acidic but sweet juices they give. Wouldn’t think of making it without them, although the second time around I experimented with the other vegetables. Both times I ended up tossing it with some whole grain pasta for a beautiful, healthy meal. Thanks for the great recipe 🙂

    Like

  23. Tess @ Tips on Healthy Living Avatar

    This recipe looks amazing– what sides would you recommend pairing with this dish?

    Like

  24. Victoria from London Avatar
    Victoria from London

    This is delicious thank you! After such raving about it I couldn’t resist, and I’m glad I tried it. It’s really versatile once you’ve cooked it, it’s delicious cold for a picnic, and the washing up is much easier than standard roasties because it’s caramelised but moist. I’ve served it with feta and a green salad and green beans, also would be great on baked potoatoes, with pasta, can’t wait to try it with chilli and other flavourings, with parsnip. I need to start making double quantities as it runs out too fast. It seems to stretch much further than the same quantity of veggies roasted whole. Brava!

    Like

  25. Luisa Avatar

    Hmm, I don’t know. They’re definitely the chewiest of the batch, but usually pretty soft by that point.

    Like

  26. Joe Cook Avatar

    Fantastic and easy to make too! We served ours alongside jet black wild rice and roasted chicken and that was about the most healthy and delicious dinner you could ask for. thanks!

    Like

  27. carly Avatar
    carly

    Yum yum yum, I love roasted vegetables and these were to die for, I just made them for dinner for my family of 4, minus the carrots and potatoes but with bacon and pasta, empty plates all round and my 5 year old requested that I cook more so she can have it in her lunchbox tomorrow! Looking forward to making many more of your recipes x

    Like

  28. hannah Avatar
    hannah

    I WILL make this. There, you win!! xoxo

    Like

  29. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    I made these when you first posted the recipe, exactly as you described. My 1 year old was not impressed, but I was! So simple and delicious! I am making them again today, this time with some leftover veg I have after our lake house trip. I am using 1 potato, 1 sweet potato (for Bode, they are BY FAR his favorite food), 2 zucchini’s, and 1 onion. Hope he likes it this time (hey, he’s a little older, his palate may have changed, right?)! The boy needs some vegetables as he is on a very strict all-carb diet right now. Wish us luck!
    ps, I DEVOURED your book, LOVE your blog and am especially partial to Cooking for Hugo (I think he’s about 2 or 3 months older than Bode). Keep it coming!

    Like

  30. Gayle Avatar

    So excited to discover this recipe ala my daughter and your blog. Can’t wait to make this!!

    Like

  31. marlise Avatar
    marlise

    I was looking for a grilled veggies recipe and yours was the first I found, in spite of all the “noise” out there! Hehe. And the fact that you included celsius degrees (as opposed to only Farenheit, which means nothing at all to me since I am not from the States) makes me like you even more. Yay!

    Like

  32. Patricia Avatar
    Patricia

    Thank you! This is so much better than roasting them at 450! And I love the liberal use of olive oil! Great blog Luisa!

    Like

  33. Allyson Avatar
    Allyson

    Thank you for the BEST roasted veggie recipe ever! I shopped this morning, faithfully chopped all the ingredients into small pieces, tossed liberally with good olive oil, poured into a deep baking dish and popped it into the oven. I have to be honest, I was worried I would end up with mush since I started with such small pieces! But no – they were perfect!! It took my veggies 1 hour and 20 minutes to cook so they looked like your finished product but that was fine. The end product was devoured by 3 adults and my husband has requested I whip up another batch tomorrow. Thanks for such a great addition to my recipe folder. Can’t wait to see what you (or your wonderful Aunt) come up with next!

    Like

  34. Ellen Avatar
    Ellen

    I’m eating roasted veggies now! So good and so easy!! Thank you!!!

    Like

  35. YelloowTI Avatar
    YelloowTI

    I named this fantastic recipe the ‘Simon & Garfunkel’ of roasted veggies. 1 Tsp diced ofeach fresh herb: sage, Rosemary and thyme. Sooooo good. Made it two nights now! Thanks

    Like

  36. Sis Avatar
    Sis

    I use the sheet pan method too, but this way I was able to use more veggies! I used zucchini, carrots, brussel sprouts, tomatoes, onion and garlic. Yummy! thanks for sharing!

    Like

  37. Kay Avatar
    Kay

    thanks, this was great! i used sweet potatoes, yukon gold, red potatoes, fennel, zucchini, and garlic cloves with skin on. i used a pinch of herbs de provence. can’t wait to try fresh herbs next time i have some on hand.

    Like

  38. meghan Avatar
    meghan

    I think this is awesome. I just finished roasting my second batch in three days, both of which were a riff on your recipe (added an apple the second round.) The first night I roasted them for 90+ minutes and tonight it was ~75. I don’t know if I”m doing something wrong.

    Like

  39. Ally Avatar
    Ally

    This is a great recipe. I didn’t have any fresh herbs so used some dried mixed herbs and it worked perfectly. Even my children who normally won’t eat courgettes devoured them and pronounced the best roasted veg ever!

    Like

  40. Luisa Avatar

    Yes! So happy to hear it.

    Like

  41. Luisa Avatar

    Ha! Love the name.

    Like

  42. Luisa Avatar

    So glad you all loved it!

    Like

  43. Luisa Avatar

    Good luck! Hugo just started the all-carb diet, it’s driving me nuts! This too shall pass, right? 🙂

    Like

  44. Luisa Avatar

    Wow! That’s one great compliment. 🙂

    Like

  45. Shirley Avatar
    Shirley

    I’m taking this to my daughters in laws (also friends of ours) for Thanksguving day. Along with my home made cranberry sauce, I’ve got it easy!

    Like

  46. Sharon Avatar
    Sharon

    My best friend suffers from Celiac and I am FOREVER looking for gluten free recipes…..Your preamble caught my attention – you write like I do!! I loved it! I am making my mom’s famous lemon chicken with garlic mashed potatoes and now Luisa’s Roasted Veggies! Thanks Luisa 🙂

    Like

  47. Dagart Avatar
    Dagart

    Do you recommend peeling the eggplant or just chopping it with the skin left on?

    Like

  48. Luisa Avatar

    Definitely leave the peel on!

    Like

  49. george Avatar
    george

    This is my favourite veggie dish for Christmas dinner with Cornish hens stuffed with lemon and rosemary. I serve roasted beets with walnuts and gorganola cheese on the side. So much more interesting than dry turkey.

    Like

Leave a comment