Roasted Ratatouille = The Best Ratatouille
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
Last Friday, before heading out to see friends for a long weekend, I made the roasted ratatouille from my friend Gena Hamshaw’s Food52 Vegan. I chopped up every pepper, onion, eggplant, tomato, and zucchini I could find, threw them into my largest roasting pan, tossed them with olive oil, white balsamic vinegar, fresh thyme, and salt, and cooked them till they released their juices and melted into a stewy mix.
That evening, I tossed the ratatouille, as Gena suggests, with pasta, then packed up what remained for the road. My friends and I ate the ratatouille all weekend, cold straight from the fridge for lunch, spread over grilled bread before dinner.
What I love about this ratatouille’s flavor is the subtle bite lent by the balsamic vinegar, which evokes eggplant caponata though the sharpness here is more mellow. It is irresistible.
What I also love about this roasted ratatouille is how unfussy and forgiving it is. In the notes, Gena writes: “Traditional ratatouille can be a little high maintenance: It simmers on the stovetop for an hour or longer and often requires adding specific vegetables at specific times.” With roasting, on the other hand, all of the vegetables and seasonings enter the pan at once.
With the exception of a quick stir halfway through cooking, the process is hands off—there’s no sautéing, no (vigilant) monitoring, no staggering the entry of the vegetables. When the vegetables release their juices, and when those juices then reduce down into a thick, stewy mix, it’s done.
How to Make Roasted Ratatouille
Here’s what you do: Gather all of your ratatouille vegetables: tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, onions, summer squash, and garlic.
Roughly chop everything. As you chop, pile the vegetables into your largest roasting pan, seasoning each layer of vegetables with salt.
Pour olive oil and vinegar over top. Crack pepper over top.
If your pan looks like this, don’t worry! (And don’t stir either.)
Transfer pan to the oven and roast at 400ºF for 45 minutes. At this point, when the vegetables have released some of their juices and have shrunk down considerably, you can remove the pan, and carefully give it all a stir.
Return the pan to the oven and continue to cook for 2 hours (or more or less), stirring halfway, until the vegetables become completely stewy, almost jammy in texture.
Spread your ratatouille over toast, toss with pasta, use as a layer in a summer lasagna, or simply eat with a spoon. Ratatouille freezes beautifully, too, so don’t be afraid to pack it into quart containers, and stash it away for a future use.
\
PrintRoasted Ratatouille = The Best Ratatouille
- Total Time: Varies: 1 to 3 hours
- Yield: Varies: 1 to 3 quarts
Description
This is adapted from Food52 Vegan by Gena Hamshaw.
Use this recipe as a guide: It’s best to use a balanced mix of vegetables, but the roasting process is forgiving. For instance, I’ve made this with and without zucchini; I’ve used a mix of vegetables that leans heavy on the eggplant at times and heavy on the tomatoes at others. I’ve used all sorts of peppers, tomatoes, eggplant, etc.
Also, I often make a quadruple (or more!) recipe, so don’t be afraid to load up your largest roasting pan. The key is to be patient with the roasting. Let the vegetables cook until the liquids reduce, and the mixture becomes thick and stewy. When I double/triple/quadruple the recipe, I scale the dressing as needed. When my roasting pan is completely loaded, I use 1 cup olive oil and 1/2 cup white balsamic vinegar (or 1/2 cup olive oil and 1/4 cup vinegar), and I cook the vegetables for 3 hours.
Also, I often omit the thyme altogether: I simply season each layer of vegetables with salt as I add them to the pan. Then once all of the vegetables are in, I pour over the olive oil and white balsamic vinegar. After 1 hour, I stir it; then I stir it again every hour after that until it has roasted for 3 hours total.
Ingredients
For the roasted ratatouille:
- 12 ounces eggplant, (about 1), chopped into 1-inch pieces, see notes above re quantities
- 1 1/4 pounds tomatoes, chopped into 1-inch pieces
- 12 ounces zucchini (about 2), chopped into 1-inch pieces
- 2 red bell (or other) peppers, seeded and coarsely chopped
- 1 yellow or white onion, chopped
- 1 shallot, thinly sliced
- 4 cloves garlic, minced
- 1/4 to 1/2 cups olive oil, see notes above
- 2 to 4 tablespoons white balsamic vinegar
- 2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme, optional
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste
- Freshly cracked pepper to taste
For the pasta:
- dried pasta
- roasted ratatouille
- freshly grated parmesan
- basil
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400° F.
- In a large roasting pan or casserole, combine the tomatoes, eggplant, zucchini, peppers, onion, shallot, and garlic. Note: I add the vegetables to the pan as I finish chopping them, and sprinkle each layer of vegetables lightly with salt.
- In a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the olive oil, vinegar, thyme, and 1 teaspoon kosher salt. Pour over the vegetables. Toss to coat. Season with pepper. (Alternatively: If you’ve seasoned each layer of vegetables generously with salt, simply pour the olive oil and vinegar over the vegetables. As noted above, I omit the thyme.)
- Bake for 30 minutes, then stir well. Bake for another 30 to 45 minutes (or longer, especially if you’ve increased the quantities: if my roasting pan is really loaded, I roast the vegetables for 3 hours, stirring once every hour, until the juices really begin to reduce/thicken) until the vegetables are all very tender and the released juices are beginning to thicken. Taste and adjust seasoning with more salt and pepper as desired.
- To serve, spoon over toast or toss with cooked pasta, grated parmesan, finely chopped basil and enough of the reserved pasta cooking liquid to make a nice sauce.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 to 2 hours (or more)
- Category: Vegetable
- Method: Roasted
- Cuisine: French
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
319 Comments on “Roasted Ratatouille = The Best Ratatouille”
This is the absolute BEST recipe. I only ever make your’s now and its so simple too…..This one should win an award!
Awwww thanks, Deborah 🙂 🙂 🙂 It’s my fave, too 💕
Ali,
This ratatouille is to die for! I want to use it to make your eggplant lasagne. Would you sub the eggplant and greens tor the ratatouille but keep the balance of the recipe the same including the tomato sauce? And didn’t you have a trick when use no-boil pasta? Do share.
Thank you for everything you share. My family thinks I’m a great cook because of you! I love it!
So nice to read all of this, Cindi 🙂 🙂 🙂 You can definitely sub the ratatouille for the eggplant and greens, though I don’t think the addition of greens would hurt it — they’re not necessary, but if you’re up for sautéeing some, go for it. Yes, keep everything else the same. Regarding no-boil noodles, for the final layer, I have been boiling a pot of water, and dunking the final three sheets of noodles into the water just briefly — 5 to 10 seconds. This ensure they’ll soften up nicely on top. You don’t have to do this with the other layers because they’ll definitely soften given all of the sauce and veggies surrounding them. Hope that helps. Thank you for your kind words.
As I had a lot of vegetables to use up, I made this recipe, even though Ratatouille isn’t my favourite. Wow, what a fantastic recipe! The flavours were wonderful; the texture was great; it was super easy to prepare & it was absolutely delicious. We loved it & I look forward to making it again. Thanks for a fantastic, award worthy recipe.
So nice to read this, Helene 🙂 🙂 🙂 I made a huge batch yesterday, and smeared it over flatbread. It was such a treat. So glad you liked it. Thanks for writing!
So glad you featured this recipe – had most of the ingredients in the fridge, and others that I included. It’s sensationally good!
And will go into regular rotation through the late fall. Thank you!!
Great to hear, Tracy!
What containers do you like to use for freezing?
Hi! I use these quart containers.
This recipe is so good! I’ve made 4 batches so far – my granddaughters love itv and ask me to make it. What a great way to eat vegetables- especially with the abundance we have in our garden. Thank you! It’s awesome!
Great to hear, Christine! And how nice your granddaughters approve, too 💕💕💕💕
I’ve made ratatouille many times in my life – never really been a fan. Historically, it just missed the mark. Decided to try this because I had so much zucchini, tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and basil growing in my garden. GAME CHANGER!!!!!!! This recipe is PERFECTION. Having it tonight as a side dish to Italian Chicken in Lettuce Cups…..and leftovers tomorrow on pasta.
MAKE THIS TONIGHT! I am a foodie and cook all the time (aka tI ry a LOT of recipes). This recipe is a keeper – and sooo easy. Well done, Ali. This recipe has a permanent spot in my summer repertoire.
So nice to read this, Kris! Thanks so much for writing and sharing. Italian chicken lettuce cups sound divine!!
Seriously so easy and good! I should have used more veggies as it shrinks down significantly but it’s so tasty! I also love when you accompany the recipe with a video. Thanks for all you do!
Great to hear, Jodi! It is astonishing to see the vegetables shrink down so dramatically. Glad you enjoy the videos, too. Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This was amazing!! Pretty easy recipe considering you just chop and dump vegetables and the end result is so incredible!! In love with this recipe and it’s versatility.
Wonderful to hear this, Yana! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This is the BEST ratatouille recipe. So good with the balsamic vinegar. Delicious. Thank you 🙏
Great to hear, Rebecca! I think the balsamic makes it, too 🙂 🙂 🙂
This was the best ratatouille ever. Makes a fantastic pizza topping. My only change was equal parts white wine vinegar and dark balsamic as I had no white balsamic. It made a ton so I am stashing some in the freezer.
Great to hear Regina! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂 🙂 🙂
I cannot believe how easy and absolutely delicious this is! I’m not super fond of ratatouille but this is incredible!!! I wonder if it’s the white balsamic vinegar that makes the difference! Thank you so much, Alexandra, for sharing this!
So nice to hear this, Hina! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂 I do think the vinegar makes a difference — it adds a bite and a sweetness and just a little more depth of flavor.
I think I commented on this once before, but as I am making this today I wanted to note how forgiving this recipe is. I’m substituting a can of drained broken up Italian plum tomatoes for fresh– only my cherry tomatoes are ripe and my grandson finished off most of them. I’ve done this several times before and it turned out fine. Once in the middle of a cooking marathon I misplaced my garlic, so I threw in lots of Asian garlic chives after it finished roasting. Still delicious! My only criticism is that I have to wait for a cool summer morning or start roasting very early on the day, lest I cook down along with the vegetables
Great to read all of this Mimi! Thanks for writing. As I type (6:30 am) I have a batch going, because I, too, am trying to beat the heat, and I used scallions in this batch, too, in an effort to use them before we head out for a long weekend camping. So forgiving! Great tip on the canned tomatoes.
Such a wonderful end-of-summer delight. I love the idea of freezing some for winter, but it doesn’t last long enough to do so. I added fresh basil chiffonade at the end and omitted the thyme as Alexandra said she generally does. The basil adds a bright color as well as flavor. When using the ratatouille for a pasta sauce, a few pinches of crushed red pepper flakes are nice. Be sure to save ample pasta water as the pasta thickens as it sits. I also love this on Alexandra’s overnight focaccia.
This was so easy to make and absolutely delicious. The flavor it takes on from the long slow roast is incredible. I made a triple batch and am freezing for use throughout the winter.
Hi Amanda! So nice to see you here, and so nice to read all of this. Thanks so much for writing. Hope you are enjoying these last few weeks of summer 💕💕💕💕💕
Epic as always! My garden eggplants did well this year so between this and your eggplant involtini I’ve been spoiled these last few weeks. This recipe is just heaven! I just pulled it out of the oven and your roasted garlic bread is currently in the oven so I know what I’ll be having for dinner tonight. 🙂
Oh yay! Kristen, so wonderful to read all of this. Jealous of your homegrown eggplants!! Can’t imagine how delicious they must be.
Love this recipe. I did as you said, filled our largest roaster with vegetables from our garden. We had it for dinner and I froze enough for 4 more meals. It was so easy and so delicious! Thank you.
Wonderful to hear this, Janet! Such a great feeling having a stash of this in the freezer. Thanks for writing!
I made this last week at your inspiration; you indirectly reminded me the ingredients are fast disappearing after this challenging dry summer. The pre-baking dish mirrored yours in quantity. I used a little too much olive oil but my favorite uses of this dish favor extra oil. Thanks so much for offering up this recipe while the bountiful ingredients are still available. This is my only bookmarked recipe for, as the kids say, ratatootie. I ate some with pasta but am freezing most as freezer-prizes for the dead of winter.
So nice to read all of this, Bob 🙂 🙂 🙂 How fun to have a stash of ratatootie on hand for the winter. Thanks for writing!
This was outstanding and so easy! I will make it again. One challenge: the shallot on top was starting to burn within 30 min and over time the onions began to burn too as stirring broke them apart. Tried to stir every 30 vs 60 min to tuck them back under but it wasn’t enough. Appreciate any thoughts on how to keep that from happening next time.
Hi Ann! Great to hear. A few thoughts: you can put the onions on the bottom layer so that they are completely covered from the start. I wonder if you need to lower your oven temp? Does your oven tend to run hot?
Let me begin this by saying that I always look for veggie rich recipes that I can make in big batches, so the weekday rushes don’t push me towards grabbing yet another basic ham and cheese sandwich (although they are tasty, too). This ratatouille… The batch I made will last a couple of lunches… If I don’t eat it by a spoonful by the time it cools down. It’s that good. Will absolutely be making yet another huge batch as soon as I get more ingredients (garlic and eggplant just give it that special quality). Thank you so much for introducing us to this method and your recipe. Your recipes never disappoint!
So nice to read all of this, Lili 🙂 🙂 🙂 I find that this one feels like such a gift when I have it on hand. It’s so nice to be able to open the fridge and pull out something so nourishing… I hear you on the ham and cheese: for me it’s cheese sticks and meat sticks 🤣
Thanks for writing and thank you for your kind words 🙂 🙂 🙂
On you Instagram site you mentioned importance of layering in certain order. Here is seems random. Can you clarify. Great idea and so practical. Thanks vicki
Hi Vicki and John! I actually say on IG that order is not important … it might have been muffled in the video. Layer the veggies as you wish!
Oh my! So sweet and delicious. The only way to make ratatouille.
Great to hear, Marie! And I agree 🙂 🙂 🙂
Made this 2 days ago and cannot stop eating it!! Smeared on baguette, accompanying eggs, over pasta, straight out of the pot…INCREDIBLE flavour! I did add a splash of red wine while it cooked down and a squeeze of lemon at the end. Will make again and again and again!
This is baking time #2, and this is such an easy recipe, and works with what I have in the kitchen. Thank you so much
Great to hear, Amy 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing.
This is by far the best ratatouille that I’ve ever made and it couldn’t have been easier. Best part is that I could make it ahead and just warm it for my holiday dinner. My guests raved about it and I will make it regularly.
Oh yay! Wonderful to hear this, Ellen 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing. Hope your holiday was wonderful.
We make ratatouille year round since it always seems like a lifesaver to have it in the fridge. Since trying this recipe in August, this is my favorite version and I am in the middle of making it again this morning.. So good and when I don’t have tomatoes I use a 28 oz can of crushed tomatoes (I know, probably sacrilegious but tastes just as good). Thanks for all of your great tasting, reliable recipies!
That is so good to know! Thank you so much for writing and sharing this. Such a great tip and not sacrilegious at all. Thank you for your kind words 🙂 🙂 🙂
Made this in the summer with my garden produce. I found 2 drawbacks– the 400 degree oven heats up the kitchen ( I advise roasting vegetables very early in the morning), and we liked it too much to have any left in the freezer. My grocery stores have tomatoes, eggplant,peppers and zucchini on sale this week, and I have a huge pan roasting in the oven. My kitchen smells like summer, and it’s toast warm on this gray, cold day
So nice to read all of this, Mimi 🙂 🙂 🙂 I could use a dose of summer right about now!
So yummy and simple Ali! Made a huge pan late last night and planning to toss it with some orzo and pine nuts this evening. Thank you for sharing another great recipe!
Great to hear, Kelli! Orzo + Pine Nuts + Ratatouille sounds amazing 🙂 🙂 🙂
So good and so easy! ❤️ The best ratatouille.
I’m about to make this, it looks fabulous! How would mushrooms work, to watery? Would it work if I sautéed them first before adding to oven ingredients?
Thanks for your input!
J
I don’t think you need to sauté them first. Mushrooms, like so many of the other vegetables in this mix, have a lot water, and it will cook off during the lengthy cooking period. I say give it a try! Now that you’ve made it once without, you have a baseline from which to compare.
I made this today❣️ Oh my word, I’m a senior and usually sautéed tons of veggies but got same delicious result in oven with your method‼️
Genius ‼️ Thank you so much‼️
Has anyone added mushrooms?
Great to hear, Jane! Thanks for reporting back 🙂 🙂 🙂 I have not added mushrooms to this mix.