Veggie-Loaded Stuffed Bell Peppers
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This is my go-to summer vegetarian entrée. These roasted stuffed peppers are loaded with sautéed vegetables and herbs: onions, corn, zucchini, tomatoes, scallions, and cilantro. Quinoa and Monterey Jack cheese give them a hardiness. Super summery and delicious, these peppers are loved by meat-eaters and vegetarians alike!
How to feed vegetables to a crowd?
This is a question I’ve found myself asking often in recent weeks. I’ve been on the road, first in Lake George, then in Connecticut, each for a week-long trip with extended family.
When it has been my turn to make dinner, I’ve found myself wanting to make something vegetarian — like a big, chopped salad with chickpeas and cubed cheese — but worrying about two things:
- How would it be received? and
- Would it be substantial enough?
This time of year, when the produce is nearing its peak, it’s easy to throw together a big green salad or to steam a dozen ears of corn or to chop up a bunch of tomatoes and call the side dish done.
But how to make something vegetable-based for the main course when eight adults and eight children are sitting around the table? And how do you do this without spending three days chopping?
Here’s one answer: vegetarian stuffed peppers. I made these peppers three times this past week, and while I didn’t even attempt to serve them to the children, the adults raved.
The Beauty of Veggie-Loaded Stuffed Bell Peppers:
- Loaded with a mix of sautéed zucchini, corn, and tomatoes, and bulked up with cooked quinoa and Monterey Jack cheese, these peppers feel substantial and satisfying, while also summery and light.
- Make ahead-able: You can prepare this dish ahead of time a number of ways. My favorite way is to stuff the partially roasted peppers with the filling, then stash them in the fridge or leave at room temperature until I am ready to pop them in the oven for their final bake.
- They reheat beautifully.
- Adaptable: The vegetables can be swapped, spices can be added, any number of grains could be used in place of the quinoa, and any number of good melting cheeses could be used in place of Monterey Jack. Last fall, I made a variation with blistered poblano peppers, quinoa, and corn.
These peppers are not something I would suggest you whip up on a weeknight, but they won’t keep you locked up in the kitchen chopping for days either.
How long to bake stuffed peppers?
These stuffed peppers bake for a total of 25 minutes. The peppers first bake alone at 475ºF for about 15 minutes or until their surfaces blister; then, once stuffed, they bake for another 5 to 10 minutes or until the cheese melts.
How to Make Stuffed Bell Peppers:
Here’s the play-by-play: Gather your ingredients. Heat the oven to 475ºF convection roast.
Halve and core bell peppers, leaving their stems intact. Drizzle with olive oil and salt, place them cut-side down on a sheet pan, and transfer to the oven for 20 minutes.
Meanwhile, cook 1/2 cup quinoa in salted water for 9 to 12 minutes or until it is done; then sauté an onion with a hot chili until it is soft, about 5 minutes.
Add the diced zucchini, and sauté for a minute or two more.
Next add the corn and sauté for a minute more.
Add the tomatoes, scallions, and cilantro, and turn off the heat.
Next add the quinoa and stir to combine.
Add cubed Monterey Jack (or other cheese) and stir to combine.
Remove bell peppers from the oven.
Flip them over.
Stuff the peppers with the quinoa-vegetable filling.
Transfer pan to the oven (or transfer a few of the peppers to a smaller roasting pan) and bake for another 10 minutes or until the cheese melts.
Garnish with fresh basil out of the oven and serve with lemon, if you wish.
PrintVeggie-Loaded Stuffed Bell Peppers
- Total Time: 50 minutes
- Yield: Serves 6
Description
Inspired by a recipe I made last fall for blistered poblano peppers stuffed with corn and quinoa from Leigh Belanger’s My Kitchen Chalkboard.
Scale this recipe up or down as needed. In the video, I make a half recipe, which yields 6 pepper halves.
Ingredients
- 6 large bell peppers, halved and cored, leaving the stems intact (if you wish)
- 2 tablespoons olive oil plus more for drizzling
- kosher salt
- 1/2 cup quinoa
- 1 onion, finely diced
- 1 hot chili, optional, finely minced
- kosher salt
- 1 or 2 zucchini, small diced, to yield about 2 cups
- 2 ears corn, kernels removed
- 1 cup cherry tomatoes, quartered
- 6 scallions, finely sliced
- 1 bunch cilantro, finely chopped to yield about a cup
- 12 ounces Monterey Jack cheese, cubed
- basil or chives, chopped finely, for garnish, optional
- lemon for garnish, optional
Instructions
- Heat the oven to 475ºF convection roast. Place the peppers cut side down on a sheet pan lined with parchment paper. Drizzle with oil. Season with salt. Transfer pan to the oven and cook for 15 to 20 minutes or until the peppers begin to blister. Remove from the oven. Turn peppers over. Set aside.
- Meanwhile, fill a medium pot with water, and bring to a simmer. Add a big pinch of kosher salt. Cook quinoa 9-12 minutes or until the quinoa is done. Drain through a fine-mesh sieve. Set aside.
- Meanwhile, heat the 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large skillet over high heat. When it shimmers, add the diced onion and chili, immediately lower the heat to medium, season with a pinch of salt, and stir. Cook for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the onion softens and begins turning translucent.
- Add the diced zucchini and cook for 2 minutes, just until the zucchini loses its rawness — you don’t want the zucchini to turn to mush; it’s nice when it has some texture here. Add the corn and cook for a minute more. Turn off the heat. Add the tomatoes, scallions, and cilantro.
- Add the quinoa and stir to combine. Taste. Add salt and pepper until it tastes well seasoned. Fold in the cubed Monterey Jack.
- Spoon filling into the cavities of the peppers. Don’t be afraid to really, really pack them full — it’s OK if the filling is heaped in a mound in each pepper. These peppers are meant to feel substantial. You may have a little extra filling on hand; it’s delicious on its own. Save it for another day or eat it.
- Transfer peppers to the oven and cook for about 10 minutes more until the cheese begins melting and the vegetables begin browning.
- Remove from oven. Garnish with fresh basil, if you wish. Serve with a squeeze of lemon, if you wish.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
89 Comments on “Veggie-Loaded Stuffed Bell Peppers”
We LOVE the roasted poblano version of this recipe and have made it several times!
Here’s one I made last night that is a salad but hearty enough for a main: drained and rinsed pinto beans, grilled corn cut off the cob, halved cherry tomatoes, arugula, with a classic french vinaigrette with minced shallot.
Or, the night before we had diced onion and red bell pepper sauted with a little olive oil. Add a good dollop of tomato paste and saute a minute longer, add diced zucchini and add dried basil (all I had) and dried oregano. Add cooked and drained Israeli couscous and some grated parm. Some fresh herbs would work beautifully!
Since I just threw these together I don’t have measurements. Enjoy your summer, and keep ’em coming!
This all sounds soooo good, Sunie! I could eat a big salad with vegetables + beans every night. Your Israeli couscous dish sounds amazing as well.
Hope your summer is going well, too!
Hello Ali!
I make a medley of carrots, onion, bell pepper, squash, zucchini, green beans, asparagus snow peas, tomato, garlic cloves. Any combo on hand or all of them. Toss the veg with olive oil, and season with salt pepper and Italian seasoning. Then I roast it on the grill till the onions start to caramelize. Every time I cook this outside,the smell conjures up fond memories of going to a fair and carney food.
If I am camping, I put it in foil packets with a touch of butter and toss it on the campfire.
Lisa this sounds amazing!! We are camping at the end of August and I’m adding this to my to-bring list… I’m thinking I could assemble the foil packets ahead of time. Earlier this summer I brought vegetarian chili, which was so nice to have for both lunch and dinner.
Yes, wonderful for a crowd as I just discovered or to make for 2 to enjoy for a few meals in a row, varied by a salad on the side or whatever strikes your fancy at the farmers’ market or stand. I loaded up on the herbs from my garden and my family and guests loved the dish, vegetarians and omnivores alike. Great recipe.
So happy to hear this, Mary 🙂
My favorite vegetarian dish for crowds is ratatouille served over polenta with a couple of ears of corn, cut off cob, added to the polenta in the last few minutes of cooking. Satisfying and delicious. I like the Bon Appétit recipe by
Andy Barghani.
YUM! I was just thinking how it is almost time for ratatouille … can’t wait. I love it with polenta, too. Have you ever made fresh corn polenta?? Almost time for that, too 🙂
I love your recipes. I also love that you consider 6-8 a crowd 😉
I think a large potato salad—but not the “usual.” I do a potato-corn-bell pepper-cherry tomato-onion (or add those Thai crispy onions)-herb with chopped shellfish (shrimp? Lobster? Crawfish? Langostino? <— many of which available in frozen form, from Trader Joe’s, grocery market). Can be assembled ahead of time. Dressings vary, like could do a buttermilk based or cider vinegar … love tarragon in this, and parsley.
Ha 🙂 🙂 🙂 I suppose 6 to 8 is not really a crowd, is it?
Your potato salad + shellfish + vegetables + tarragon (favorite!) + vegetables sounds unbelievable!! Love this idea.
Just made this with frozen bell pepper blend and frozen corn. Turned out beautifully, but obviously stuffing it in the pepper would have been better (had to use what I had). I also used pepper jack which gave it some bite! Love your blog and recipes. Thank you!!!
Wow! I thought this recipe sounded good but it came out amazingly delicious! The only thing I added was some chopped up mushrooms I had laying around. Family loved them for a light lunch. Another winner here.
Mushrooms sound amazing here! So happy to hear this, Keena!
These delicious stuffed and roasted peppers are just the perfect amount of spicy for me and the Monterey Jack cheese and hot chilli add even more flavor to this already scrumptious dish!
Hi! I love this dish! I made it last summer a few times and it came out delicious every time! I was wondering – do you think I could make this in advance and then throw them on the bbq for the the last baking step?
Yes, absolutely! Love this idea.
These stuffed peppers are wonderful! So much flavor and the perfect use of my summer CSA vegetables. These will definitely be added to our rotation. Thank you!
Wonderful to hear this, Molly! These are one of my favorite summer meals. Thanks for writing 😍😍😍
So good and easy—even my meat loving teen was happy! I subbed basil for cilantro since I still have a lot in the garden and used cheese bits from the fridge plus a generous showering of parmesan. Yum!
Wonderful to hear this, Bri! I love using parmesan here as well.
Would these freeze okay? I have a lot of peppers to use!
Yes! I would freeze them after you stuff them (but before you return them to the oven). I would thaw them overnight in the fridge the day before baking them.
Easy and was great even the next day
Hi Alexandria,
We love this recipe (and many of your others also)! After watching this video I was wondering what stainless steel pan/wok you use. I have a non-stick pan that I typically use but would love a recommendation for a good large stainless steel pan!
Thank you,
Lisa
Great to hear Lisa! I love this one, too 🙂 OK, the pan I am using here is an All-Clad “every day” pan. I don’t think they make it anymore, which is a shame because it’s such a good one. It’s 13-inches across. This Le Creuset braiser is very similarly sized, and it’s a great pan as well, but what’s nice about the stainless steel pan is that it’s not quite so heavy.
I will keep my eye out for something similar to the All-Clad pan… I get questions about this one all the time and would love to be able to give people an alternative.
Another winner Ali! Thank you. We had this for dinner tonight and it was delicious. I substituted feta for mozzarella because that’s what we had. Yum! Can’t wait to have it cold for lunch tomorrow.
Wonderful to hear this, Amanda! This is one of my favorite summer meals 🙂 🙂 🙂
These are the perfect way to lure meat-lovers away from traditional meat- and rice-stuffed peppers. These have so much more depth of flavor and happen to be a good way to clean out the fridge (although the first time I made this, all the lone veggies and cheese in my fridge just happened to match what the recipe called for). Thanks, Ali!
So great to hear this, Alyson! I too find that meat lovers are very satisfied with this one 🙂 🙂 :). Thanks for writing!
This recipe is DELICIOUS! I usually don’t go for stuffed peppers, I don’t like red and green cooked so much, but the yellow peppers are the perfect level of mild pepperiness. The filling is just yum. I made a bunch ahead of time and while they looked a bit smushy in the fridge, they did reheat very well. I saved the final baking for just before eating.
So nice to hear this, Jennifer! I do find they reheat well, and, when I’m lazy, I also don’t mind them cold straight from the fridge 🙂 Thanks so much for writing!
My daughter and I liked this recipe! Wasn’t for my hubby… that being said had leftover filling and put it in a casserole dish – actually liked that better! Will make a deconstructed version in the future … with diced peppers!
Thanks for sharing – I don’t have a ton of vegetarian recipes in my repertoire so this one is great – as a casserole it will make an awesome side dish too!
Wonderful to hear this! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hi Ali,
Can I use green peppers in this recipe? I wondered if would change anything if using green instead of orange peppers.
Linda
Absolutely! Go for it.
I have made this recipe a number of times and it’s become a family favorite. Once I didn’t have corn on hand and substituted peeled edamame instead and it was tasty. I love how many flavors come through and you can just keep eating it without limits knowing you are eating a healthy dish!
So great to hear this, Jenn! I love the versatility of this one as well. Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
So delicious, I tossed a handful of cooked lentils in, used up bits and bobs of cheese. Making again today…may take some to a neighbor who’s not feeling well.
Thank you for another winner 😊
Wonderful to hear this, Jeannie! Love using this format to clean out the fridge, too. Thanks so much for writing! You’re a nice neighbor 💕
Absolutely delightful!!!
Great to hear, Shelly!
I’ve made these a couple times—once with farro and once with quinoa. I prefer the farro that was seasoned while hot to absorb the spices and lemon.
Don’t skip the cheese or hot pepper/chili flakes. Easy to prepare and reheat well.
Great recipe and I plan to make it every which way. And I love finding another way to use that ubiquitous summer zucchini. BUT, can you please do a post/blog on how to use convection oven roast and convection oven bake? I don’t want to buy an air fryer and yet I’ve read that if your oven has convection capabilities, it’s basically an air fryer. I still don’t get how the oven with convection roast/bake can be an air fryer. Anyway, I hope you have a wonderful Fourth of July.
Barbara, I have to be honest, I’m still learning how to use my convection setting as well — I typically use it for fish, meats, and vegetables. I never use it for baking cakes or bread. I have read the same thing about air fryers, which I have yet to buy as well. I do wonder if the small shape of the air fryer plays a role in how foods turn out in it… my point is that I want to believe it’s the same as a convection oven, but in the photos I’ve seen of foods cooked in an air fryer, the food looks really, really good. I’m tempted to buy one but am holding out for now.
Wow, I a big meat guy my wife convinced me to make This dish. Gotta tell ya. Knock your socks off good. Light , flavorful absolutely the best summer meal you will have
I told her next time I was going to add meat and the skillet went flying. LoL
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Best comment I’ve read in a very long time. So great to read all of it. My meat-loving husband also loves this one. Thanks so much for writing!! 🙂 🙂 🙂
How far in advance could I make these for a party? Would I put in the frig prior to baking? Thank you, they look wonderful!
I think you could make them a day in advance, place them in the fridge. Wrap the pan with plastic wrap or cover it somehow. Then bake them when you are ready. If time permits, you could remove the peppers from the fridge 30-60 minutes before baking to bring them to room temperature.
I made this tonight with CSA peppers, corn, and zucchini, and it was OUTSTANDING!!! I mean like restaurant quality, serve to dinner guests, and pretty much the best recipes I have ever made! Thank you so much for sharing it.
On a side note, I, too, am coveting the All-Clad pan in the video. Do you know if its a 4 or 6 quart size? I see that All-Clad makes an All-In-One Pan in different sizes as well as a Weeknight Pan that looks similarly shaped but with different handles. I continue to search as I think I would use a pan like this all the time.
So nice to read all of this, Cindy!! Thanks so much for writing. I just filled up my “everyday” pan with water, and it’s 4 quarts. From the bit of searching I did on the All-Clad site, it looks as though the 4.5 qt Universal Pan might be the closest thing to mine? Unless I’m missing something. I use my everyday pan ALL the time. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed investing in something like this pan 🙂
Do you think these will be as tasty if I use farro and mushrooms as replacements for the quinoa and corn ingredients? Thanks!
YES! Delicious. Go for it.
A definite hit. I substituted summer squash since that’s what was on hand. This will be on our repeat list for sure.
Great to hear, Becky! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This looks so delicious and healthy! I love recipes like this that showcase fresh healthy ingredients as part of a delicious meal – “health food” does not have to be synonymous with bland!
One doubt. If we halve 6 large peppers, is this recipe for just the halves, so if I wanted to use the other half, I would need to double? Thank you and cannot wait to try soon!
Hi Bella! The recipe is for 6 bell peppers, so 12 halves. No need to double the filling. Hope you love it!