Ratatouille
Updated Nov. 20, 2023

- Total Time
- 3 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4garlic cloves
- 2medium white onions
- 3medium zucchini
- 2medium eggplant
- 3sweet red peppers, such as bell peppers, red cubanelle or any other sweet variety
- 3sprigs fresh rosemary
- 6sprigs fresh thyme
- 1cup olive oil, more as needed
- 2large heirloom or beefsteak tomatoes
- 2small bay leaves, ripped in half
- 1½teaspoons fine sea salt, more as needed
- Freshly ground black pepper
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees.
- Step 2
Prepare the vegetables: Smash and peel 3 garlic cloves, reserving the 4th. Halve onions through their roots, and slice halves into ¼-inch-thick pieces. Slice zucchini into ¼-inch-thick rounds. Cut eggplant into 1-inch cubes or spears. Seed peppers, and cut them into ¼-inch-thick strips.
- Step 3
Spread each vegetable on a separate rimmed baking sheet (use extra sheets as necessary). Add the 3 cloves of smashed garlic to the onion pan. Add 1 sprig rosemary and 2 sprigs thyme to each of the pepper, eggplant and zucchini pans. Sprinkle salt lightly over vegetables. Drizzle 3 tablespoons olive oil on each of the pans.
- Step 4
Place all the pans in the oven (or work in batches if they don’t fit at once). Cook until vegetables are very tender and lightly browned at the edges. This will take about 35 to 40 minutes for the peppers (their skins should shrivel), 40 to 45 minutes for the eggplant and zucchini (the eggplant should crisp slightly and the zucchini should be well cooked, so let them go 3 to 5 minutes longer than you normally might), and 60 to 65 minutes for the onions. Don’t worry about the vegetables being pretty; they will meld into the ratatouille. Shake or stir the pans every 15 to 20 minutes or so, especially the onions.
- Step 5
In the meantime, prepare the tomatoes: Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add tomatoes and blanch until the skins split, about 10 seconds. Use a slotted spoon to quickly transfer the tomatoes to a bowl filled with ice water.
- Step 6
Using a paring knife, peel the cooled tomatoes (the skins should slip right off). Halve tomatoes across their equators. Set a sieve over a bowl. Working over the bowl, use your fingers to seed the tomatoes, letting the seeds catch in the sieve and the juice run into the bowl. Discard seeds but save juices. Dice tomatoes and add to the reserved juices in bowl.
- Step 7
Finely grate or mince remaining garlic clove. Add garlic to tomatoes along with bay leaves and a large pinch of salt. Set aside.
- Step 8
Once vegetables are done cooking, combine them on one baking sheet or a large shallow baking dish and add ingredients from tomato bowl. Toss well. Vegetables will be stacked, and that’s O.K. Cover generously with olive oil, using remaining ¼ cup oil or more, and sprinkle with salt. Everything should have a good coat of oil, but should not be drowning in it. Cook at least 1 hour, stirring every 15 to 20 minutes, until vegetables are very tender and imbued with juices and oil. Add salt and pepper to taste, then serve warm, or let cool.
Private Notes
Comments
I'm sorry, but this is the most hilarious rats I've ever seen. It takes at least 15 to 20 times longer to make than it needs to, has far too much olive oil, and far too little tomato. Everything is chopped far too small and ends up being close to mush! Please find a Provencal/Marseilles recipe and learn.
Peppers done at 35 minutes Onions ready at 40-45 minutes Eggplant needed about 48 minutes Zucchini ready at about 42 minutes
This recipe calls for a cup of olive oil - I made it with far less (less than a quarter of a cup using an oil sprayer, including on the eggplant) and it was delicious - the best ratatouille I have ever had. This recipe, as part of a series on traditional French cooking, probably didn't have healthy cooking as an objective, but I do, as do all my family and friends. Fortunately this was easily adaptable.
Just as a note to myself, this recipe takes far too much time to make. Understanding how to roast each of the vegetables is an art in itself, and I do not understand it. In the end, the onions were burnt, I was exhausted and it was almost unusable. This is for chefs far more experienced and organized than me.
Cooking in a Le creuset dutch oven, cover it?
I have always used the stovetop recipe in The Silver Palate Cookbook, but this is far tastier. You can streamline by doubling up the veg on the baking sheets and raising the temp to 400, as others have suggested. I used only 1/3 cup oil for 1/2 the recipe, and it was still delicious. Instead of a beefsteak tomato, I roasted 10 ounces of Cherub grape tomatoes in some of the EVOO and a sprinkling of salt and proceeded with the recipe. Very good!
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