Recipe

halloumi and fall vegetable roast

I realize, after 18 years as a part of it, that the rules of the food internet in the week before the American cooking superbowl we call Thanksgiving dictate that everything should relate back to turkey, stuffing, or pie. But friends, we have that abundantly covered in the archives, and the newsletter. So let me tell you what I’ve been making a lot lately to feed myself what I crave, and that is sheet pans of mixed vegetables roasted until almost charred, finished with a balsamic vinaigrette, and studded with heavenly, salty, crispy pillows of halloumi.


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Halloumi is a semi-hard, brined, salty cheese from Cyprus with a squeaky, slightly rubbery texture (when cool) and a pillowy soft texture (when warm) with crisp edges if grilled, fried, or roasted. I adore it. But, to me, the wonder of halloumi is when it’s warm, so when I see it grilled and then put into a salad that will be chilled or even at room temperature, returning it to its squeaky and less magical state, I find it a little disappointing, but I keep it to myself. Well, most of the time. Whose idea was it to give me a place to mouth off, anyway?

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This sheet pan method, in which the vegetables are crowded and warm, doused in a vinaigrette, keeps the halloumi tender until it reaches your plate. I’ve got a summer version of this in Smitten Kitchen Every Day, Halloumi Roast with Eggplant, Zucchini and Tomatoes, that you shouldn’t miss. And this is the long overdue fall/winter edition. I’ve been making it with sweet potatoes, cauliflower, and brussels sprouts, but other hearty vegetables work great here too, even cabbage or broccoli florets. Make it with whatever you’ve got that sounds good (or needs to go), but make it for you, and soon, before we get too busy feeding everyone else.

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It’s here! The special audiobook edition of Smitten Kitchen Keepers, Smitten Kitchen Keepers: A Kitchen Counter Conversation published last week. Read by me, I hope it feels exactly like you’ve pulled up a chair and we’re hanging out in the kitchen together. Bonus recipe: When you purchase the audiobook, you will receive a signed holiday card from me, perfect to give as a gift, with a bonus recipe. To receive your card, complete the form with your purchase order number right here.

Video

Halloumi and Fall Vegetable Roast

  • Servings: 2 as a main, 4 as a side
  • Source: Smitten Kitchen
  • Print
No halloumi? A sprinkle of feta at the end won’t have quite the same pillowy-crisp cheese effect, but will provide that salty, tangy flavor.
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil, plus for pans
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves, chopped
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • Many grinds of black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes, or to taste
  • 1 pound cauliflower, cut into 1-2-inch florets
  • 1 pound sweet potatoes, in 1-inch chunks
  • 1 pound brussels sprouts, trimmed, halved
  • 1 tablespoon honey or maple syrup
  • 3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • One 8-ounce (225-gram) block halloumi, in 1-inch cubes
Heat your oven to 450°F. Coat one half-sheet or two quarter-sheet baking sheets lightly with olive oil.

In a large bowl, combine 4 tablespoons olive oil, garlic, thyme, salt, black and red pepper. Add vegetables and halloumi to marinade, stirring to evenly coat.

Spread mixture out on the roasting tray(s) in as even as a layer as possible, and roast for 20 to 30 minutes on the first side, until browned underneath, then flip and roast for 10 to 15 minutes more on the second, until the vegetables and halloumi are browned in spots and tender. While it roasts, whisk together balsamic and honey. As soon as the sheet pan leaves the oven, drizzle the balsamic and honey mixture over the vegetables. It should sizzle and the heat will soften some of the vinegar’s bite. Scoop onto plates and eat right away.


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83 comments on halloumi and fall vegetable roast

  1. Holly

    Any suggestions for a halloumi alternative? I live in the boonies of NW Virginia and there isn’t a lot of diversity at my grocery stores.

    1. Maureen

      Just above the list of ingredients, Deb mentions that sprinkling feta over the roasted vegetables at the end would be another approach. That might be what you’re looking for.

    2. Francesca

      Most grocery stores have bread cheese, which is milder and cooks up to similar effect. Look for it in the special cheese section.

      1. Marz

        I’ve made this twice. The first time I followed directions and put the halloumi in from the start. Far too long and practically inedible. The next time it went in 5 minutes before the final timer. Perfect.

        1. Camilla

          I made this at the specified temperature and time, but my halloumi melted to a crisp! It broke my heart! Wondering if maybe I used the wrong kind? But I wasn’t aware there were different kinds of halloumi.

    3. Maggie

      Same. I’d try paneer (if you have a South Asian presence in your community) or maybe one of the non-melting Mexican cheeses like cotija or queso blanco. Of the three, I’ll probably start with queso blanco, which is widely available in my own slice of the Upper Mid-South. I love halloumi, but can’t get it anywhere within at least 100 miles of here.

  2. Nytasha Tarver

    Halloumi tip: let your cubes sit in tap hot water for 10-15 minutes, lightly towel dry, and THEN add to the pan. This will avoid rock hard halloumi.

  3. Alison

    I’m absolutely obsessed with the summer version of this recipe from Smitten Kitchen Every Day with eggplant, zucchini, and tomatoes. My grocery store doesn’t stock halloumi, so I’ve been making it with paneer, and it’s delicious. The paneer browns really beautifully without melting. Excited to try the fall version!

    1. Angela Allen

      Good to know about the paneer, as we are also obsessed with the summer version and can’t always find halloumi in SW Virginia. We long for a Trader Joe’s.

  4. X

    Deb! I know you just wrote that you don’t want to do another Thanksgiving recipe, but what about a dish that would be welcome on the Thanksgiving table as well as any time thereafter? I was on food Instagram yesterday and saw a Reel for an absolutely bonkers looking Japanese milk bread pull-apart loaf that was slathered with herbed garlic butter and grated gruyere in between each pull-apart layer. It reminded me of the insane garlic bread at Donna’s, in Los Angeles, where they make halfway cuts into a mini sourdough loaf, tuck in parmesan, herbs, and roast garlic-studded softened butter into each pocket, grate on more parm on top, and then broil. Your garlic bread is so good, I know it would benefit from the milk bread, gruyere, and pull-apart treatment.

  5. Angela

    Oooh this is how I can eat all the cheese I crave while still feeding my people who don’t like cheese. I wonder if it could be modified with a block of feta added in the last 10 minutes when the veggies are flipped. And then served with grilled bread – feta slathered on and topped with roast veggies, finished with a drizzle of balsamic or the vinaigrette.

  6. Erika

    Deb. Two in a row! I happened to have all of the ingredients on the day you posted a new recipe and made it that night. Hoping for a trifecta with this bloggery version of Chopped. Thank you!

  7. Kathy

    I love halloumi! It’s only a seasonal thing where I live, but the package expiration dates extend into the next season. The only question I had for this was whether it was worth using one from my hoard.

    Yes, with caveats. I cooked a half recipe since it’s just me. The biggest issue I found was in the timing. I chose the lower end of both sections, and the halloumi is burned almost beyond recognition. :-( it looked fine after the first 20 minutes, but I figured to stop then was such a big difference in the recipe I let it go for another 10 minutes. I also threw in some end-of-season tomatoes that I had which worked out great to provide the sweetness that the maple syrup would provide, since I don’t like the flavor of maple.

    I also used broccoli and butternut squash and onions in addition to the tomatoes, because that’s what I had lying around. Overall, very tasty but definitely no more than 25 minutes in the oven!

  8. Janet

    I have a factory sealed slice of pate that sat in my fridge for the two days when we had no power, so that has to be dinner tonight. But what to do with it? I almost didn’t log onto your site, figuring that it would be cranberry-something-or-other or pumpkin whatchamacallit, but no, you ride to the rescue. I just happen to have all the ingredients, too. How did you know??

  9. Sunshine’s Eschatology

    I have been tasked with cooking dinner the day after thanksgiving for a group, and I think this is gonna be it! Serve with some arugula and pomegranate maybe. (Also satisfies a couple separate dietary restrictions at the same time!)

  10. Colleen

    Looking forward to making this version! I love the summer one from the book and just wanted to share that I’ve been adding a package of gnocchi to it, to make it more filling without extra effort. Happy fall, y’all!

  11. Mickey

    Thank you! A savory yummy sweet potato dish. The sweet potato dish, covered with marshmallows, and enough sugar to bake 10,000 cookies in a dish, is gone in this house!

  12. Adrianna

    Delish! Except that my halloumi ended up totally dried out. I think in the future I’ll let veggies go first then add halloumi towards the end.

  13. Elemjay

    Made this with the same mix of veg, which is really good. I changed the timing for the halloumi because I chopped it up too small – put in after 20 mins and honestly that was perfect. I also cut down a n the amount of vinegar (just to 1 tablespoon) because I only had rubbishy supermarket balsamic that was very acidic and thought my kids would moan – and again that made it tangy but not too much. Very very happy – will make again!!

  14. LL

    This sounds amazing! Do you think it would work with tofu in addition to or instead of halloumi, for more protein? Might need less roasting time…

  15. Heather

    I made this last night! It was sooo yummy! I used some leftover “bread cheese” I got from Wegmans along with halloumi and it gets a bit meltier but the outside still gets crispy. I liked it a little more than the halloumi because it was softer on the inside :) I’d second the recommendation to soak the halloumi in water for 15 min before baking to reduce drying out

  16. Carol

    Being a vegetarian living alone I keep it simple. A baked sweet potato, stuffing, Brussel Sprouts with chestnuts, cranberry sauce and dessert a homemade blueberry pie. The day after, I’ll roast sweet potato strips alongside parsnips, mushrooms, baby sweet corn. Yum.

  17. Jen

    This was delicious! Full disclosure, I tweaked it mightily, so take my opinions for what they’re worth. I roasted butternut squash, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and persimmons together on one tray for about 25 minutes (at 425), and shredded Brussels sprouts & halloumi on a separate tray for about 15 minutes, then tossed everything in the balsamic-maple mixture. I then put the veg/cheese mixture on top of a salad of farro, walnuts, shallots, and apple in a dijon-maple-lemon dressing, and topped the whole shebang with pomegranate seeds and torn mint leaves. It was great!

  18. A.M.

    I love this! Another great option for an alternative to halloumi is Bread Cheese, with a spritz of lemon juice after its time in the oven.

  19. Alice

    This was so delicious! I followed the recipe pretty precisely and was thrilled. I didn’t pre-soak the halloumi in warm water (as some commenters have suggested) and thought it turned out perfectly–crispy on the outside, soft on the inside. I will undoubtedly make this multiple times throughout the Winter. Thank you so much!

  20. Sarah P

    Yes! The summer version is the most stained page in my copy of your book. My mother stayed with me few weeks this past summer and I made it. She loves it and makes it now too. This fall version will be on rotation all winter. Thankfully halloumi is readily available here in Vancouver Canada. Thanks for another winner.

  21. Natalie

    I feel so validated! I started making something like this some years ago when I had a lot of different kinds of root veg in the garden. Although I didn’t make a dressing, I’ll have to try that.

    It’s incredibly flexible – we usually add small quartered onions, butternut squash, and/or whole garlic cloves.

  22. Nathan Williams

    I made this yesterday. Following quantities exactly, but perhaps cutting things a little smaller, I ended up with a very crowded half-sheet pan – a bit more than your photo, I think. Indeed, cooking took a bit longer and it was more steamed than roasted (admittedly, this worked well for some of the people I was feeding, who aren’t as into roast character as I am).

    I’d appreciate more clarity about the intent here – should I be going for giving the vegetables the traditional spacing on a half-sheet pan (or more likely two) and fully roasting, or is the partial-steaming intended?

  23. Kelly

    So good! A few changes: added chicken apple sausage to appease the carnivores in our family, waited to add halloumi until the last 15 minutes and flipped the cheese halfway through that last 15 minutes, and only used 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar for the glaze at the end instead of 3. We really liked it!

  24. Steph

    I’m in the medical field so have to work tomorrow, and live alone (with dog) so this was Thanksgiving dinner. It was so good and so easy and I’d make it for Thanksgiving any year. I’d make it for non-holiday meals, too.

  25. Sallie Altman

    I cannot wait to try this. Looks so good…except for the charring. Not to be a killjoy, but I now love to roast vegetables, yet dont want the heavy duty charring as shown here. It often happens with broccoli and brussels sprouts to the point that I have sometimes discarded them. As with grilled food in general, charred food is carcinogenic, so it almost seems against the point of eating vegetables to do this to them. Ovens vary, but honestly, I bake mine at 350-375 degrees. I cut them up about about 1 1/2 ” big, start to watch them carefully after 30 minutes, and eat them as soon as a fork goes in easily. They are usually touched with brown, not black, and still so delicious! I AM thinking of steaming the brussels sprouts slightly before roasting because it is so tough to get the insides done without burning the outside. Has anyone tried this? I really do love brussels sprout side dishes but have been avoiding roasting them because of this problem.

  26. Jane B

    I am on a three-year streak of getting colds at Thanksgiving. I plan a big meal, then bonk out and cook all the dishes spread out over a few days when I have the energy. This was our favorite!

    I left out the red pepper flakes due to my tiny, spice-adverse children. They ate it all up, digging for the halloumi like little treasures.

  27. Becca

    For anyone like me who foolishly thought “baked feta is a thing, i’m sure it would hold up just fine cubed and roasted along with the vegetables”, please be warned that it does not, and Deb actually means it when she says to add it at the end

  28. Mary

    Benjamin–imagine if everyone who loves Deb posted like you and tried to sell things. What would that look like, and would it be fair to Deb? Or to those of us who just want to share in this community? Please consider developing your own website to sell your posters.

  29. RuthS

    I made this tonight (minus the cauliflower which I didn’t have) and it was wonderful–my husband loved it. I had intended to sub broccoli but my sheet pan was full with just the sweet potato, cheese, and sprouts–plenty for the two of us.

    It paired really well with a side of the herby cornbread mushroom dressing I had
    prepared for Thanksgiving.

  30. Marie-Christine Mahe

    How come your site now defaults to a very small page, with minuscule font? Can no longer cook with my tablet, it’s a pain. Using latest firefox on kindle fire

  31. Sara

    Made this tonight and it was easy and insanely good. Served with sliced baguette and butter. I used the frozen sheet pan vegetable mix from Costco/broccoli, sweet potato, sprouts and red onion-since I had it in freezer and it worked beautifully.

  32. Yum! Threw everything in a 12” cast iron skillet (used upper cooking limits) and subbed broccoli for sprouts because sad Thanksgiving rejects were all that was left. Love how broccoli got crispy and nice foil to rest of veg. Finished with RG banana vinegar and the honey. Been heavily using SK since my days as a newlywed in a tiny NYC apartment, now 15 years later, we’re back in a teeny tiny kitchen living full time on the road in an RV. Appreciate you so much Deb, you never disappoint, no matter where we take you!

  33. Pam

    Made this alongside a pot of farro for the most delicious wintry grain bowl! Worth hunting down a few grocery stores for halloumi (weirdly Trader Joe’s doesn’t carry this right now??).

  34. Carolyn

    Luckily I checked it at 15 minutes— both halloumi and vegetables were burned on the bottom. Next time I’ll do this at 425 and avoid the lower rack.

  35. Laur

    I love the summer recipe but sub in zucchini and yellow squash for the eggplant (not much nutritive value). Last night I added cubes of pressed tofu to add protein (used less halloumi to lower the sodium). The summer vegetable recipe I have doesn’t have the glaze.

    I ate leftovers cold and enjoyed immensely.

  36. Erin

    A delicious recipe. I substituted broccoli for the brussels sprouts and added extra halloumi. My teenagers complimented a vegetable dish, “It is perfectly spiced.” This never happens!!! Worth making again and again.

  37. Kristina Bronitsky

    This was really good! I only had Brussel sprouts and Halloumi in the fridge, so I just used those. I took it out of the oven after 30 minutes because the sprouts and halloumi were totally charred by then. We thought it was super tasty and the dressing was delicious. The halloumi initially looked too burnt, but it was crispy on the outside and airy on the inside. I think my oven runs a little hot, so next time I’d lower the temp to 425 and check around 25-30 mins.

  38. Theresa

    Made with cauliflower and butternut squash. Delicious, although the squash was a little overcooked. Even though I was concerned to do it, I added the halloumi from the start–surprisingly, had no issues with it overcooking. This is a tasty recipe and I can see it working with a variety of vegetables.

  39. D’Euly

    What a delightful meal. A little sweet for my taste (I’d add sriracha next time) and perfect for my husband’s. We used green beans in place of sprouts and they were delicious. I’d suggest making sure that your halloumi is indeed cut into 1-inch cubes, which is quite a lot larger than I think most of us are used to cutting cheese–otherwise, decrease its time in the oven accordingly.

  40. Laurie

    Really good. And I will definitely make again. Definitely use the maple syrup/balsamic mixture at the end.

    I think I’ll turn the temp down a bit next time. At 20 minutes, everything was brown with some burned spots, especially the cheese. If that doesn’t solve it, I’ll add the cheese a little later, as others have suggested.

  41. Constance

    I’ve made this twice already. It’s fantastic fresh out of the oven with a warmed pita, but great warmed up too. And I’ve used the balsamic/honey mixture on other pans of roasted vegetables, such as wedges of Haikkado winter squash roasted with just olive oil, salt and pepper till surfaces carmelized.

  42. Kristin

    Loved that I could tailor the veggies so my picky husband would have things to eat. I also threw on half a package of dry gnocchi because I knew he’d want something like that, and was very happy I did. The whole thing was absolutely delicious!

  43. Missie

    Very tasty dish, and loved the combination of sweet and salty. I could’ve eaten the whole thing myself. Perfect the next day with an egg over it. Like other reviewers, my halloumi was overdone, next time I’ll add it in about halfway through the roasting time

  44. Debra Wollett-Delso

    This was great! I doubled the halloumi (we love it) but no other changes. Fantastic and easy Friday night meal.

  45. Leslie

    Made with the vegetables I had on hand (carrots, broccolini, potatoes, cherry tomatoes, Hokkaido squash). Left the broccolini whole, and it had to come out after 20 minutes because it was done enough by then, but that was not a problem. Didn’t have balsamic vinegar so I used sherry vinegar, and didn’t read the recipe carefully, so the vinegar and maple syrup got mixed in right from the start, whoops. But I thought it was great anyway! Baking probably mellowed the vinegar. I like my halloumi crispy, and this did not disappoint – but I did cut my veg a bit smaller than 1″, and I baked it the minimum amount of time.

  46. Sharon

    We made this tonight and it was superb! I only needed 20 minutes in the oven at 450. The Trader Joe’s balsamic glaze was a tasty easy substitute.

  47. Petra

    Phenomenal! Made this last week and plan to make again tonight – this could become a staple in our half-vegetarian household. I did follow the tip from the comments to soak the halloumi in hot water (did this for 15 mins while I was prepping the rest of my veg), so I can’t say how it would turn out without. But with the soaking, and moving everything around with a spatula every 10 mins or so, this was perfection. (Careful when you open the oven because with a crowded pan like this, you are going to get *steam* from your veggies.) I am excited to see how this adapts and develops for the seasons…winter now, but in the spring I plan to try with asparagus, mint, pomegranate seeds, ohhhh it’s almost too much delight!

  48. Mona

    I love this recipe and have made it 2x. My complaint- someplace in the upfront blurb and certainly the first direction under instructions should be marinade the vegetables (not heat oven as it currently says.) and if you chop as small as suggested (1 inch cubes) the baking instructions seem too long. The other night the vegetables got charred and the cheese got hard, burned. So I’d relook at your timing. I do use a convection oven if that’s a factor

  49. Emma

    just made this for dinner, followed others’ advice of adding halloumi at end & it turned out amazing. will make on repeat for sure!!