Blackstone zucchini goes from plain summer squash to something worth fighting over when the slices hit a hot griddle and pick up that deep golden edge. The center stays tender, the outside gets a little crusty, and the garlic butter at the end pulls everything together without turning the zucchini soft and watery. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears fast because it tastes like it took a lot more effort than it did.
The trick is heat and spacing. Zucchini throws off moisture as soon as it warms up, so the griddle has to be hot enough to sear before the coins start steaming. A single layer matters more than anything here. If you crowd the pan, the slices sit in their own moisture and go limp before they ever caramelize. The garlic butter goes on at the end for a reason too — garlic burns fast on a Blackstone, and burned garlic turns the whole batch bitter.
Below, you’ll find the exact timing that keeps the zucchini browned instead of soggy, plus a few smart swaps if you want to make it dairy-free or turn it into a more complete side.
The zucchini browned up instead of steaming, and the garlic butter at the end gave it that restaurant-style finish. Even my picky kid ate the crispy edges first.
Love the deep caramelized edges on this Blackstone zucchini? Save it to Pinterest for the nights when you want a fast griddle side that actually tastes like something.
The Secret to Getting Zucchini to Sear Instead of Sweat
Zucchini is packed with water, and that’s the reason so many griddle versions turn soft before they ever pick up color. The fix isn’t a fancy marinade. It’s a hot, oiled surface, enough space for steam to escape, and the discipline to leave the slices alone long enough for the first side to build a crust. If you move them too soon, they stick and tear. If the griddle is only medium-hot, they release moisture faster than they brown.
The other mistake is cutting them too thin. Half-inch rounds hold their shape and give you enough surface area for deep caramelization without collapsing. You want the edges to look browned and slightly wrinkled, with the centers just tender when pierced with a fork. That’s the sweet spot.
- Don’t skip the oil on the griddle. A light coating helps the zucchini make contact with the hot surface instead of grabbing and tearing.
- Keep the slices in one layer. Overlap creates steam, and steam is the enemy of browning.
- Wait for the release. When the first side is ready, the coins lift cleanly. If they fight you, give them another minute.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Zucchini: Medium zucchini work best because they’re firm and not overloaded with seeds. Larger ones can be watery and pithy in the center, which makes the coins soften before they brown.
Olive oil or avocado oil: Either one works, but avocado oil gives you a little more insurance on a hot griddle because it handles the heat better. The oil on the zucchini helps the seasoning cling and encourages even browning.
Butter and garlic: This is the finish, not the starting point. Butter adds richness, and garlic perfumes the whole batch, but both can scorch fast on a hot flat top, so they go in only after the zucchini has already browned.
Italian seasoning and smoked paprika: Italian seasoning gives the squash an herb-backed savory note, while smoked paprika adds a subtle grilled depth that makes the zucchini taste like it came off a live fire. If you don’t have smoked paprika, use regular paprika, but you’ll lose some of that warm charred edge.
Parmesan, parsley, and lemon: Parmesan adds salt and a little nutty finish. Fresh parsley keeps the dish from tasting heavy, and lemon wakes up the butter at the end. If you want this dairy-free, skip the butter and Parmesan and finish with olive oil, parsley, and a squeeze of lemon instead.
How to Build the Garlic Butter Finish Without Burning It
Heat the Griddle First
Preheat the Blackstone to medium-high and oil the surface well before the zucchini goes down. You want a griddle hot enough that the first side starts browning almost immediately. If the surface is only warm, the zucchini will sit there leaking moisture and never develop that caramelized edge. The oil should shimmer, not smoke aggressively.
Season the Coins Before They Hit the Heat
Toss the zucchini with oil, Italian seasoning, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper so every slice is lightly coated. The seasoning sticks better this way and the oil helps the coins brown evenly. Don’t drown them in oil; too much coating makes the griddle greasy and can keep the surface from searing cleanly.
Let the First Side Do Its Job
Add the zucchini in a single layer and leave them alone for 3 to 4 minutes. You’re listening for a steady sizzle and watching for deep golden edges on the bottom. If they’re stuck, they’re not ready yet. When they’re ready to flip, they release from the griddle without a fight.
Finish with Butter and Garlic Off to the Side
Push the zucchini to one side of the griddle and add the butter and garlic to the open space. Stir just until the garlic smells fragrant, about 30 seconds, then toss the zucchini through the butter right on the griddle. This keeps the garlic from burning and lets the squash soak up the richness at the very end instead of steaming in it from the beginning.
Three Ways to Adjust This Blackstone Zucchini
Make it dairy-free without losing the finish
Skip the butter and Parmesan, then finish the hot zucchini with a drizzle of olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, and extra parsley. You lose the nutty, salty edge from the cheese, but the result stays bright and savory instead of flat.
Turn it into a mixed vegetable side
Add sliced yellow squash, bell pepper strips, or mushrooms, but cook each vegetable according to its moisture level. Mushrooms and squash release a lot of liquid, so they need space and strong heat; peppers hold their shape and can go in with the zucchini.
Make it spicy and a little more savory
Add a pinch of red pepper flakes with the garlic butter or use a little extra smoked paprika. The heat stays in the background, but it gives the zucchini a sharper finish that works especially well next to grilled chicken or steak.
How to store leftovers
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The zucchini softens a bit after chilling, but the flavor holds up.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this one. Zucchini turns mushy after thawing, and the griddled texture is the best part.
- Reheating: Warm it in a skillet or back on the griddle over medium heat just until hot. The microwave will steam it and wipe out the browned edges.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Blackstone Zucchini
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat a Blackstone griddle to medium-high and oil the surface well so zucchini coins get good contact for caramelization.
- In a bowl, toss zucchini rounds with olive oil (or avocado oil), Italian seasoning, smoked paprika, salt, and black pepper until evenly coated.
- Add zucchini in a single layer to the hot griddle and leave undisturbed for 3–4 minutes until deeply golden on the bottom.
- Flip each zucchini coin and cook for 3 more minutes until the second side is also deeply golden; work in batches if needed to avoid steaming.
- Push zucchini to one side, add butter and garlic to the open griddle section, and cook 30 seconds until fragrant and lightly sizzling.
- Toss zucchini in the garlic butter directly on the griddle to coat every coin.
- Transfer zucchini to a plate, top with parmesan and fresh parsley, then serve with lemon.


