Grilled zucchini gets a lot more interesting once it leaves the “just a vegetable” category and starts carrying real flavor. The thin char marks, the creamy salt from feta, and the hit of fresh basil turn a simple side into the part of the meal people keep picking at after the main dish is gone. This version works because the zucchini stays in planks instead of coins, which gives you enough surface area for smoke and browning without letting it collapse into soft, watery slices.
The other thing that matters here is timing. Zucchini needs hot, oiled grates and a short cook, not a long one. If it sits too long on the grill, it turns limp before the edges ever caramelize. The lemon, basil, and flaky salt go on at the end for a reason too — they wake up the warm vegetables instead of disappearing into them.
Below you’ll find the little details that keep this side dish from tasting flat, plus a few ways to adjust it if your basil is looking sparse or you want to make it work with what you already have.
The zucchini kept its shape on the grill and the feta softened just enough from the heat without melting all over the plate. I loved the lemon zest at the end — it kept the whole thing bright instead of heavy.
Grilled zucchini with feta and basil is the kind of side that disappears fast — save it for the nights when you want something smoky, fresh, and low-effort.
The Real Trick to Grilled Zucchini That Doesn’t Go Mushy
Zucchini fails on the grill for two reasons: people cut it too thin, or they cook it too long. Thin rounds lose their structure before they ever pick up color, and once the moisture starts leaking out, the vegetable steams against the grates instead of searing. Long planks solve both problems. They give you enough width to flip cleanly, and they hold their bite even after the center turns tender.
The grill also needs to be hot enough that the zucchini starts browning within a few minutes. If the grates aren’t properly oiled, the planks stick and tear before the char has a chance to develop. What you want is visible dark grill marks, softened edges, and a center that still has some firmness when you press it with tongs. Pull them at that point. They finish as they sit on the plate.
- Cut size matters — 1/3-inch planks are thick enough to handle the heat without falling apart.
- Oil is not optional — it helps the zucchini sear and keeps the flesh from grabbing the grate.
- Short cook time is the whole point — three to four minutes per side is enough for tender zucchini with defined char.
- Warm feta works better than cold feta — it softens against the hot vegetables without turning into a sauce.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

The zucchini is the backbone here, so choose firm, medium-to-large squash with tight skin and no soft spots. Bigger zucchini can get seedy in the center, which gives you a waterier result, so I like ones that still feel dense when you pick them up. Good olive oil matters because you’re using it twice: once to help the zucchini grill cleanly, and again at the end for a glossy finish that carries the lemon and basil.
Feta is the ingredient that makes the dish feel complete. Use a block if you can and crumble it yourself; it tends to taste cleaner and hold its shape better than pre-crumbled feta, which can be dry. Basil should be fresh and added at the end, because heat dulls both its color and its aroma. The lemon juice and zest work together too — juice gives brightness, zest gives the part of the lemon flavor that doesn’t vanish as fast.
Red pepper flakes are optional in the sense that the dish will still work without them, but they keep the feta from reading as too salty and one-note. Flaky sea salt at the end is worth the extra pinch because it lands on the warm zucchini as a finishing layer instead of disappearing during grilling.
Getting the Grill Marks Without Overcooking the Center
Prepping the Zucchini
Brush both sides of the zucchini planks with olive oil and season them before they go on the grill. Salt pulls out moisture, so don’t season them too early or they’ll get wet and slippery before they hit the heat. You want the surface lightly coated and the zucchini still dry enough to sear when it meets the grates.
Building the Char
Lay the planks on a medium-high grill and leave them alone until the first side has clear dark marks and the edges have softened. If you move them too soon, they stick and tear; if you leave them too long, the centers collapse before the surface gets that grilled flavor. Flip once and cook the second side just until the zucchini is tender but still holds its shape.
Finishing While the Vegetables Are Warm
Transfer the grilled zucchini to a platter right away and add the feta while the vegetables are still hot. That warmth takes the edge off the cheese and helps the olive oil and lemon spread across the surface instead of pooling underneath. Scatter the basil and red pepper flakes last so they stay bright and fragrant, then finish with flaky salt right before serving.
What to Change When You Want a Different Version
Make it dairy-free without losing the salty finish
Skip the feta and finish with chopped kalamata olives or a spoonful of caper relish instead. You lose the creamy crumble, but you keep the briny contrast that makes the zucchini taste complete.
Swap basil for mint or parsley
Mint gives the dish a cooler, brighter finish, while parsley keeps it clean and savory. Both work best added at the very end, just like basil, so the herbs stay fresh instead of fading into the heat.
Add tomatoes for a fuller Mediterranean side
A handful of halved cherry tomatoes adds juiciness and sweetness, which makes the feta taste even sharper. Toss them on the platter after the zucchini comes off the grill so they stay raw and fresh instead of collapsing.
How to make it work under a broiler
If you don’t have a grill, broil the planks on a sheet pan close to the heat source and flip once after the first side starts blistering. Broilers brown fast, so watch closely; the line between charred and burnt is thin here.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The zucchini will soften a bit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this dish. Zucchini turns watery and the feta loses its texture once thawed.
- Reheating: Rewarm gently in a skillet over medium-low heat or eat it cold or room temperature. The biggest mistake is blasting it in the microwave, which makes the zucchini limp and the basil wilt.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Grilled Zucchini with Feta & Basil
Ingredients
Method
- Brush the zucchini planks with olive oil and season with salt and black pepper.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates.
- Grill zucchini for 3–4 minutes per side until char marks are well defined and the zucchini is just tender, flipping once.
- Arrange the grilled zucchini on a serving plate or platter.
- While still warm, crumble feta generously over the top to slightly soften it.
- Drizzle with olive oil and lemon juice, then scatter lemon zest, fresh basil leaves, and red pepper flakes.
- Finish with a pinch of flaky sea salt.


