Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

Recipes Main Ingredients Vegetable Recipes

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (1)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

ByMiriam HahnandTasting Table Staff/

Ratatouille is a dish that was not named after a Pixar movie. In fact, the fancy-looking dish whipped up by said movie's rodent chef was actually closer to a different vegetable preparation called a tian. Rather than being a spiral swirl of produce, a true ratatouille is, as recipe developer Miriam Hahn explains, "kind of a cross between a vegetable soup and vegetable stew."

As for what goes into a ratatouille, this can vary from cook to cook, but for this recipe, Hahn insists that "fresh herbs are such a key ingredient here" due to the fact that "they add an element of freshness and flavor to the cooked vegetables." She also employs a less-common technique for flavoring the dish with garlic. While many recipes call for sautéing it along with the onions, she prefers to roast it instead, as she feels that "roasting a full bulb of garlic gives you a sweeter, buttery, and caramelized flavor." (If you like the toasty allium in ratatouille, chances are you'll loveroasted garlic in mashed potatoes, too.)

Round up the ratatouille ingredients

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (2)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

For the roasted garlic, you'll need a whole bulb of garlic plus some olive oil. The ratatouille itself is made with eggplant, onions, zucchini, tiny tomatoes of the grape or cherry variety, and a red bell pepper. "You can vary the bell pepper type," Hahn says, though she advises using orange, red, or yellow instead of the green kind as she feels they're a better fit for this recipe.

To season this dish, you'll use salt, black pepper, crushed red pepper, bay leaves, dried oregano, dried basil, fresh basil, fresh thyme, and fresh Italian parsley. Hahn says you can vary the herbs if you wish; "you can also use fresh sage, rosemary, and oregano" in place of the parsley and basil, for instance.

Roast the garlic

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (3)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

The first step in making this ratatouille involves preheating the oven to 400 F. This isn't to cook the dish itself (it's a strictly stovetop operation), but is necessary for roasting the garlic.

Cut a thin slice (about ¼ inch) off the top of the garlic bulb so you can see the cloves inside. Sprinkle ½ teaspoon olive oil over the cut end and cover it with foil. Bake the garlic for 30 minutes, then let it cool down a bit.

Salt the eggplant

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (4)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

Peel the eggplant, then chop it up into cubes about 1 inch in size. Put the chopped eggplant in a colander, sprinkle it with ½ teaspoon salt, and let it drain for half an hour. You'll note this is the same amount of time it takes the garlic to cook, so you can do these two things simultaneously.

As for why you are salting and draining the eggplant, Hahn tells us it's because "eggplant has a lot of water in it, and the salt will bring that out." Partially dehydrating the eggplant this way, she says, "helps to avoid the eggplant getting soggy."

Cook the vegetables

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (5)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

Once the eggplant has released some of its liquid and the garlic has roasted, heat up the remaining oil until it is moderately hot, then use it to cook the onions and bell pepper for 5 minutes. As you sauté these vegetables, it's best to keep stirring them to prevent them from burning. At this point, you'll be adding most of the remaining ingredients to the pan: the eggplant, zucchini, tomatoes, thyme, bay leaves, basil, oregano, red pepper flakes, pepper, and remaining salt. Turn the heat down to medium and cook the mixture for 10 to 15 minutes, stirring it every so often.

Finish off the ratatouille with herbs and garlic

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (6)

Miriam Hahn/Tasting Table

Remove the thyme sprigs and bay leaves from the vegetable mixture, then remove the baked garlic cloves from their skins. Mash the garlic, then stir it into the ratatouille and remove the pot from the heat. As a final step, dress up the dish with a parsley and basil garnish.

Your ratatouille is ready to eat immediately, but many French chefs swear that it's even better the next day, as the veggies will have had ample time to linger together by then. This recipe is good for about 3 days in the fridge, and you can eat it warm at room-temp, or even slightly chilled.

Classic Ratatouille Recipe

4.9 from 73 ratings

Fill 202Print

Learn to make classic Provençal ratatouille; this easy and delicious stew featureseggplant, tomatoes and zucchini.

Prep Time

15

minutes

Cook Time

45

minutes

Servings

6

Servings

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (7)

Total time: 1 hour

Ingredients

  • 1 bulb garlic
  • 2 tablespoons + ½ teaspoon olive oil, divided
  • 1 eggplant
  • 1 ½ teaspoons salt, divided
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 1 red bell pepper, chopped
  • 3 cups zucchini sliced ¼-inch thick
  • 2 cups grape or cherry tomatoes, halved
  • 3 bundles thyme
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 teaspoon dried basil
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • ½ teaspoon crushed red pepper
  • ¼ teaspoon black pepper
  • ¼ cup Italian parsley, chopped
  • ¼ cup fresh basil, chopped

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 F.
  2. Cut ¼ inch off the top of a whole garlic bulb to expose the cloves.
  3. Drizzle ½ teaspoon of the olive oil over the cut side of the garlic.
  4. Cover the garlic with foil and bake for 30 minutes.
  5. Meanwhile, peel the eggplant and cut it into 1-inch chunks. Sprinkle the eggplant with ½ teaspoon salt and drain it in a colander for 30 minutes as the garlic cooks.
  6. Remove the garlic from the oven and let it cool down.
  7. Heat the remaining oil over medium-high in a large pot or Dutch oven.
  8. Cook the onion and red pepper for 5 minutes, stirring frequently.
  9. Add the eggplant, zucchini, tomatoes, thyme bundles, bay leaves, dried basil, dried oregano, red pepper flakes, pepper, and remaining salt to the pan. Lower the heat to medium.
  10. Cook the vegetables for 10 to 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  11. Remove the thyme and bay leaves from the pot.
  12. Remove the garlic cloves from their skins and mash them.
  13. Stir the garlic into the ratatouille. Remove pot from heat.
  14. Top the ratatouille with fresh parsley and basil.

Rate this recipe

Recommended

Classic Ratatouille Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

FAQs

What are the most common ingredients used in ratatouille? ›

Ratatouille is a classic French dish from the region of Provence that consists of eggplant, onions, bell peppers, zucchini, tomatoes, garlic, and herbs that are quickly seared and then gently stewed. The result is a creamy delicious mixture of fresh vegetables that serves as a wonderful main or side dish.

How is ratatouille supposed to taste? ›

It is a rich and flavoursome stew that is enhanced with the addition of aromatic herbs and spices, like garlic and thyme, which meld with the sauce and sink into the vegetables.

How old is the recipe ratatouille? ›

The Guardian's food and drink writer Felicity Cloake wrote in 2016 that, considering ratatouille's relatively recent origins (it first appeared in 1877), there exists a great variety of methods of preparation for it.

Do you have to salt eggplant for ratatouille? ›

An optional step of pre-salting the eggplant and summer squash helps remove excess water from those vegetables, increasing the overall sweetness of the dish. Cooking the vegetables separately allows you to control perfectly the level of doneness for each one; simmering them together briefly melds their flavors.

What is the correct order of steps for making ratatouille? ›

  1. Step 1: Roast Nuts. Start by roasting the pine nuts in a dry frying pan. ...
  2. Step 2: Prepare Eggplant. Dice the eggplant, put the cubes in a strainer and sprinkle with salt. ...
  3. Step 3: Slice the Onion. ...
  4. Step 4: Cook the Onion. ...
  5. Step 5: Add Tomato Puree. ...
  6. Step 6: Cook Peppers. ...
  7. Step 7: Mushrooms and Zucchini. ...
  8. Step 8: Eggplant.

What is an ingredient in a ratatouille? ›

Ratatouille is traditionally made with tomatoes, zucchini, peppers, onions, and eggplant when they are at the peak of their season at the same time. Garlic, thyme, and basil are often added to the mix as well.

What is the secret for a good ratatouille? ›

Ratatouille requires ripe vegetables, a liberal hand with the olive oil, and patience: only long, slow cooking will give you the creamy soft vegetables, and intense, almost jammy sauce that sings of the sun. Anything else is just plain vegetable stew.

What is the fancy version of ratatouille? ›

Confit byaldi is a variation on the traditional French dish ratatouille by the French chef Michel Guérard.

How do you take the bitterness out of ratatouille? ›

Submerge the diced eggplant in ice cold water and let sit for ten minutes to remove any bitterness. I started soaking eggplant rather than salting after reading a cookbook of Japanese dishes. I found it works better.

Is ratatouille good for you? ›

Ratatouille is packed with dietary fiber, potassium, vitamins A, C and K, folate and much more. With so many vegetables included, you're bound to meet the recommended daily amount of veggies your body needs.

What does ratatouille mean in French? ›

The word ratatouille comes from Occitan ratatolha. The dish is a traditional vegetable stew that was once known as a poor man's meal but is now one of the most known and loved around the world.

What is a fun fact about ratatouille dish? ›

The teeming summer gardens of Mediterranean France are the inspiration for and source of ratatouille, a dish whose name is taken from two related words: ratouiller, meaning to agitate or stir a liquid, and tatouiller, meaning to beat (as in the drumbeat called the tattoo) or to shake.

What happens if you don't salt eggplant? ›

Older recipes call for salting eggplant to draw out the bitter juices, but today's eggplants are less bitter (unless very large), so salting is largely unnecessary. It will, however, help the spongy flesh absorb less oil and crisp up like a dream.

Do I rinse eggplant after salting? ›

Furthermore, adding a good amount of salt will help tenderize the eggplant and keep its shape. Let the eggplant sit: Place the seasoned eggplant over a colander for 30 minutes to an hour. Once beads of moisture start to appear, rinse your eggplant slices under cold water and remove excess salt.

What are the different foods in ratatouille? ›

A classic ratatouille includes eggplant (aubergines), zucchini (courgettes), bell peppers, tomatoes, onions, garlic, olive oil and herbs. Its name is a combination of the French word “rata” meaning a stew with whole pieces and the verb “touiller” which means to stir, toss, or mix.

What are the two ways ratatouille is commonly served? ›

Is Ratatouille a Side Dish or a Main Dish? Both! Ratatouille can be served as a first course with bread; it can also be served as a side dish, as you would any vegetable side. However, I most enjoy serving ratatouille as a main-ish dish; that is, as an anchor to a summer's dinner.

What is the main dish in ratatouille called? ›

The dish that Remy creates in Ratatouille, technically, isn't Ratatouille. It's really a dish that goes by the name of (fancy French term alert!) Confit Byaldi that was perfected by the great chef Thomas Keller. Ratatouille itself is a much more rustic dish.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6480

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.