Grilled Zucchini Chickpea Salad with Burrata and Chili Oil

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Charred zucchini, crisp chickpeas, and torn burrata make this salad feel like a full meal instead of a side dish that got lucky. The contrast is what keeps people going back for another forkful: smoky edges on the zucchini, crunchy little bites from the chickpeas, and that cool, creamy center of burrata pooling into the chili oil. It lands on the table looking dramatic, but it eats with the ease of a weeknight salad.

The key is treating each part on its own terms. The zucchini needs enough heat to pick up color before it turns soft, and the chickpeas need to dry out well before they hit the pan or they’ll stay pale and chewy. The chili oil also matters more than it looks — warming the garlic first gives the oil depth, then the red pepper flakes and smoked paprika finish it with a gentle burn instead of a harsh one.

Below, you’ll find the details that keep the burrata from getting lost, plus the small changes I use when I want to turn this into a bigger dinner or serve it with bread for soaking up every last bit of oil and cream.

The zucchini kept its bite, the chickpeas got properly crisp, and the burrata melted into the chili oil in the best way. I served it with bread and there was nothing left but crumbs.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save this grilled zucchini chickpea salad for the nights when you want burrata, char, and chili oil all on one plate.

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The Reason the Zucchini Needs High Heat Before It Goes Anywhere Near the Plate

Grilled zucchini can go limp fast if the heat is too low or the slices are too thin. You want actual browning here, not just softened squash marks, because that char is what keeps the salad from tasting watery next to the burrata. Thick planks hold up better than coins, and grilling them long enough to get defined grill marks gives the salad structure.

The chickpeas play a big part in that structure too. Pan-frying them until the skins blister and the centers firm up gives you a crunchy element that doesn’t disappear under the cheese. If your chickpeas are still damp when they hit the pan, they’ll steam first and crisp much later, so drying them well is worth the extra minute.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Grilled Zucchini Chickpea Salad with Burrata and Chili Oil charred creamy crispy
  • Zucchini — This is the smoky, juicy base. Medium zucchini work best because they’re tender without turning mushy, and slicing them lengthwise gives you enough surface area for real grill marks. Smaller zucchini are fine if that’s what you have, but avoid oversized ones with spongy centers.
  • Chickpeas — These give the salad crunch and substance. Canned chickpeas are perfect here as long as you dry them well before frying; that step matters more than the brand. If you want to use cooked-from-scratch chickpeas, chill and dry them first so they crisp instead of softening in the pan.
  • Burrata — This is the cool, creamy contrast that pulls everything together. Don’t swap in fresh mozzarella unless you have to; it won’t give you the same rich center that mingles with the chili oil. If burrata is very cold, let it sit out for a few minutes so it tears cleanly and spreads more easily.
  • Chili oil — This is the punctuation mark. Warming the garlic in olive oil first softens its sharp edge, then the flakes and paprika steep into a deep red oil that coats the vegetables without drowning them. If you want a milder version, cut the red pepper flakes in half, but don’t skip the garlic because it gives the oil its backbone.
  • Fresh basil and lemon zest — These finish the dish with brightness. Basil adds a sweet herb note that keeps the salad from feeling heavy, while lemon zest lifts the burrata and sharpens the chili oil. If you only have one, use the zest first; it changes the whole plate faster than the herbs do.

Building the Salad So the Creamy Center Doesn’t Collapse

Steeping the Chili Oil

Start the oil with the garlic and heat it just until the garlic softens, not browns. Once it comes off the heat, the flakes, paprika, and salt bloom in the residual warmth and turn the oil a deep brick red. If the garlic takes on much color in the pan, pull it sooner next time; browned garlic turns bitter and dulls the whole salad.

Crisping the Chickpeas

Put the chickpeas in a hot pan with enough oil to coat the bottom and leave them alone long enough to sear. They should sound active in the pan and end up golden, blistered, and firm to the bite. If they’re soft in the center after frying, they needed more drying before cooking or a little more time over high heat.

Grilling the Zucchini

Brush the planks lightly with oil and season them right before they go on the grill so they don’t weep. You’re looking for dark grill marks and tender flesh that still holds its shape when lifted with tongs. If the zucchini starts sticking, it usually needs another minute before you turn it; trying to force it off early tears the surface and ruins the char.

Assembling With the Burrata at the Center

Arrange the zucchini first, then tear the burrata over the middle so the cream spills naturally into the warm vegetables. Scatter the chickpeas around the edges so they stay crisp longer and don’t sink into the cheese. Finish with chili oil at the table if you want the most dramatic look; that keeps the burrata from getting tinted too far ahead of serving.

How to Adapt It When You Want a Different Ending

Dairy-Free Version

Swap the burrata for torn avocado or a spoonful of thick dairy-free ricotta-style cheese. You’ll lose the milky richness of burrata, but the chili oil and basil still carry the salad, and the avocado adds the same cool contrast that makes the dish feel complete.

Make It a Bigger Meal

Serve it over arugula, farro, or toasted sourdough if you want something more filling. Arugula adds peppery bite, farro gives it chew, and bread turns the burrata and chili oil into the best part of the plate. All three hold up well without blurring the grilled zucchini.

Lower the Heat

Use half the red pepper flakes and keep the smoked paprika for depth. You still get a warm, savory oil, just with a gentler finish that won’t overpower the burrata. If you want almost no heat at all, infuse the oil with garlic and paprika only, then pass the flakes at the table.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the grilled zucchini, chickpeas, and chili oil separately for up to 3 days. The zucchini softens a bit, and the chickpeas lose some crunch, but both still taste good cold or at room temperature.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze the assembled salad. The zucchini and burrata both break down after thawing, and the texture goes flat.
  • Reheating: Warm the zucchini and chickpeas separately in a skillet or low oven until just heated through, then add fresh burrata and chili oil. If you reheat the burrata, it turns greasy instead of creamy, so keep the cheese cold until serving.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make the chili oil ahead of time?+

Yes. Make it up to a week ahead and keep it in the fridge in a sealed jar. The flavor deepens as it sits, and you can warm it slightly if it thickens or turns cloudy from the olive oil chilling.

How do I keep the chickpeas crispy?+

Dry them as well as you can before they go into the pan, and don’t crowd them. Moisture is what makes them steam instead of crisp, and a crowded pan traps that moisture right back onto the surface. If they soften after sitting, a quick re-fry in a hot skillet brings them back.

Can I use mozzarella instead of burrata?+

You can, but the salad won’t have the same creamy center. Fresh mozzarella gives you mild cheese and good texture, while burrata gives you a soft, rich middle that melts into the chili oil and acts like a sauce. If you use mozzarella, add a little extra olive oil over the top.

How do I keep the zucchini from getting soggy?+

Use medium zucchini, slice them lengthwise, and grill them over enough heat to brown quickly. If the grill is too cool, the zucchini sweats before it chars and turns soft in the center. A light coating of oil and seasoning right before grilling helps too.

Can I make this salad without a grill?+

Yes. A hot cast-iron skillet or grill pan works well and gives you the same charred edges. Don’t pile the zucchini in the pan; cook it in batches so the surface browns instead of steaming.

Grilled Zucchini Chickpea Salad with Burrata and Chili Oil

Grilled zucchini chickpea salad with burrata and chili oil brings charred zucchini planks, crispy chickpeas, and a torn burrata center with cream pooling. Finish with a vivid red chili oil and bright lemon zest for a summery Mediterranean salad.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Salad
Cuisine: Mediterranean
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Grilled zucchini
  • 3 zucchini Slice lengthwise into planks.
  • 2 tbsp olive oil For brushing zucchini and pan-frying chickpeas (split as directed).
  • 0.5 salt and pepper To taste; season zucchini and chickpeas.
Crispy chickpeas
  • 1 can (15 oz) chickpeas Drained, dried thoroughly, then pan-fried until crispy and golden.
Burrata center
  • 2 balls (4 oz each) burrata cheese Tear and place in the center so cream pools.
Chili oil
  • 0.33 cup olive oil For chili oil base.
  • 1 tbsp red pepper flakes Adds heat and color.
  • 2 cloves garlic Minced.
  • 0.5 tsp smoked paprika For smoky depth.
  • 1 pinch salt A pinch for the chili oil.
Garnish and serving
  • 0.5 fresh basil Chopped or torn for garnish.
  • 1 lemon zest Bright garnish.
  • 1 crusty bread For serving.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 small saucepan
  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Make the chili oil
  1. Heat 1/3 cup olive oil with the minced garlic in a small saucepan over medium heat for 2 minutes until the garlic softens.
  2. Remove from the heat and stir in red pepper flakes, smoked paprika, and a pinch of salt, then let the oil steep while you cook the rest.
Pan-fry the chickpeas
  1. Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a cast iron skillet over high heat, then add the drained, dried chickpeas and pan-fry for 6–8 minutes until crispy and golden.
  2. Season the crispy chickpeas with salt and pepper to taste, then set aside.
Grill the zucchini
  1. Brush the zucchini planks with olive oil and season with salt and pepper.
  2. Grill on medium-high heat for 3–4 minutes per side until charred, then cut into pieces.
Assemble
  1. Arrange the grilled zucchini on a serving platter.
  2. Tear the burrata and place it in the center, then scatter the crispy chickpeas around it.
  3. Drizzle chili oil generously over everything and garnish with fresh basil and lemon zest.

Notes

Pro tip: dry the chickpeas thoroughly before pan-frying so they turn crisp instead of steaming. Store leftovers covered in the fridge up to 3 days; the burrata is best within 24 hours, and the chili oil keeps up to 1 week refrigerated. Freezing isn’t recommended. For a dairy-light option, swap burrata with whole-milk fresh mozzarella or whipped ricotta and assemble the same way.

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