Grilled zucchini gets a lot better when it’s treated like more than a side dish. The planks pick up smoky edges, stay tender in the middle, and give you a clean, savory base for salty feta and fresh basil. Add a slick of olive oil and a hit of lemon, and the whole plate tastes bright, balanced, and worth firing up the grill for.
The key is cutting the zucchini into long planks so it can brown without falling through the grates or turning mushy. A medium-high grill gives you those defined char marks before the vegetables overcook, and the feta goes on while the zucchini is still warm so it softens just enough to cling to the surface. Basil and lemon finish the dish after grilling, which keeps the herbs fresh and the citrus sharp.
Below, I’ll show you the little details that keep grilled zucchini from turning limp, plus a few ways to adapt this side when you want to keep it dairy-free, use what’s already in the fridge, or make it ahead for a crowd.
The zucchini stayed tender with those nice grill marks, and the feta softened just enough on top without melting into a mess. The lemon and basil made it taste fresh instead of heavy.
Grilled zucchini with feta and basil brings smoky edges, creamy crumbles, and fresh lemon together in one fast side dish.
Why the Zucchini Needs Space on the Grill
The biggest mistake with grilled zucchini is crowding the grates and expecting it to brown. Zucchini holds a lot of water, so if the grill is too cool or the pieces are packed too tightly, it steams before it ever chars. You want enough direct heat to drive off moisture fast, which is what gives you those defined marks and a better texture.
Cutting the zucchini into long planks instead of rounds helps too. Planks stay intact, have more surface area for browning, and are much easier to flip cleanly. If the slices are too thin, they’ll collapse; if they’re too thick, the centers stay watery while the outside burns.
What Each Topping Is Actually Doing Here

- Olive oil — This is not just for flavor. It helps the zucchini brown instead of drying out, and a good finishing oil adds gloss and richness after grilling. A basic extra-virgin bottle is fine for grilling; use the nicer one for the final drizzle.
- Feta — Salty feta gives the dish its backbone. The crumbly kind works best because it softens around the warm zucchini without turning creamy or disappearing into the plate. If you use a drier feta, let it sit at room temperature while the zucchini grills so the flavor opens up.
- Basil — Fresh basil has to go on at the end. Heat dulls its perfume fast, so add it after the zucchini comes off the grill if you want that clean, green finish. Torn leaves release more aroma than whole leaves, but don’t shred them into confetti.
- Lemon juice and zest — The juice cuts through the feta and oil, while the zest gives you the part of the lemon that actually tastes bright and fragrant. If you only have juice, the dish still works, but it loses some of that lifted finish.
Getting the Char Before the Zucchini Goes Soft
Seasoning the Planks
Brush the zucchini lightly with olive oil and season both sides with salt and black pepper. Salt early enough to flavor the vegetable, but not so far ahead that it starts pulling out a puddle of water on the counter. If the planks look wet before they hit the grill, pat them dry with a towel first or you’ll fight steam instead of getting color.
Building the Grill Marks
Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates well. Lay the zucchini down and leave it alone for 3 to 4 minutes so the surface can sear and release on its own. If it sticks when you try to flip it, it needs another minute; forcing it tears the plank and leaves the good char behind.
Finishing While Warm
Transfer the grilled zucchini to a platter and crumble the feta over the top right away. The residual heat softens the cheese just enough to make it taste richer without melting it flat. Drizzle on the lemon juice and a little extra olive oil, then scatter the basil, zest, red pepper flakes, and flaky salt so every bite has a mix of creamy, bright, and savory.
Make It Dairy-Free Without Losing the Lift
Skip the feta and finish the zucchini with extra lemon zest, chopped basil, flaky salt, and a spoonful of toasted pine nuts or chopped almonds. You lose the salty creaminess, but you keep the bright, layered finish that makes the dish work.
How to Add More Protein to Turn It into Lunch
Add chickpeas or white beans on the platter and spoon the olive oil, lemon, and herbs over everything. The vegetables stay the star, but the beans catch the dressing and make the dish hearty enough to serve on its own.
What to Do If You Only Have Halloumi Instead of Feta
Use halloumi in thin slices and tuck them onto the platter after grilling so they warm through from the zucchini. Halloumi gives you chew instead of crumble, and it’s saltier and more structured, so use a lighter hand with the finishing salt.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 3 days. The zucchini softens as it sits, and the basil will darken, so the flavor is best on day one.
- Freezer: This dish doesn’t freeze well. Grilled zucchini turns watery and soft after thawing, and the feta loses its texture.
- Reheating: Rewarm gently in a skillet over medium-low heat just until the zucchini loses its chill. Don’t blast it in the microwave or you’ll end up with limp slices and separated oil.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Grilled Zucchini with Feta & Basil
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Brush zucchini planks with olive oil and season with salt and black pepper, coating both sides evenly so they brown on the grill.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates to prevent sticking; you should see steady heat before placing the zucchini down.
- Grill the zucchini for 3–4 minutes per side until char marks are well defined and the zucchini is just tender, flipping once for even color.
- Arrange the grilled zucchini on a serving plate or platter in a single layer so the toppings don’t steam it too much.
- While still warm, crumble feta generously over the top so the heat softens it slightly and clings to the zucchini edges.
- Drizzle with good olive oil and lemon juice, then scatter lemon zest, fresh basil, and red pepper flakes for bright, fragrant coverage.
- Finish with a pinch of flaky sea salt so it pops as a last layer of flavor.


