Pizza Stuffed Zucchini Boats

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Pizza stuffed zucchini boats hit that sweet spot between fun and practical: you get all the saucy, cheesy, pepperoni-loaded comfort of pizza without a heavy crust. The zucchini turns tender underneath the toppings, but it still holds its shape, so every boat eats like a personal-size pizza with a little extra freshness built in.

The trick is in the prep. Zucchini carries a lot of water, and if you skip the drying step, the sauce slides around and the cheese can turn loose instead of bubbling into a proper topping. A thin shell, a quick pat with paper towels, and a moderate oven give you the right balance — tender vegetable, concentrated flavor, and browned edges where the cheese meets the pan.

Below, I’ve included the part that matters most: how to keep the boats from getting soggy, which toppings can shift without changing the method, and how to reheat them without softening the whole thing into mush.

The zucchini stayed tender without turning watery, and the cheese browned right on top instead of sliding off. My kids ate theirs like little pizza shells and asked for them again the next night.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save these pizza stuffed zucchini boats for the night you want a low-carb pizza dinner with melty cheese, pepperoni, and no soggy crust.

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The Soggy-Zucchini Problem Starts Before the Oven

Zucchini boats fail when they go into the oven already wet. The flesh releases moisture as it heats, and if the shell is too thin or the cavity is left damp, the sauce gets diluted and the cheese loses its grip. This version avoids that by scooping a sturdy border, drying the inside well, and baking at a temperature hot enough to melt the cheese before the vegetable collapses.

The other mistake is overloading them. Pizza toppings need room to melt and settle, not pile into a mound that steams the center. A light layer of sauce, a modest amount of toppings, and cheese on top give you the most pizza-like result without flooding the boats.

What Each Topping Is Doing in These Boats

Pizza Stuffed Zucchini Boats with pepperoni, mozzarella, and basil
  • Zucchini — Choose medium zucchini with a firm feel and smooth skin. Smaller ones can be too narrow for filling, while oversized ones tend to be watery and seedy inside. The 1/4-inch shell is important because it gives the boats enough structure to hold the toppings without turning floppy.
  • Pizza sauce — Use a thick sauce, not a thin one, because watery sauce runs to the bottom of the pan and softens the zucchini. Jarred pizza sauce is fine here if it’s one you like on its own. If you only have marinara, simmer it for a few minutes first so it tightens up.
  • Mozzarella — Shredded mozzarella melts into the best pizza-style blanket. Fresh mozzarella is too wet for this setup unless you blot it thoroughly, and even then it releases more liquid than you want. Low-moisture mozzarella gives you those browned bubbles on top.
  • Pepperoni and vegetables — The pepperoni brings salt and fat, which helps the filling taste like pizza instead of baked vegetables. The mushrooms, olives, and bell pepper add classic pizzeria flavor, but keep the pieces small so they soften in time with the zucchini. If you swap in other toppings, use cooked or quick-cooking vegetables so the boats finish evenly.

Building the Boats So the Tops Melt Before the Centers Collapse

Cutting and Hollowing the Zucchini

Slice each zucchini in half lengthwise, then scoop out the center with a spoon, leaving a firm shell about 1/4-inch thick. If you dig too deep, the boat buckles and leaks; if you leave it too thick, the center stays tough. Pat the cut sides and the hollowed centers dry before adding anything else. That one step keeps the sauce from slipping around in a puddle.

Layering for Even Melt

Start with a spoonful of sauce, then add the vegetables and half the pepperoni before the cheese goes on. This keeps the toppings anchored under the cheese instead of drying out on top. Save the rest of the pepperoni for the final layer so it crisps a little and flavors the cheese as it bakes. The boats should look full, not overloaded.

Baking Until Tender, Not Mushy

Bake at 400°F until the cheese is melted and spotty-brown and the zucchini gives easily when pierced with a fork. The edges should be tender with a little bite left in the shell. If the cheese browns too fast before the zucchini softens, move the pan to a lower rack for the last few minutes. Pull them as soon as the filling looks set so the boats hold together when you serve them.

Make Them Vegetarian Without Losing the Pizza Feeling

Skip the pepperoni and add a little extra mushroom, bell pepper, or black olive instead. The boats still taste like pizza because the sauce, mozzarella, and seasoning are doing most of the work. If you want a little more savory depth, add a pinch of parmesan on top before baking.

Keep It Keto and Low Carb

This recipe already lands in low-carb territory as written. The main thing to watch is the sauce, because some jarred pizza sauces hide extra sugar. Use one with a lower-sugar label, and the flavor stays bold without changing the texture of the finished boats.

Swap the Toppings for What’s in the Fridge

These boats are forgiving as long as the add-ins are chopped small and don’t release too much water. Try cooked sausage, finely chopped ham, or even leftover roasted vegetables. Just avoid raw watery toppings like large tomato chunks, which can make the centers soupy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The zucchini softens a bit after chilling, but the flavor stays good.
  • Freezer: Not a great freezer recipe. The zucchini turns watery after thawing, and the cheese loses its best texture.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a 375°F oven or toaster oven until the cheese is hot and the edges crisp back up, usually 8 to 10 minutes. The microwave works in a pinch, but it makes the zucchini softer and the topping less bubbly.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use marinara instead of pizza sauce?+

Yes, but only if it’s a thicker marinara. Thin sauce pools in the bottom of the boats and makes the zucchini soft before the cheese finishes melting. If your marinara seems loose, simmer it for a few minutes first to reduce it.

How do I keep the zucchini from getting watery?+

Dry the hollowed zucchini with paper towels before adding the sauce, and don’t overload the boats. Zucchini releases moisture as it bakes, so starting with a dry shell and a modest amount of sauce keeps the filling concentrated instead of watery.

Can I make pizza stuffed zucchini boats ahead of time?+

You can assemble them a few hours ahead and keep them covered in the fridge. For the best texture, wait to bake until right before serving so the zucchini doesn’t sit in the sauce and soften too much. If you need to prep farther ahead, hollow and dry the zucchini first, then add the toppings later.

How do I know when the zucchini boats are done?+

The cheese should be melted and bubbling, and the zucchini should pierce easily with a fork without falling apart. If the boats still look tight and pale in the center, give them a few more minutes. You’re aiming for tender, not mushy.

Can I use a different cheese on top?+

Yes, but stick with a good melting cheese. Provolone or an Italian blend works well and gives a slightly sharper finish, while hard cheeses alone won’t give you that stretchy pizza top. If you use parmesan, treat it as an extra layer of flavor, not the main melting cheese.

Pizza Stuffed Zucchini Boats

Pizza zucchini boats are baked zucchini boats loaded with pizza sauce, pepperoni, and melty mozzarella for a baked zucchini pizza dinner. Each boat is hollowed to a 1/4-inch shell and baked until the cheese is bubbly and the zucchini is tender.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Italian-American
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

Zucchini boat filling
  • 4 medium zucchini Halved lengthwise.
  • 0.5 cup pizza sauce Use 1/2 cup total, portioned between boats.
  • 1 cup mozzarella cheese Shredded, divided between topping layers.
  • 30 mini pepperoni slices Divide between the center layer and the top.
  • 0.25 cup black olives Sliced.
  • 0.25 cup green bell pepper Diced.
  • 4 mushrooms Thinly sliced.
  • 0.5 tsp Italian seasoning
  • 0.25 tsp garlic powder
  • red pepper flakes For garnish.
  • fresh basil For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep the zucchini
  1. Preheat the oven to 400°F, and set a sheet pan inside to heat while you prep.
  2. Halve 4 medium zucchini lengthwise and scoop out the centers, leaving about a 1/4-inch shell; discard the flesh or save for another use.
  3. Pat the inside of each zucchini shell dry with paper towels to remove excess moisture.
Stuff and bake
  1. Spread a spoonful of pizza sauce inside each zucchini boat.
  2. Layer the mushrooms, diced green bell pepper, sliced black olives, and half of the mini pepperoni slices.
  3. Top each boat with shredded mozzarella and the remaining mini pepperoni slices.
  4. Sprinkle Italian seasoning and garlic powder evenly over the tops.
  5. Bake 20–25 minutes at 400°F until the cheese is melted and bubbly and the zucchini is tender; garnish with red pepper flakes and fresh basil before serving.

Notes

For crisp-tender boats, dry the zucchini shells well so they don’t steam in the oven. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; reheat in a 400°F oven until hot. Freezing isn’t recommended because zucchini can soften further after thawing. Dietary swap: use turkey pepperoni or a dairy-free mozzarella to reduce saturated fat or make it dairy-friendly.

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