Easy & Delicious Roasted Green Beans
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Roasted green beans with Parmesan and basil are crispy and so flavorful. Turn a few ordinary ingredients into an extra special side dish.
Recipe Overview
Why you’ll love it: This is such a yummy way to make green beans! A little effort yields a big reward.
How long it takes: 20 minutes
Equipment you’ll need: sheet pan, oven
Servings: 4
- 1 Recipe Overview
- 2 Why you’ll Love these Roasted green Beans
- 3 What You’ll Need
- 4 Can you Roast Canned or Frozen Green Beans?
- 5 How to Make Roasted Beans
- 6 FAQs
- 7 Make It Your Own
- 8 Storage & ReheatingTips
- 9 Leftover Love
- 10 Roasted Vegetables
- 11 Get the Recipe: Roasted Green Beans with Parmesan and Basil
I don’t know if I’ve ever seen my mom enjoy a food as much as she enjoyed these roasted green beans! Okay, that might be an exaggeration but my mom LOVES these beans.
She couldn’t stop eating them! She actually was snacking on them before I reheated them.
I love cooking with my mom and she is the one who gave me the love of cooking. Any time I knock a recipe out of the park in her eyes, I feel an extra sense of accomplishment and success.
Why you’ll Love these Roasted green Beans
- They’re easy to make: Guys. I’m talking green can Parmesan and dried basil. There are times for freshly grated cheese and leafy green fresh basil, but in this case, it’s not. necessary.
- They’re salty and crunchy: If you’re a person that loves french fries, you’ll love these too. Of course they’re not exactly the same, but they satisfy the same cravings.
- They honor the green bean: That might sound weird, but the fresh beans are still crisp and flavorful. We’re not boiling them to death, we’re highlighting and enhancing their flavor in a hot oven, until they’re perfectly tender but still crisp.
I’ll get you started here and give you helpful tips. Look for the printable recipe card near the end of the post. It has complete instructions, measurements, and nutrition information.
What You’ll Need
- Fresh Green Beans: From your garden, grocery store, or farm market, doesn’t matter. Fresh is best for roasting. Look for crisp firm beans that aren’t wrinkled or soft. Snip off the stem end and leave the tail end on.
- Olive Oil: A bit of oil is necessary to roast vegetables. If you prefer a different type of oil, go for it.
- Salt and Pepper: Use coarse freshly ground black pepper and coarse sea salt or coarse kosher salt if you can. They provide the most flavor.
- Dried Basil: Nothing fancy here, just dried basil leaves from your pantry. If you’d rather use fresh, add it after roasting instead of before.
- Parmesan Cheese: Whether it’s from a green can or freshly grated, Parmesan cheese adds a really nice touch to these beans.
Can you Roast Canned or Frozen Green Beans?
While you technically could, I don’t recommend it for this particular recipe. They have a higher water content and they just won’t turn out the same.
How to Make Roasted Beans
When roasting anything, crispy is the goal. Those brown crispy bits are the best part.
To achieve that, make sure to dry your green beans really well. This is true when you’re roasting any vegetable and green beans are no exception. Put them right onto a towel and roll them around a bit until they’re nice and dry. Then you can get to roasting.
Preheat the oven to 425°F. The oven needs to be good and hot before you put the beans in.
Mix the beans with the olive oil, salt and pepper, and dried basil.
Spread them evenly on a rimmed sheet pan. Give them plenty of room.
Roast the beans for ten minutes, give them a stir, and roast for five more minutes.
Remove the pan from the oven and sprinkle the beans with the cheese. Serve immediately.
While you have the oven on, bake Parmesan and almond crusted salmon to go with the green beans. It’s so, so good and you can roast them both (and potatoes, too) at the same time. We also love baked chicken cordon bleu, which sounds fancy but is easy to make. Crockpot ham with maple Dijon sauce is easy and goes great with green beans.
These roasted green beans with Parmesan are almost as good as French fries. Okay, no, nothing like French fries. But good on their own merits! Totally different than French fries but just as good. Where was I going with this?
FAQs
While it’s important to snip the stem end off because it can be tough, there’s no need to snip the opposite end off (the dark green pointed end). It is tender and looks kind of cool.
The answer to this question varies a bit. Roasted green beans aren’t going to have the same texture or taste as steamed or boiled beans. Steamed/boiled beans should be bright green and tender, with an almost buttery flavor. If they are still “squeaky” when you bite into them, they probably could use a couple more minutes of cooking. If they are olive green and limp, they are overcooked.
Roasted green beans won’t be as tender as boiled/steamed beans. They’ll have a chewy texture but should taste cooked, not grassy or raw.
Make It Your Own
- Love garlic? Add minced or pressed garlic (2-4 cloves) to the beans after they’ve roasted 10 minutes. When you stir the beans, stir in the garlic.
- Have something else in the oven at a lower temperature (350°F)? No problem, the beans will be fine at a lower temperature but will take up to 20 minutes to cook. They won’t be quite as browned and crisp.
- If basil and Parmesan aren’t for you, try green beans with lemon and feta. I prefer those, my mom prefers these. Try them both!
- Don’t want to turn your oven on? Try green beans almondine or green beans with bacon. We just love this Mediterranean green bean salad with sun-dried tomatoes.
- Or if you’re in the mood for something a bit richer, try my homemade green bean casserole – no canned soup in this version!
- Not crazy about green beans? Try roasted broccoli or roasted cauliflower, and add basil and Parmesan cheese.
Storage & ReheatingTips
Leftover green beans can be stored in the fridge for three to four days. Reheat in the microwave or give them a quick blast in your air fryer.
Leftover Love
Have some roasted green beans left over? Chop them up a bit and add them to a salad with fresh greens, and tomatoes for a quick lunch tomorrow. They are particularly good on a gazpacho salad or panzanella salad.
Did you make this? Be sure to leave a review below and tag me @rachelcooksblog on Facebook, Instagram, or Pinterest!
Ingredients
- 1 pound fresh green beans (trimmed, stem end snipped off)
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
- ¾ teaspoon dried basil (see note)
- ¼ teaspoon kosher salt
- ¼ teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper (more or less to taste)
- 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°F.
- Dry green beans well and spread on a rimmed baking sheet. Toss with olive oil (use your hands), so that all the beans are coated. Sprinkle with salt, pepper, basil. Toss again to coat.
- Roast for 10 minutes, toss, and continue to roast for 5 more minutes. Immediately sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and serve.
Notes
- If you prefer, use fresh basil instead of dried. Add finely minced basil leaves after the beans are roasted.
- Other types of oil can be substituted for the olive oil.
- Yellow wax beans are great, too. A mixture of green beans and yellow beans is really attractive.
Nutrition Information
This website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.
Mark says
Ended up really weird chewy for me, maybe they just weren’t good beans I guess but the flavor was good.
Rachel Gurk says
Could have been the beans! Did you dry them well?
Megan @ MegUnprocessed says
That green beans look great!
Liz says
I’m still waiting on decent fresh green beans so I can make these! I know this will be one recipe I’ll make week after week all through the summer!!
Lane & Holly @ With Two Spoons says
I love roasting my vegetables, but I’ve never roasted green beans! This week!
Megan says
My first time roasting green beans and these were delicious! My husband and I ate almost the entire pan! I used Wegman’s basting oil (which has herbs in it), fresh basil and garlic salt (instead of regular salt). This will go into the rotation!
Rachel Gurk says
So happy to hear this! That basting oil sounds amazing and perfect for roasting vegetables!
Ellen says
These look amazing.
My family tends to steam veggies, without any other seasoning, and while the texture is good, the flavor is lacking. I am all about roasted veggies and I will definitely have to give this a try.
Allison says
Yum! Each summer my BF’s parents grow green beans so come July/August I will have an endless stash available to me – i’ll be saving this recipe!
Kirsten says
Rachel,
This is the kind of dish that won’t make it off the roasting pan and onto a serving dish at my house. We just stand in the kitchen sampling ‘just one more’ until there is none left!
I heart the green can, and I think this looks awesome!
Kristine @ Kristine's Kitchen says
How come I’ve never thought to roast green beans?! I’m always roasting other veggies, and these look delicious! I love that they are so easy, too!
denise says
never had roasted green beans, but these sound good
Monique @ Ambitious Kitchen says
These look amazing. I love making meals for my Mom and I know she would love these!
marcie says
I haven’t roasted green beans in so long! These would be so great for snacking!
Barbara @ Spirited Cook says
I haven’t roasted green beans, I guess I never thought of it…and I agree, things have to be easy and can’t be a big project for everything! I will give this a try as I always have parm on hand. Cheers!
Marye says
Green Beans are one vegetable I haven’t yet roasted. These sound really good! I love the Parm/Basil combo!
Nibbles By Nic says
Yup..I have some green beans sitting int he fridge and this is what I am doing with them! Thanks for the idea!