Mediterranean Grilled Zucchini Salad

Category:Salads & Side dishes

Charred zucchini changes everything. Once it comes off the grill with those dark ridges and a soft, meaty center, it stops tasting like a filler vegetable and starts carrying the whole salad. Paired with briny olives, cool cucumber, sweet tomatoes, and feta that softens into the dressing, this salad lands in that sweet spot between fresh and substantial.

The trick is treating the zucchini like the main ingredient, not an afterthought. A hot grill gives it color before it turns limp, and cutting it into bite-sized pieces after grilling keeps the edges intact instead of losing all that texture in the bowl. The dressing stays bright and simple on purpose: lemon, oregano, garlic, and good olive oil are enough when the vegetables are doing this much work.

Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: how to get the zucchini charred instead of soggy, how to balance the salty feta and olives without overdoing the dressing, and a few easy ways to adapt this when you need it dairy-free or want to make it ahead.

The zucchini held its shape on the grill and the dressing was bright without being sour. I made it ahead for dinner and it still tasted great at room temperature, which never happens with most salads.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this Mediterranean Grilled Zucchini Salad for the nights when you want something crisp, smoky, and bright without turning on the oven.

Save to Pinterest

The Reason This Salad Stays Crisp Instead of Turning Watery

Zucchini can go limp fast if it’s crowded, under-charred, or tossed with salt too early. The grill needs to do the first job here: it drives off moisture and gives the slices enough structure to hold up once they hit the bowl. If you skip that step and treat it like raw squash salad, the tomatoes and dressing will pull out even more liquid and the whole thing gets slippery.

The other important detail is timing. Salt the zucchini lightly before grilling, but don’t let it sit for long before it hits the heat. After grilling, let it cool just enough to stay warm without steaming the cucumber and feta. That contrast — warm, smoky zucchini against cool crisp vegetables — is what makes the salad feel finished instead of assembled.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Mediterranean Grilled Zucchini Salad charred, fresh, bright
  • Zucchini — This is the base, so pick medium zucchini with firm skin and not much visible seed cavity. Smaller ones grill more evenly and stay less watery. If yours are oversized, slice them into wider planks and trim off the seedy center after grilling if it looks soft.
  • Olive oil — You need it both for the grill and the dressing. A decent extra-virgin olive oil matters in the dressing because there’s nowhere to hide it, but for brushing the zucchini, any good cooking olive oil works.
  • Kalamata olives — They bring salt and depth that keeps the salad from tasting flat. If you use green olives instead, expect a sharper, less mellow finish. Rinse very salty olives if they’ve been packed heavily in brine.
  • Feta — Crumbled feta gives the salad creaminess and a salty finish that settles into the lemon dressing. Block feta usually tastes better than pre-crumbled and breaks into softer, wetter pieces. If you need dairy-free, leave it out and add a handful of chopped avocado right before serving.
  • Fresh parsley and mint — These aren’t garnish here. They lift the grilled vegetables and keep the salad tasting bright. If you only have one, use parsley; mint is the more noticeable flavor, so use it lightly unless you love it.
  • Lemon, garlic, and oregano — This dressing is small but important. The lemon wakes up the tomatoes and cucumber, the garlic gives the salad a little bite, and oregano ties it back to the Mediterranean profile. Fresh oregano can work, but dried oregano gives a steadier, more familiar flavor here.

How to Grill the Zucchini So It Holds Its Shape

Getting the Heat Right First

Preheat the grill until it’s properly hot before the zucchini goes on. You want quick color, not a long slow cook that turns the slices soft before they brown. If the grates aren’t hot enough, the zucchini will grab and steam instead of marking cleanly.

Looking for the Right Grill Marks

Lay the planks down in a single layer and leave them alone long enough to develop visible char. You’re looking for dark grill lines and edges that start to look slightly collapsed, not mushy. If the zucchini sticks when you try to lift it, give it another minute; it usually releases once the surface browns enough.

Cutting and Cooling at the Right Moment

Move the grilled zucchini to a board and cut it into bite-sized pieces while it’s still warm. That keeps the salad easy to eat without letting the pieces shed too much moisture in the bowl. Let it cool just enough that it won’t wilt the cucumber, then toss everything together gently so the feta stays in soft crumbles instead of turning pasty.

Three Useful Ways to Adapt It Without Losing the Point

Make It Dairy-Free Without Making It Flat

Skip the feta and add a little extra salt to the dressing, then finish with chopped avocado or toasted pine nuts. You lose the tangy dairy note, so the lemon and herbs need to carry more of the brightness. The texture stays satisfying if you keep the zucchini well-charred.

Turn It Into a Fuller Meal

Add chickpeas, grilled chicken, or flaked tuna to make the salad more filling. Chickpeas keep it vegetarian and soak up the dressing well, while chicken makes it a clean lunch or light dinner. Add the extra protein after the dressing so the zucchini doesn’t get crushed while tossing.

Use the Broiler When You Don’t Have a Grill

Lay the zucchini on a sheet pan and broil it close to the element until the tops are browned and the edges soften. It won’t have the same smoky flavor, but you’ll still get the charred texture that keeps the salad from tasting raw. Watch it closely — broilers go from perfect to scorched fast.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 2 days. The cucumber softens a bit and the tomatoes release more juice, but the salad still tastes good cold.
  • Freezer: This one doesn’t freeze well. The zucchini and cucumber lose their texture once thawed, and the salad turns watery.
  • Reheating: Don’t reheat the whole salad. If you want the zucchini warmer, warm just that portion briefly in a skillet, then add it back to the cold vegetables and dressing.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make Mediterranean grilled zucchini salad ahead of time?+

Yes, but keep the components separate until serving if you want the best texture. The grilled zucchini can be made a day ahead, and the dressing holds well in the fridge. Once everything is tossed together, it’s best the same day because the cucumber and tomatoes start to soften.

How do I keep the zucchini from getting soggy on the grill?+

Use medium zucchini, slice them into even planks, and grill over a hot grate so they brown before they soften. If the grill is too cool, the zucchini releases water before it gets color. Cutting the grilled pieces after cooking also helps them keep their shape in the bowl.

Can I use yellow squash instead of zucchini?+

Yes, yellow squash works the same way and grills just as well. It tastes a little softer and sweeter than zucchini, so the salad will feel slightly less earthy. Use the same slicing and grilling method so the texture stays balanced.

How do I stop the dressing from tasting too sharp?+

Add the lemon juice gradually and taste after tossing it with the vegetables, because feta and olives bring a lot of salt to the bowl. If it still tastes sharp, add a little more olive oil rather than more salt. The oil softens the acid without muting the herbs.

Can I serve this Mediterranean zucchini salad cold?+

You can, but room temperature tastes better because the zucchini and olive oil are more aromatic that way. Straight from the fridge, the dressing firms up and the feta gets firmer, which dulls the overall texture. Let it sit out for about 15 minutes before serving if you’ve chilled it.

Mediterranean Grilled Zucchini Salad

Mediterranean grilled zucchini salad with charred zucchini, feta, Kalamata olives, and a bright oregano lemon dressing. Quick to toss together for an easy Mediterranean summer salad with crisp cucumber and juicy cherry tomatoes.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Salad
Cuisine: Mediterranean
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

  • 3 zucchini Medium; sliced into planks
  • 2 tbsp olive oil For brushing and grilling
  • salt To taste
  • pepper To taste
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes Halved
  • 1 cucumber Sliced
  • 0.5 cup Kalamata olives Pitted
  • 0.5 cup red onion Thinly sliced
  • 0.75 cup feta cheese Crumbled
  • 0.25 cup fresh parsley and fresh mint Chopped
  • 4 tbsp olive oil Mediterranean dressing
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice Mediterranean dressing
  • 1 clove garlic Minced; Mediterranean dressing
  • 1 tsp dried oregano Mediterranean dressing
  • salt For dressing, to taste
  • pepper For dressing, to taste

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet
  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Grill the zucchini
  1. Brush the zucchini planks with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Grill over medium-high heat for 3–4 minutes per side until visibly charred, then cut into bite-sized pieces.
Make the oregano lemon dressing
  1. Whisk olive oil, lemon juice, minced garlic, dried oregano, salt, and pepper together until combined and fragrant.
Assemble the salad
  1. Combine grilled zucchini, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, Kalamata olives, and red onion in a large bowl. Drizzle with the dressing and toss gently until lightly coated.
  2. Top with crumbled feta and the chopped fresh herbs. Serve at room temperature or slightly warm.

Notes

Pro tip: cut grilled zucchini into bite-sized pieces right after grilling so they absorb dressing better without getting soggy. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container up to 3 days; refresh with a small squeeze of lemon before serving. Freezer: no. Dietary swap: for a lighter option, use reduced-fat feta and keep the olive oil measure the same.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating