Charred grilled peppers, creamy burrata, and crisp toasted breadcrumbs hit all the right notes in one platter. The peppers stay sweet and supple after their short marinade, the burrata melts into the warm surface just enough to coat everything, and the breadcrumbs give each bite a little crunch so it never feels heavy. It looks elegant on the table, but it eats like something you’d want to make again the next night.
The trick is giving the peppers time to absorb the garlicky balsamic marinade before they ever touch the grill. That brief rest seasons the flesh all the way through and helps the surface brown faster without drying out. I also like to toast the breadcrumbs separately so they stay crisp instead of going soft the minute they hit the cheese and juices.
Below you’ll find the part that matters most: how to get deep char without collapsing the peppers, what kind of burrata works best, and the small finishing touches that turn this from a simple starter into the dish people keep hovering over.
The peppers came off the grill sweet and tender, and the burrata melted into all the charred edges. I also loved that the breadcrumbs stayed crunchy right on top instead of turning soggy.
Love the contrast of smoky peppers, creamy burrata, and crisp breadcrumbs? Save this grilled pepper platter for your next appetizer spread.
The Char You Want Before the Burrata Goes On
Grilled peppers can go wrong when they soften before they brown. Once that happens, they slump on the platter and lose the sweet edge that makes this dish worth serving. The goal here is a deep blister on the cut side first, then a short finish skin-side down so the flesh stays intact and the surface picks up those dark, smoky spots.
The marinade also matters more than it looks like it should. Garlic and balsamic need that 30-minute rest to settle into the peppers, but the acid isn’t there to pickle them. It’s there to sharpen the sweetness and give the finished dish a little lift so the burrata doesn’t flatten everything.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Platter

- Bell peppers — Use large, sturdy peppers so they hold their shape on the grill. Mixed colors make the platter look special, but they also give you a nice range of sweetness. Thin peppers cook too fast and can collapse before you get good char.
- Olive oil — This helps the peppers sear instead of sticking and carries the garlic and balsamic across the surface. A good everyday olive oil is fine here; save the fancy finishing oil for the platter if you want a richer final drizzle.
- Balsamic vinegar — It’s the small splash that makes the peppers taste more layered, not just smoky. Use one that tastes balanced rather than harsh. If yours is sharp, cut it back slightly and add a pinch more salt so the flavor still lands cleanly.
- Burrata — This is the creamy counterpoint, so buy the freshest burrata you can find. If it’s cold from the fridge, let it sit out while the peppers finish grilling so it softens and tears more easily over the warm vegetables.
- Panko breadcrumbs — Panko gives the best crunch because it stays light and crisp on top of the cheese. Toasting them first is nonnegotiable if you want texture that lasts past the first bite. Regular breadcrumbs work in a pinch, but they won’t give the same airy crunch.
- Fresh basil — Basil brings a clean, peppery finish that keeps the dish from feeling too rich. Tear it just before serving so it doesn’t blacken or bruise into the plate.
Building the Grill Marks Without Overcooking the Peppers
Marinating the Peppers
Toss the halved peppers with olive oil, garlic, balsamic, salt, and pepper until every cut surface looks glossy. Let them sit for 30 minutes so the seasoning settles in and the garlic loses its raw edge. If you rush this step, the peppers still taste fine, but the finished dish won’t have the same depth.
Getting the First Side Well Charred
Put the peppers cut-side down over medium-high heat and leave them alone for 6 to 7 minutes. You want dark grill marks and some blistering, not a gentle warm-up. If the grill is too cool, the peppers steam and turn limp instead of taking on that sweet, smoky edge.
Finishing on the Skin Side
Flip the peppers skin-side down and grill for another 5 to 6 minutes until they’re tender at the thickest part. The skins should char and wrinkle while the flesh stays juicy. Pull them off when they still hold their shape; if they’re falling apart on the grate, they’ve gone a minute or two too far.
Plating the Burrata and Breadcrumbs
Arrange the peppers on a platter while they’re still warm so the burrata softens as soon as it hits the surface. Tear the cheese over the top instead of slicing it; the uneven pieces give you little pockets of cream in every serving. Finish with toasted breadcrumbs and basil right before serving so the crunch stays intact.
Three Ways to Make This Platter Fit the Table You’re Setting
Dairy-Free Version with a Bright Finish
Skip the burrata and finish the peppers with toasted breadcrumbs, chopped basil, and a spoonful of whipped white beans or almond-based ricotta. You lose the milky richness, but the dish still feels full and satisfying because the peppers carry enough sweetness and char on their own.
Gluten-Free Crunch Without the Panko
Use gluten-free panko or crushed toasted nuts if that’s what you have. Gluten-free panko keeps the same light crunch, while nuts give a richer, more savory finish that leans a little more rustic.
Make It a Heartier Starter
Add a few slices of grilled sourdough or serve the peppers over toasted polenta rounds. That turns this from a platter-style appetizer into something guests can eat with a fork and call dinner-adjacent without much extra work.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the grilled peppers separately from the burrata and breadcrumbs for up to 3 days. The peppers hold up well, but the cheese loses its fresh texture once mixed in.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this dish assembled. The peppers can be frozen after grilling, but burrata and breadcrumbs won’t thaw with good texture.
- Reheating: Warm the peppers in a low oven or a skillet just until heated through. High heat makes them slump and release too much liquid, which is the fastest way to lose the clean contrast in the final platter.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Grilled Marinated Peppers with Burrata and Breadcrumbs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Toss the bell pepper halves with olive oil, minced garlic, balsamic vinegar, salt, and pepper until well coated, and set them cut-side down in a single layer for even coverage. Let the bowl sit at room temperature while you prepare the grill.
- Marinate the peppers for 30 minutes so the garlic and vinegar flavor soak in, then briefly drain off excess liquid before grilling.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat, then place the peppers on the grates cut-side down and grill for 6-7 minutes until the surfaces start to char. Keep the lid closed as much as possible to build heat quickly.
- Flip the peppers so the skin side faces down and grill for 5-6 minutes until charred and tender. Look for softened interiors and blistered skin.
- Arrange the grilled peppers on a platter in a single layer so the charred sides stay visible.
- Tear the burrata over the peppers, sprinkle with the toasted panko breadcrumbs, and finish with fresh basil for color.


