
Olive Oil Braised Vegetables
Few dishes capture the soul of Greek home cooking like briam. Built on simple vegetables, generous olive oil, and patience rather than technique, this olive oil–braised vegetable dish is proof that Mediterranean food doesn’t need complexity to feel deeply satisfying.
Served warm or at room temperature, briam is a quiet, comforting main — the kind of recipe that fills the kitchen with gentle aromas and rewards slow cooking with rich, rounded flavor.
🫒 Why Olive Oil Makes This Dish
In traditional Greek cooking, olive oil is not just a fat — it’s the foundation. As the vegetables slowly braise, the oil blends with tomato juices, herbs, and natural sugars, creating a silky sauce that coats every slice.
This method turns everyday vegetables into something deeply nourishing and balanced, aligning perfectly with Mediterranean principles of simplicity and seasonal eating.
🥒 Ingredients (Briam-Style)
- Zucchini, sliced into rounds
- Eggplant, sliced thin
- Tomatoes, fresh or canned, sliced
- Onion, thinly sliced
- Garlic cloves
- Extra virgin olive oil (generous)
- Dried oregano or thyme
- Sea salt & black pepper
Optional additions include potatoes or bell peppers, depending on the season and what’s available.
🍳 How to Make Olive Oil Braised Vegetables
Preheat the oven and lightly oil a wide baking dish or oven-safe pot. Arrange the vegetables in overlapping layers, allowing their colors and textures to mix naturally.
Season with salt, pepper, and herbs, then drizzle generously with olive oil. Add the tomatoes last, letting their juices seep between the layers.
Cover loosely and bake slowly until the vegetables soften and begin to caramelize at the edges. Uncover near the end to allow the top to deepen in color while the olive oil emulsifies with the tomato juices below.
🍽️ How to Serve It
Briam is traditionally served as a main dish with crusty bread, but it also pairs beautifully with:
- grilled halloumi or feta
- a simple green salad
- a spoon of thick Greek yogurt on the side
If you enjoy vegetable-forward Mediterranean mains, this dish sits naturally alongside other comforting recipes like One-Pan Mediterranean Turkey Meatballs already featured on The Mediterranean Living.
For more context on traditional Greek vegetable cooking and olive oil use, resources like Olive Oil Times offer excellent insight into regional methods and ingredients.
🌿 A Dish That Improves with Time
Like many Mediterranean recipes, olive oil braised vegetables taste even better the next day. Flavors deepen, textures soften, and the dish becomes richer without feeling heavy — ideal for relaxed lunches or make-ahead dinners.

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