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It was one of those Tuesdays where the afternoon got away from me. Soccer cleats were still damp by the back door, math homework was spreading across the table, and I realized I had exactly 30 minutes to turn a bag of stubborn-looking Brussels sprouts into something no one would groan about.
I almost reached for the frozen fries. Instead I remembered a scrap of paper tucked in my recipe box, scribbled at the library by a neighbor who said, “Just roast them hotter than you think, and don’t be shy with the cheese.” That was years ago. I have changed the amounts, shifted the timing, burned a pan or two. But at some point this stopped feeling like her recipe and started feeling like one of our weeknight anchors.
Crispy Parmesan Roasted Brussels Sprouts are not fancy. They are what happens when you trust high heat, a sheet pan, and a handful of pantry basics to make a vegetable pull its weight at dinner. They are the thing I make when I want a green side that feels like a treat and reheats well enough to tuck into tomorrow’s lunch.
And importantly, they will forgive you if you get distracted for a minute. Or five.
Why Parmesan Roasted Brussels Sprouts Belong in Your Rotation
A lot of Brussels sprouts recipes aim straight for impressive. This one aims for repeatable.
The pieces get trimmed, tossed with oil, spread on a pan, and roasted until the flat cut sides are deeply browned and crisp around the edges. Parmesan goes on near the end so it melts and frizzles into little salty bits without burning. When they come out of the oven, they smell nutty and toasty, more like roasted nuts than the boiled Brussels sprouts many of us grew up side‑eyeing.
Here is what I love about this version:
- The ingredient list is short and familiar.
- The timing is flexible, which matters when the chicken takes longer than the recipe promised.
- Leftovers are actually useful, stirred into tomorrow’s pasta or folded into an omelet.
- You can scale it up for a potluck without needing extra pans or equipment.
This is the kind of side dish that makes a plain piece of roasted chicken or a simple pot of rice feel like a meal someone meant to make, not just what was left in the fridge.
Gathering what you need
- 1 pound Brussels sprouts
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
- Salt and pepper to taste

Step by step to crisp, not mushy
- Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C).
- Trim and halve the Brussels sprouts.
- In a large bowl, toss the Brussels sprouts with olive oil, salt, and pepper.
- Spread them out on a baking sheet in a single layer.
- Roast for about 20-25 minutes, until they are golden brown and crispy.
- Remove from the oven and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
- Return to the oven for an additional 5 minutes, until the cheese is melted.
- Serve warm.

What to watch for in the oven
The real magic here is less about strict timing, more about noticing how the sprouts change.
After about 15 minutes, you will see the cut sides picking up color. By 20 minutes, some of the loose outer leaves will look quite dark and papery. That is good. Those stray leaves turn into little Brussels chips, and they are almost always the first thing picked off the pan while I am trying to transfer everything to a bowl.
You are aiming for:
- Deep golden brown on the cut sides, not just pale green.
- Edges that look a little frazzled and crisp, but not entirely blackened.
- A fork that slips in with just a bit of resistance, so they stay firm enough to hold their shape.
If your sprouts are on the larger side, they may need the full 25 minutes before the cheese goes on. Very small ones can be ready closer to 18 or 20. If you have both sizes mixed together, do not overthink it. Just trim them all, roast, and know that some will be more caramelized than others. That variety is half the charm.
And if the rest of dinner is not quite ready when the sprouts are, you can turn the oven off and leave the pan inside for a few extra minutes. They will stay warm and keep crisping gently.
Make ahead, leftovers, and feeding tomorrow you
Roasted vegetables do not usually get more attention the next day, but these hold their own.
To prep ahead:
- Trim and halve the Brussels sprouts in the morning or even the night before.
- Store them in an airtight container or a zip-top bag in the fridge.
- When it is time to cook, toss with oil, salt, and pepper, then roast as written. You might add a minute or two if they were very cold.
You can also roast them almost all the way earlier in the day, pull them out just before they are fully browned, then reheat and finish with the Parmesan right before serving. This is handy for holidays when oven space is like prime real estate.
For leftovers:
- Reheat on a small sheet pan in a 375°F oven for 5 to 8 minutes. The edges crisp back up more than they would in a microwave.
- Or, chop them and stir into scrambled eggs with a little extra cheese.
- Fold into warm cooked grains like quinoa or farro with a squeeze of lemon for a quick lunch.
- My kids have been known to eat them cold out of the container after school. That is not a guarantee, but it has happened.
They will keep in the fridge 3 days, tucked into a covered container. If they look a little soft when you open the lid, that is all right. A quick blast in a hot pan or oven brings them back around enough for a weeknight.
Flexible by design: swaps and small adjustments
You do not have to follow this recipe with a ruler in your hand.
- Oil: Olive oil brings nice flavor, but you can use any neutral oil you keep on the counter, like avocado or canola. Just do not skip the oil entirely, it is what helps the sprouts brown instead of steam.
- Cheese: Grated Parmesan works beautifully because it melts and then crisps in little patches. You can use Pecorino or another hard, salty cheese if that is what you have. Pre-grated is fine here, truly.
- Seasoning: Salt and pepper are the base. Add a pinch of garlic powder, smoked paprika, or dried thyme if you like. Sprinkle a little crushed red pepper on your portion at the table if you are feeding spice-cautious kids.
- Vegetable mix-ins: If you are short on Brussels sprouts, you can mix in some halved baby potatoes or carrot coins. Keep the pieces similar in size so everything cooks in roughly the same window.
If the Parmesan amount feels like too much or too little, adjust next time. This is the kind of recipe that meets you where your pantry is, not the other way around.
Serving ideas from busy tables
These Brussels sprouts end up on our table in a lot of different company.
- Beside roasted chicken thighs and a bowl of brown rice.
- With salmon and lemon wedges, everything sharing the same oven.
- Added warm to a big salad of mixed greens, cherry tomatoes, and toasted nuts, almost like croutons.
- On holidays, squeezed between the stuffing and sweet potatoes on a crowded buffet, where they politely steal more than their fair share of compliments.
If you are feeding a crowd, you can easily double the recipe. Use two sheet pans so the sprouts still have space around them. If they are crowded, they steam instead of crisp. Rotate the pans halfway through roasting, top rack to bottom and front to back, so they brown more evenly.
I have even brought a pan of these to a neighborhood potluck, reheated briefly in a borrowed oven. They disappeared faster than the fancier dishes, which felt quietly satisfying.
Questions that tend to come up
You do not have to. Lining the sheet makes cleanup easier, but the sprouts actually brown a bit better directly on the metal. If you use parchment, just know they may need an extra minute or two to really crisp.
Most likely, the pan is too crowded or the oven is running a little cool. Give the sprouts more space so they are not touching, use a large pan, and make sure your oven is fully preheated. A few extra minutes in the oven can make a big difference.
You can, but they will not get quite as crisp. If you try it, thaw them first, pat them very dry, then roast at 425°F so they have a better chance of browning. I reach for fresh when I can, and save frozen for soups and sautés.
Freshly grated Parmesan melts a bit more smoothly and has fuller flavor, but I have made this many times with the pre-grated tub from the grocery store. For a Tuesday night side dish, use what you have and what fits your budget.
Yes. If you are cooking a main dish at a slightly different temperature, aim somewhere in the middle. For example, if your chicken is at 375°F, roast the sprouts on the top rack and give them a few extra minutes until they are browned to your liking.
Halving is usually enough. If you have very large sprouts, you can quarter them so they cook at the same pace as the smaller ones. The key is to expose a flat side that can sit directly on the pan and caramelize.
Passing it along
If I were scribbling this on a card for you at the end of a PTA meeting, it would be messy, with little arrows in the margins: “hotter oven than you think,” “do not worry if some leaves get really dark,” “kids may eat them straight off the pan.”
That is how this recipe has lived at our house, written and rewritten, adjusted to whatever the day brings. Some nights the cheese is measured, some nights it is a quick handful over the pan while someone asks where their backpack is.
Use it the way you need to. Roast the sprouts until they look good to you. Taste one, then decide if you want a bit more salt or a squeeze of lemon at the table. Let it be imperfect and still dinner.
And when you find the way you like them best, tuck this in your own recipe box, with your own notes in the corners. That is how good weeknight recipes grow roots.

Crispy Parmesan Roasted Brussels Sprouts
Ingredients
Brussels Sprouts
- 1 pound Brussels sprouts Trimmed and halved
Seasoning and Oil
- 2 tablespoons olive oil Use a neutral oil if preferred
- to taste salt
- to taste pepper
Cheese
- 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese Can substitute with Pecorino
Instructions
Preparation
- Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C).
- Trim and halve the Brussels sprouts.
- In a large bowl, toss the Brussels sprouts with olive oil, salt, and pepper.
- Spread them out on a baking sheet in a single layer.
- Roast for about 20-25 minutes, until they are golden brown and crispy.
- Remove from the oven and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
- Return to the oven for an additional 5 minutes, until the cheese is melted.
- Serve warm.
Notes
Hello
Welcome to Cooking Guide. I’m a home cook and former library program coordinator who collects handwritten recipes and the stories behind them, and I share dependable, comfort-filled meals from my Raleigh kitchen.
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