Main Dish Medium American

Stuffed bell peppers (easy version)

A flexible weeknight main that uses bell peppers as their own container — fill them with whatever cooked grain, protein, and sauce you have on hand, and bake until tender.

A baking dish of stuffed bell peppers filled with rice and topped with tomato sauce, melted cheese, and herbs.
Prep
15 min
Cook
35 min
Total
50 min
Serves
4

Easy stuffed bell peppers turns a few peppers into a full meal with a method flexible enough for real-life fridge conditions — this version is designed for weeknight usefulness, and the filling can shift between meat, beans, grains, and herbs based on what you already have cooked.

Stuffed bell peppers (easy version)

Makes 4 stuffed peppers

Serves 4

Ingredients (9)

Filling

You'll need

  • 9×9 or similar baking dish
  • Aluminum foil
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 stuffed pepper
310 Calories
14 g Protein
50 g Carbs
6 g Fat
9 g Fiber
8 g Sugar
420 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Red — sweetest, fully ripened green pepper; excellent flavor and color
  • Orange and yellow — sweet and mellow, slightly less rich than red
  • Green — less sweet, firmer wall, more affordable; works perfectly for stuffing
  • Cubanelle — thinner walls, Italian-style; milder and slightly more delicate

Ripeness

Firm walls with no soft spots. Red, orange, and yellow peppers are green peppers left to fully ripen — they are sweeter and less bitter. All colors work for this recipe.

Imperfections are fine

Slight surface wrinkling, small dents, and cosmetic blemishes do not affect eating quality. Stuffed peppers hide any visual imperfections anyway. Avoid only peppers with large soft or sunken spots.

Good substitutions

  • Poblano peppers for a more savory, mildly spicy version
  • Large tomatoes hollowed out (same filling, shorter bake time)
  • Large zucchini halved lengthwise (same filling, reduce bake time to 25 minutes)

In season

Peak July through October. Red and yellow peppers are most abundant in late summer through early fall when they have had time to ripen fully on the plant.

How much to buy

4 large bell peppers (about 1 1/2 lb) serves 4 — one pepper per person.

From a grower near you

Find your bell pepper grower on CollectiveCrop

Green bell peppers are picked unripe; red, yellow, and orange peppers are the same fruit left to ripen on the plant. Commercial producers usually pick green for shipping durability and miss the sweetness entirely. A local grower can leave peppers on the vine to color — which is when they taste like sweet ripe peppers instead of crunchy neutral ones. CollectiveCrop is how you find that grower. Stuffed peppers are the recipe that rewards the difference.

  • In season July through October (red and yellow peak: late August through September)
  • For this recipe 4 large bell peppers / about 1 1/2 lb
  • While you're there Local tomatoes · Garlic · Fresh herbs

At the market

4 large bell peppers (about 1 1/2 lb) serves 4 — one pepper per person.

Best varieties

  • Red sweetest, fully ripened green pepper; excellent flavor and color
  • Orange and yellow sweet and mellow, slightly less rich than red
  • Green less sweet, firmer wall, more affordable; works perfectly for stuffing

Good to know

Tips

  • Use pre-cooked rice, beans, or leftover grains — the filling does not cook through from raw inside a pepper.
  • Bell peppers should be tender but still hold their shape — do not overbake or they collapse.
  • Taste the filling before it goes into the peppers; once it is inside, there is no way to adjust seasoning.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: up to 4 days in an airtight container; reheat well.
  • Freezer: freeze assembled but unbaked for up to 2 months; thaw overnight in the fridge before baking.

Reheating

  • Oven: 350°F covered for 15–20 minutes, then uncover for the last 5 minutes.
  • Microwave: covered on medium power for 2–3 minutes.

Make ahead

  • Assemble up to 2 days ahead, cover, and refrigerate; add 10 minutes to the bake time.
  • Make the filling alone up to 3 days ahead and refrigerate; fill and bake when needed.

Variations

  • Mexican-style: season the filling with cumin and chili powder; top with salsa and sour cream.
  • Mediterranean: fill with orzo, feta, olives, and spinach; skip the tomato sauce.
  • Breakfast peppers: fill with scrambled egg, cheese, and cooked sausage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make stuffed bell peppers ahead of time?

Yes. You can assemble them ahead and bake later or bake them fully and reheat.

What can you serve with stuffed bell peppers?

Serve them with salad, beans, roasted vegetables, or simple yogurt sauce.

What filling works best?

Use filling ingredients that are already mostly cooked — rice, beans, cooked meat, or lentils. Raw ingredients will not cook through inside the pepper in time.

Know what's worth cooking this week

Get one recipe a week — always timed to what's actually in season near you. No filler, no fluff.

Get the dispatch