Roasted artichokes are the Easter centerpiece that looks like a restaurant dish and costs almost nothing. Prep is the only real work — once they're on the pan, the oven handles everything. The built-in lemon aioli makes this feel special without being precious. Put a platter in the middle of the table and let people rip leaves off with their fingers while they talk; there's no neater way to eat an artichoke, and no better way to mark peak spring.
Lemon roasted artichokes
Whole artichokes halved, lemon-rubbed, and roasted with garlic and olive oil until the leaves pull tender — an Easter-table centerpiece with a built-in dipping sauce.

- Prep
- 15 min
- Cook
- 45 min
- Total
- 1 hr
- Serves
- 4
Lemon roasted artichokes
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (12)
Lemon aioli (optional but recommended)
Lemon aioli
You'll need
- Large sheet pan
- Kitchen shears
- Sharp knife (serrated helps)
- Spoon (for choke removal)
- Aluminum foil
- Small bowl (for aioli)
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 halved artichoke with 2 tablespoons aioliWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Green Globe — the standard large round artichoke; the classic choice
- Big Heart — thornless variety; easier to trim (no snipping needed)
- Imperial Star — tender, reliable California green variety
- Violetta — smaller purple-tinged Italian variety; sweeter and more tender
- Baby artichokes — 8 to 10 in place of 4 medium; skip the choke-removal step
Ripeness
Leaves should be tight and squeak slightly when pressed (a fresh-squeaking artichoke is a good sign). The base should feel heavy. Avoid brown leaf tips that are spreading, limp leaves, or overly dried stems.
Imperfections are fine
Brown streaks on the outer leaves (called "winter kissed") are actually a sign of a sweeter artichoke — don't skip them. Minor leaf blemishes, slight discoloration, and irregular size are all fine.
Good substitutions
- Baby artichokes — 2 per person, no choke to remove, 25-minute roast
- Frozen artichoke hearts (thawed, drained) — skip the prep, roast 20 minutes
- Jarred marinated artichoke hearts — not ideal for roasting but great tossed with roasted vegetables
- Fennel bulbs, halved — same aioli, different vegetable, lovely alternative
In season
US artichoke season peaks March through June, with a smaller fall harvest in October. California grows nearly all US artichokes. Spring artichokes are sweeter and more tender than fall.
How much to buy
About 4 medium artichokes (3 lb total).
Find your artichoke grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season March – June (peak); October (secondary harvest)
- For this recipe 4 medium artichokes (about 3 lb)
- Freshness Picked within this week
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegan (without aioli) · vegetarian · gluten-free · dairy-free (without aioli)
- While you're there Fresh lemons · Good olive oil · Garlic · Fresh thyme and rosemary · Parmesan
At the market
About 4 medium artichokes (3 lb total).
Best varieties
- Green Globe the standard large round artichoke; the classic choice
- Big Heart thornless variety; easier to trim (no snipping needed)
- Imperial Star tender, reliable California green variety
Good to know
Tips
- Work fast and keep lemon water nearby. Artichokes brown in seconds after being cut.
- The stem is edible and delicious. Peel the tough outer fibers with a vegetable peeler and you'll find heart-like flesh inside.
- Eat artichokes with your fingers. Pull a leaf, scrape the tender flesh off the bottom with your teeth, discard the rest. The heart at the end is the prize.
- Save the cooking juices. The roasted lemon-garlic-olive oil on the pan is a sauce in itself — pour over the artichokes or toss with pasta.
- For a crowd, roast 6 to 8 artichokes on two sheet pans, rotating halfway through.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 3 days cooked, in an airtight container. The aioli keeps 1 week separately.
- Raw artichokes: 1 week refrigerated in a plastic bag in the crisper drawer.
- Freezer: cooked artichokes freeze okay (2 months) but lose some texture; aioli doesn't freeze.
Reheating
- Oven: 375°F (190°C) for 8 to 10 minutes, cut side up.
- Skillet: 3 to 4 minutes cut-side down in a hot pan with a drizzle of olive oil.
- Microwave: 60 seconds per half — works but misses the crisp edges.
Make ahead
- Trim artichokes up to 4 hours ahead; hold in lemon water in the fridge.
- Aioli can be made up to 1 week ahead.
- Fully roast up to 1 day ahead; reheat and serve.
Variations
- Parmesan-crusted: add 1/2 cup grated Parmesan over the artichokes in the last 10 minutes of roasting.
- Stuffed roasted artichokes: tuck 2 tablespoons of breadcrumb-Parmesan-herb mix into each half before roasting.
- Grilled artichokes: par-cook by steaming 20 minutes first, then grill cut-side down for 5 minutes per side.
- Artichoke panzanella: chop leftover roasted artichokes into a salad of stale bread, tomatoes, and olive oil.
- Balsamic-honey: drizzle with 2 tablespoons balsamic glaze and 1 tablespoon honey in the last 5 minutes.
- Romesco dip: swap the lemon aioli for romesco sauce.
- With breadcrumbs and anchovy: top with seasoned breadcrumbs and 2 minced anchovies for a punchy upgrade.
Swaps
- Vegan: skip the aioli; use vegan mayo or serve with olive oil and lemon alone.
- No mayo: whip 1/4 cup Greek yogurt with the aioli ingredients for a lighter dip.
- Herb swap: use tarragon and chives for a French accent; oregano and basil for Italian.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know when artichokes are cooked?
Do I have to eat only the leaves and heart?
What's the choke and how do I remove it?
Why do artichokes turn brown when I cut them?
Can I use baby artichokes instead?
Can I make roasted artichokes ahead?
What do I dip them in?
Are artichokes hard to prepare?
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