Asparagus season is short enough that it should feel like an event. This recipe leans into that: one bunch, a hot oven, and a finish that makes the most of a single lemon. It's the kind of side that turns weeknight chicken or a pan of eggs into something that feels like you meant it.
Roasted asparagus with lemon
A 20-minute spring side that turns a single bunch of asparagus into something with blistered tips, bright lemon, and a Parmesan finish.

- Prep
- 5 min
- Cook
- 12 min
- Total
- 17 min
- Serves
- 4
Roasted asparagus with lemon
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 (8)
To finish
You'll need
- Sheet pan
- Microplane or fine grater
- Tongs
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 4 oz)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Green — the standard; grassy and tender, roasts evenly
- Purple — sweeter than green, turns green in the oven but keeps its mild flavor
- Jersey Knight — a common US field variety with reliably tender spears
- White — milder and nuttier; peel the lower half before roasting
Ripeness
Tips should be tight and dry — not flowered open or slimy. Snap the base of one spear: if it breaks crisply with an audible click, the bunch is fresh. A limp bend means it's been out of the ground too long.
Imperfections are fine
Uneven thickness in the bunch is fine — group spears by size on the pan so thin and thick ones finish together. A little dirt at the base rinses off. Slight curvature or a purple-tinged base doesn't affect roasting.
Good substitutions
- Green beans — same technique, 8 to 10 minutes at 425°F
- Broccolini — roast 10 minutes, same lemon-Parm finish
- Thick spring onions, halved lengthwise — 12 minutes, skip the Parm
In season
US asparagus season runs April through June — a genuinely short window, and local spears are wildly better than the year-round imports during peak.
How much to buy
About 1 lb — one standard bunch, roughly 16 to 20 medium spears.
Find your asparagus grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season April – June
- For this recipe 1 lb / 1 bunch
- Freshness Picked within 3 days
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian · gluten-free
- While you're there Fresh eggs · Spring onions · Fresh thyme or chives · Local butter
At the market
About 1 lb — one standard bunch, roughly 16 to 20 medium spears.
Best varieties
- Green the standard; grassy and tender, roasts evenly
- Purple sweeter than green, turns green in the oven but keeps its mild flavor
- Jersey Knight a common US field variety with reliably tender spears
Good to know
Tips
- Snap-test one spear from the bunch to find the natural break point, then line the rest up and cut them all to that length with a knife. It's faster than snapping 20 spears one by one.
- For thick spears (over 1/2 inch), peel the bottom 2 inches with a vegetable peeler — the outer layer stays stringy even after roasting.
- A splash of lemon juice goes under the spears before roasting; the zest goes on top after. Heat kills the zest's perfume but concentrates the juice.
Storage
- Refrigerator: leftovers keep 2 days in an airtight container, but they soften — best eaten the day of.
- Raw asparagus: stand upright in an inch of water in the fridge, covered loosely with a plastic bag, for 3 to 5 days.
- Freezer: not recommended for roasted — blanch raw spears and freeze instead.
Reheating
- Oven: 425°F (220°C) for 2 to 3 minutes to re-crisp the tips.
- Skillet: 1 minute in a dry hot pan brings back the char.
- Avoid the microwave — it turns the spears limp and watery.
Make ahead
- Trim and wash the spears up to 24 hours ahead; store upright in water in the fridge.
- The lemon can be zested into a small bowl 1 hour ahead — cover to keep the oils from drying out.
Variations
- Balsamic roasted: skip the lemon and drizzle with 1 tablespoon balsamic glaze after roasting.
- Prosciutto-wrapped: wrap each spear in a strip of prosciutto before roasting; skip the salt and Parm.
- Sesame-soy: swap olive oil for toasted sesame oil, finish with soy sauce and sesame seeds instead of lemon and Parm.
- Grilled version: same oil and salt, 3 to 4 minutes over direct heat, finish the same way.
Swaps
- Vegan: skip the Parmesan or use a tablespoon of nutritional yeast for the savory finish.
- Dairy-free: omit Parm; add 1/4 cup toasted breadcrumbs for crunch.
- No garlic: leave it out — the lemon and Parm carry the dish on their own.
Frequently Asked Questions
How thick should the asparagus be for roasting?
Do you need to peel asparagus?
Can you roast asparagus ahead of time?
What's the woody end and how do you remove it?
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