Golden, crispy zucchini garlic bites turn a pile of humble summer squash into a tray of snackable little rounds with a salty parmesan crust and a soft, tender center. They bake up with enough structure to pick up by hand, and the marinara on the side gives every bite that savory, pizza-parlor kind of finish. This is the sort of appetizer that disappears fast because it tastes like more effort than it takes.
The trick is getting the zucchini dry before it ever meets the cheese and breadcrumbs. Grated zucchini carries a lot of water, and if that moisture stays in the mix, the bites steam instead of browning. A quick squeeze in a clean towel, plus a light hand with the breadcrumb ratio, gives you a mixture that holds together and crisps instead of collapsing.
Below, I’ll walk through the small details that matter most, including how to keep the bites from going soggy in the oven and what to swap if you need a gluten-free version.
I was skeptical that baked zucchini bites would hold together, but these came out crisp on the outside and tender inside. Squeezing the zucchini dry made all the difference, and the parmesan-garlic coating browned beautifully in 20 minutes.
Love that crisp parmesan shell on these zucchini garlic bites? Save this one for the next time you need a fast appetizer that bakes up golden and dippable.
The Reason These Bites Stay Crispy Instead of Going Soft
Zucchini is the whole game here. It looks dry once grated, but it gives off enough water to turn a tray of bites mushy if you skip the squeeze. Salting the zucchini first helps pull moisture to the surface, and pressing it in a towel after that gives you a mixture that bakes into a real crust instead of a soft mound.
The other thing that keeps these working is the balance of binder and dry ingredients. Egg holds everything together, parmesan adds structure and salt, and breadcrumbs absorb just enough moisture to let the bites keep their shape. If the mixture still feels wet when you scoop it, add a spoonful more breadcrumbs rather than packing in more cheese, which can make the bites heavy instead of crisp.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Zucchini Garlic Bites

- Zucchini — This is the base and the moisture trap. Fresh zucchini works best here because older, oversized zucchini can be watery and seedy, which makes it harder to get a crisp finish. Grate it on the large holes, salt it, then squeeze until it feels almost fluffy and damp rather than wet.
- Parmesan cheese — Parmesan is doing more than adding flavor. It helps the bites brown and gives the exterior that salty, lacy edge. Pre-grated cheese works in a pinch, but freshly grated parmesan melts and browns better.
- Breadcrumbs — These absorb the last bit of moisture and give the bites their shape. Italian seasoned crumbs add extra herb flavor, but plain breadcrumbs work if that’s what you have; just add a little more parsley and a pinch of oregano if you want that same savory note.
- Garlic and garlic powder — The fresh garlic gives sharp, real garlic flavor, while the garlic powder rounds it out so the bites taste seasoned all the way through. Using both keeps the flavor from disappearing once the zucchini and cheese are baked.
- Egg — The egg is the binder. Without it, the mixture won’t hold together long enough to flip cleanly. Beat it first so it distributes evenly and doesn’t leave streaks of dry breadcrumbs in the bowl.
Getting the Mixture to Bake Up Golden, Not Greasy
Dry the Zucchini Until It Stops Releasing Water
After grating, toss the zucchini with a pinch of salt and let it sit for a few minutes. You’ll see moisture collect fast. Squeeze it hard in a clean kitchen towel or several layers of paper towels until a lot of that water is gone. If you skip this, the bites spread and steam on the pan instead of setting into neat, crisp rounds.
Mix Just Until the Batter Holds Together
Stir the zucchini with the egg, parmesan, breadcrumbs, garlic, parsley, garlic powder, salt, and pepper until everything looks evenly coated. Stop once the mixture can be scooped and lightly rolled. Overmixing makes the breadcrumbs turn pasty, and that can give you dense bites instead of light ones.
Bake on a Hot, Parchment-Lined Sheet
Line the baking sheet with parchment and preheat the oven fully before the bites go in. Scoop tablespoon-sized portions and roll them gently into balls so they’re compact but not packed tight. A light spray of olive oil helps the surface brown. Flip halfway through baking so both sides get that deep golden color, and pull them when the edges are crisp and the centers feel set.
Three Good Ways to Adapt These Without Losing the Crunch
Gluten-Free Version
Swap the breadcrumbs for gluten-free breadcrumbs in the same amount. If your brand is very fine and dry, start with 1/4 cup and add more only if the mixture feels loose. The goal is a mixture that scoops cleanly, not a dry paste.
Dairy-Free Version
Use a dairy-free parmesan-style alternative with a bold, salty finish. You’ll lose a little of the sharp nutty flavor that real parmesan brings, so add an extra pinch of salt and a little more garlic powder to keep the bites from tasting flat.
Air Fryer Option
Air fry at 375°F in a single layer and spray the bites lightly with oil before cooking. They brown faster in the air fryer, so start checking early. This method gives you a crisper shell, though the centers stay a little softer than the oven version.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. They’ll soften as they sit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: Freeze after baking on a sheet pan, then move to a freezer bag once solid. They freeze well, though the texture is a little less crisp after thawing.
- Reheating: Reheat on a sheet pan in a 375°F oven or in the air fryer until hot and re-crisped. The microwave will warm them, but it also makes the coating limp.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Zucchini Garlic Bites
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 400°F and line a baking sheet with parchment for easy release.
- Grate the zucchini, toss with a pinch of salt, and squeeze out all excess moisture until very dry.
- Mix the zucchini with the beaten egg, parmesan, breadcrumbs, minced garlic, parsley, garlic powder, salt, and black pepper until well combined.
- Scoop tablespoon-sized portions and roll into balls, then place them on the baking sheet with space between.
- Spray the bites lightly with olive oil spray to help them crisp.
- Bake for 15–20 minutes, flipping halfway, until golden and crispy on the outside.
- Serve immediately with warm marinara dipping sauce.