Perfectly roasted green asparagus with whole garlic cloves that turn sweet and sticky in the oven. The asparagus gets tender with crispy, caramelised tips whilst the garlic mellows into something you'll want to squeeze out and spread on everything. Finished with a squeeze of fresh lemon and flaky salt. Simple and seasonal.
Prep Time 5 minutesmins
Cook Time 15 minutesmins
Total Time 20 minutesmins
Servings 4as a side dish
Ingredients
500grasparagusfresh green asparagus, medium thickness works best,
1. Prepare the asparagusPreheat your oven to 220°C (200°C fan)/425°F/Gas Mark 7. You want it properly hot.Wash the asparagus and pat dry. Hold each spear at both ends and bend gently, it'll snap naturally where the woody bit ends. Chuck the woody ends. If the asparagus is particularly thick, you can peel the bottom third with a vegetable peeler, but it's not essential.
2. Season and arrangeLay the asparagus on your baking tray in a single layer. Don't pile them up or they'll steam instead of roast.Drizzle with olive oil (or melted butter if you're feeling French about it). Season with salt and pepper. Toss with your hands to coat everything evenly.Scatter the whole garlic cloves amongst the asparagus. They'll roast alongside and become sweet and sticky.
3. RoastBake for 12-15 minutes, depending on thickness. Medium spears take about 12 minutes. Fat ones might need 15.You want tender asparagus with some caramelised bits and slight wrinkling. The tips should be starting to crisp up. If they're still bright green with no colour, give them another 2-3 minutes.
4. Finish and serveTransfer to a serving plate whilst still hot. Squeeze over fresh lemon juice. If you've got fleur de sel, scatter a pinch over the top.Squeeze the roasted garlic cloves out of their skins and eat them with the asparagus. They'll be sweet and sticky, not sharp.Serve immediately. This doesn't sit around well, it's best straight from the oven.
Notes
Pencil-thin asparagus will overcook and turn sad. Fat spears take longer but stay tender inside. Medium thickness is the sweet spot.
Don't overcrowd your baking tray. Give the asparagus space or they'll steam rather than roast. Use two trays if needed.
Butter vs olive oil. The French would use butter. Olive oil is easier and tastes brilliant. Your choice.
Add parmesan? You can, but it's not French. Grated parmesan in the last 2 minutes of roasting is lovely, but it's veering into Italian territory.
Make it fancy. Shave over some parmesan after roasting, add toasted pine nuts, or drizzle with balsamic reduction. But honestly, the simple version is usually best.