My favourite burrata recipe – Bursty Tomato Burrata Salad. Juicy roasted cherry tomatoes, creamy burrata cheese, dollops of pesto, swish of olive oil and crusty bread. Simple, luscious, rustic perfection. A gorgeous appetiser or light meal that’s not too expensive to make.
This is my favourite burrata recipe
Burrata seems to be all the rage these days, on the menu of just about every trendy restaurant. That strange looking wobbly white ball of cheese with a molten centre that oozes out when you cut into it, there is no other cheese like it. (Is there??)
The name burrata is linked to the Italian word for butter, which hints at the rich and creamy taste of burrata. With a cheese this good yet not that expensive to buy, you can make something really special with very little effort and modest cost.
For me, juicy, bursty roasted cherry tomatoes served warm with a plump burrata ball plonked on top and a side of warm bread is just about as good as food gets. It’s on the table in 15 minutes, costs around $15, and it’s always a hit. Always!
What is burrata?
Burrata is an Italian fresh cheese. It is essentially a ball of fresh mozzarella filled with cream. The outside shell is stretchy and curdy like mozzarella while the inside is soft and creamy, and oozes out when you cut into the ball. It’s rich and intensely milky in taste, yet somehow fresh and delicate at the same time. The flavour is actually pretty mild, like fresh mozzarella. It’s not salty or heavily flavoured like an aged brie or cheddar.
Originating from the Puglia region of Italy, it’s made from cow milk (sometimes buffalo milk) and is so delicate it comes in water in tubs.
Not to be confused with fresh mozzarella or bocconcini (also sold in water in tubs) which are not oozy inside.
How to eat burrata – Burrata is eaten as is ie. no cooking. To me, because of the mild flavour, burrata is more about what you serve with it rather than the cheese itself. You need to add flavour and salt, and treat burrata almost like cream that makes a sauce. You’d never just dump just cream on a pasta, right? Need to add salt and flavourings. Bacon! Chicken! Parmesan!
How it’s used in dishes – Plonked on pastas, salads and toasts, as well as served plain with just a drizzle of olive oil and grilled bread on the side. Think of it as an instant sauce!
Today’s recipe is a burrata salad – and it’s my favourite way to use burrata in a dish.
Note: Not all burrata is created equal!
Good burrata will have a creamy centre that oozes out when you cut into it and have a beautiful luscious mouthfeel. Lesser quality burrata will not ooze properly.
My go-to brand is Paesanella. It’s a local Australian brand fairly widely available these days here in Australian grocery stores and fresh produces stores. You can find even better ones at (good) Italian / cheese delis from artisan small batch producers.
Ingredients in Bursty Tomato Burrata Salad
Finishing with dollops of pesto takes this over the top. Taste wise – and also looks. Love how it turns the juices green!
But it’s still worth making even without. If basil is either extortionately expensive or a rummage in the freezer for leftover pesto is unsuccessful, I still make this though I do add something else to compensate, like dried herbs with the roasted tomatoes. I’ve popped some suggestions in the recipe card for pesto alternatives.
Burrata and (semi-optional) pesto
Burrata – See box above for information about burrata. No preparation is need to use it, just drain the liquid and use as is. However, just emphasising my recommendation to get a good one. If it doesn’t ooze, frankly, you may as well just get ricotta! My go-to brand is Paesanella which is available at some large grocery stores and fresh produce stores. Else, Italian / cheese delis.
Pesto – As noted above the photo, recommended for my favourite version of this dish but I still make it without. Use homemade pesto (freezes so great!) or a good store-bought.
Fresh basil – For sprinkling. As with with pesto comments, highly recommended but still worth making without.
The burst tomatoes and sauce
Here’s what you need for the sauce and burst tomatoes. Which, in case you hadn’t gathered yet, is just a cute name for roasted cherry tomatoes – because they go wrinkly and soft, ready to “burst” at a touch!
Cherry or grape tomatoes – 500g/1lb, about 4 cups in total, 2 standard Australian punnets. Because we are roasting them, they are delicious even when they are not in their summer prime. But imagine how good this dish is when cherry tomatoes are at their sweetest!
Eschalot (US: Shallot) – Also known as French onions and called “shallots” in the US. They are like baby onions, but with purple-skinned flesh. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots”, ie. the long green onions. More delicate and not as sharp as ordinary onions so you don’t end up with giant lumps of onion with the tomatoes. Substitute with a garlic clove, finely minced white part of green onions, or finely shaved red onion.
Sherry vinegar – A little drizzle of vinegar to cut through all the olive oil and rich cheese really lifts this dish, I find. Use any clear(ish) vinegar that’s not as sharp as plain white vinegar. eg. like white wine vinegar, red wine or apple cider vinegar.
Standard olive oil – For roasting the tomatoes. No need to use your good stuff for cooking.
GOOD extra virgin olive oil – For drizzling over the dish at the end! This is what you use your good stuff for. Better flavour, richer colour!
How to make Bursty Tomato Burrata Salad
The tomatoes only take 10 minutes in the oven to become softened and a bit wrinkly but still holding their shape. The perfect state of almost-bursting (we want most of the actual bursting to happen in our mouth!).
Bake 10 minutes – Toss the tomatoes with olive oil, salt, pepper and the eshallots (US: shallots). Spread on a tray and bake for 10 minutes at 200°C/400°F (180°C fan) until the tomatoes are softened, some are wrinkly, but they are all still holding their shape and not collapsed into mush.
Vinegar – Gently push the tomatoes to one side of the tray (so they are bunched up together) and drizzle with the vinegar.
Transfer – Then gently transfer the tomatoes to a serving plate, in a single layer.
How to handle the burrata:
Now, burrata time! Nothing needs to be done to prepare it, we use it straight out of the tub.
GENTLY drain the liquid out of the burrata tub.
GENTLY roll the burrata out of the tub into your hand.
GENTLY place the burrata on top of the tomatoes.
Dollop pesto randomly across the tomatoes – I also do some on the burrata. Why not? 🙂
Do you see a theme in the instructions here? 😂 Burratas are delicate – the mozzarella shell is thin and barely holding in that molten creamy good inside. Fairy fingers are essential here to avoid a burrata explosion in your hands. Not fun, my friends! (Says the girl who did it just 2 days ago).
Finish with a swish of olive oil and sprinkle of fresh basil laves. Then serve your colourful bright burrata salad with a side of crusty bread!
Nominate a lucky person to break into the burrata to let the molten centre come oozing out. Let that creamy centre run everywhere, mingling with the tomato juices and the pesto…you’re imagining it, right???
Here’s your masterpiece before everyone gets stuck in. A glorious plate of rustic perfection!
And here it is, 5 seconds later.
Honestly, for a burrata plate this big which would easily serve 2 if not 3 people for lunch, I’d expect to pay upwards of $30 at a trendy bistro – plus bread which they’d probably charge another $10 for.
All the ingredients here cost me around $15, bearing in mind you only use about 1/4 of a full batch of pesto (it freezes perfectly).
Colourful, bright food that’s made for sharing, perfectly imperfect delicious mess. This is 100% my kind of food! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Bursty Tomato Burrata Salad
Ingredients
- 200g/ 6 oz x 1 fresh burrata cheese (Aus: Paesanella is my go-to, Note 1)
- 1/4 cup basil pesto , preferably homemade, recommended but not essential (Note 2)
Roasted tomato:
- 500g/ 1 lb (4 cups) cherry or grape tomatoes
- 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 2 tbsp eschalot , finely chopped (US: shallot), ~1/2 small (Note 3 subs)
- 1/2 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 2 tsp sherry vinegar (or apple cider or red wine vinegar)
Serving:
- 1/2 tsp salt flakes (or half the quantity for cooking/kosher salt) (Note 4)
- 1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil , a good one is best, for finishing
- Few fresh basil leaves , for sprinkling (Note 2)
- Warmed crusty bread , for mopping
Instructions
- De-chill – Take the burrata out of the fridge and leave on the counter for 30 minutes, to take the fridge-chill out of it. Keep it in the water in the tub.
Roasted tomatoes:
- Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan).
- Roast 10 min – Toss the cherry tomatoes with the olive oil, eschalot, salt and pepper (in a bowl, or on a tray). Spread on a tray. Roast 10 minutes until softened but not collapsing.
- Vinegar – Gently push the tomatoes to one end of the tray. Drizzle over vinegar. No need to mix.
Assembling:
- Tomatoes – Carefully transfer tomatoes to a plate, spreading them out in a single layer.
- Burrata – Gently (GENTLY!!) drain the water out of the tub and roll the burrata out into your hand. Place a burrata on top of tomatoes.
- Finish – Drizzle the 1 tablespoon of good extra virgin olive oil all over the plate. Dollop pesto randomly all over. Sprinkle with salt flakes and basil.
- Serve with crusty bread on the side!
- Eating!
- Nominate a person to do the cutting honours. Break into the burrata with a serving spoon. Let the centre ooze out. Make sure you scoop up a bit of everything, pile onto bread and eat! Don't forget to mop the plate clean. The juices are the best part.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Overseeing the shooting of today’s recipe. He had useful suggestions for styling (they involved burrata and bread and his mouth).
Lynn says
Nagi, this looks incredible! I can’t wait to try it. I was wondering, though, do you think that Champagne vinegar could be substituted for the sherry vinegar? Champagne vinegar is my go to for an elegant tomato salad.
Shez says
This was spot on, but for the amount of tomatoes, you need x 2 burrata – which I had purchased luckily (one which was truffle infused…yum!).
Laura says
This is soo delicious. I made it with some homemade foccacia and served with some prosciutto and it got rave reviews!
Nat W says
Made this as the starter for Christmas day & it was an absolute winner. I served it with the Artisan bread from the book, torn into chunks. You definitely need a bread to mop up those delcious juices. Crackers wouldn’t do the same job.
Rachel says
This is delicious. I have made it three times in the last two weeks for different Christmas events, and people keep saying it was their favourite dish at the party.
Funny story: a couple of days before Christmas, I was shopping everywhere looking for burrata, and it was sold out 🙄 I met a lady who was also on the same quest- we were both trying to locate burrata, and had tried many shops. She said she had even offered $50 to someone she knew who had already bought some burrata, haha.
We both found some eventually, and I am glad to say, my bursty burrata salad was again a hit at our extended family Christmas dinner.
Thank you Nagi, once again, for a fabulous recipe. It is very quick to make, looks and tastes great, and is worth the dash all over town looking for burrata. I also made the pesto recipe (replaced pine nuts with raw cashews due to allergy), and having the freshness of the homemade pesto takes this to next level 👏
Stacey says
I made this and ate it all for myself!! It’s that good 😂 but it is best shared as an appetizer! So simple and easy to make, definitely need the bread to soak up all the juices!
Violaine Joly says
That was soooo delicious
I could have this every day.
Jenny Ly says
So simple and easy to make. Had it as a side with some pasta
Debbie says
Absolutely delicious. Don’t accidentally leave all the yummy juices in the pan. Pour it everywhere. My burrata was just on it’s sell by date and not very oozy so be careful of that too.
Rose says
Delicious and so easy! Looks great too.
Sonia Westbrook says
Absolutely loved this recipe! I did add some garlic along with the shallots since I love Garlic!
Nadia Malik says
Amazing
Lee Bini says
I’ve made this deliciousness on a plate many times and it never fails to impress, it’s our favourite weekend dinner( have a whole burrata each)
Lora Tollefson says
Delicious. I like my tomatoes a little more slumped, so left them on the grill a couple minutes longer. Put the burrata on the plate, pour the warm tomato mixture over the top, topped with pesto. Delicious. Husband couldn’t stop talking about it, said it would be perfect for company this weekend
Lora says
So I made it again for a brunch. Two plates, one with burrata and one with brie. Both were delicious, guests loved it. I think fresh ricotta would be great, too.
I used a little less sherry vinegar and topped with a little balsamic.
This would be perfect for a summer evening on the patio with a sip of wine, too.
tami valo says
hi,
I made this tonight and it was really tasty. Like another reviewer, my tomatoes needed extra time (which I didn’t give them as I was worried they would burst).. next time. How did you get your burrata to sit prettily atop the tomatoes? Mine slid off but maybe the not quite ready tomatoes were too round to support?
Amy says
You need to have enough tomatoes to cover the base of whatever dish you are using to roast them in. If they are too sparse the burrata will roll off
sander says
NAGI, this just shows the brilliance of simplicity in the kitchen. I used Japanese rice vinegar instead of Sherry vinegar and that works fine as well. Second time I made it I replaced salt flakes with Grana Padano (the really fine grainy stuff) which was a great variation.
LisaR says
This was absolutely delicious and quickly came together. We will certainly make this again.
Joyce N says
This was the BOMB! Thank you SO much for this recipe! We’ve had a bumper crop of basil this summer and this was such a great way of enjoying the pesto I made! The roasting makes the tomatoes so much sweeter and the burrata…..well…..Two of us devoured it all for dinner! Best to you and Dozer! ❤️
Susan says
My supermarket don’t have Burrata – is Mozzarella ball similar enough to substitute.
Joyce N says
Perhaps fresh mozzarella, but even that doesn’t really have the right consistency. A slightly warm goat cheese maybe? To tell you the truth, this is amazing even without the cheese. It’s that good!
Christine Gietz says
Hello Nagi and Dozer
Thank you for this recipe – it is SO easy and it was a really companionable dish to share. My toms were a little large so I halved them,, sprayed with oil, seasoned with p & s and sprinkle of thyme. I used Pukara Estate pomegranate balsamic – YUM. Pesto, balsamic, cheese, tomato and fresh bread was a combo made in heaven which is surely where your kitchen is – thank you for giving me a new go-to for entertaining others (and just my new go-to!)