Whole Grilled Halloumi with Apricots

Reprinted with permission from Georgina Hayden’s Greekish: Everyday Recipes with Greek Rootsthis recipe is a delightfully sharable dish for a family-style dinner or the cocktail hour.

I’m not very on top of things like social media. I’m hopeless at jumping on bandwagons, always late to the party, trend-wise. However, one thing I did share on social media several years ago now, was my method for scoring and grilling a whole block of halloumi with apricots — it took off.

Using the Whole Halloumi Block 

I’d never seen halloumi cooked this way before, and now it’s being recreated far and wide and I do feel a bit proud. While the flavor combination is a family standard, I attribute using the whole block to my dear friend Iain, who would eat an entire block of halloumi in one sitting, because “it looked like a chicken breast.” I thought, well, why can’t it be treated like a chicken breast or any other form of protein…? Score, season and grill! Iain, this one’s for you. This recipe is also vegetarian and gluten-free, so anyone can enjoy it. Grilling can be just as fun without the meat when you use halloumi. The apricots also add an extra touch of Mediterranean flair.

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A bowl of grilled halloumi with apricots on a red background

Whole Grilled Halloumi with Apricots


  • Author: Georgina Hayden
  • Yield: Serves 2-4 1x

Description

Use a whole block of halloumi!


Ingredients

Scale

 

  • 1 × 8.8 oz piece of halloumi
  • Olive oil
  • 4 apricots
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • A few sprigs of oregano or thyme

Instructions

  1. Preheat your grill to medium-high. Carefully score the top of your halloumi in a criss-cross pattern — don’t cut too deep; you want to keep it intact. Rub the cheese with olive oil, in between the cuts, too. Halve the apricots, remove the stones, and halve again into quarters. Place the halloumi in a snug dish (ideally metal) and nestle around the apricots, drizzling them with olive oil, too.
  2. Pop under the grill, not too close, and grill for 8–10 minutes, so that the fruit starts to caramelize and the halloumi is tender and charred on top. The success of this recipe depends on having the right distance from the grill and heat, so check a few minutes into cooking and see if you need to raise the temperature or lower the grill rack. It’s quite a forgiving technique, so take your time and see what works with your grill. When the halloumi is ready, drizzle with honey and scatter over the oregano or thyme. Serve immediately.

Recipe by Georgina Hayden from Greekish: Everyday Recipes with Greek Roots (2024) / Photography by Laura Edwards

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