Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (2024)

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This Vegetarian Turkish Stuffed Peppers, as we say Biber Dolmasi in Turkish, is made with a rice filling and cooked in a tomato garlic sauce. They are first stove-top cooked and then oven baked. A flavor-packed family dinner for busy weeknights. They are easy to make and freezer friendly too.

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (1)

This Turkish biber dolmasi is one of our favorite foods from Turkish cuisine. Do you love stuffing vegetables? You might want to see our other Turkish foods like stuffed onions recipe, stuffed grape leaves and Turkish stuffed zucchini too!

Pepper Dolma is one of the most traditional Turkish dishes. Although we often make feta cheese stuffed peppers as an appetizer, our choice is to make these easy vegetarian stuffed peppers with rice when it comes to a comforting dinner.

Jump to:
  • Why We Love This Recipe
  • Ingredients
  • How To Make
  • Tips
  • How To Serve It
  • How to Reheat It
  • Other Stuffed Vegetables
  • More Recipes You Might Like

Why We Love This Recipe

  • It is easy to serve pepper dolma in portions.
  • This is a freezer-friendly recipe. Let them cool completely after cooked in the pot over stove-top or baked in the oven and freeze in an air tight container. Thaw and reheat with a splash of water before eating.
  • It is easy to customize. You can make this biber dolmasi recipe either vegetarian or with lean ground beef. Also, you can make the filling with brown rice, bulgur, wheat berries or buckwheat instead of rice.

Ingredients

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (2)

Peppers: We use Turkish mini green peppers called dolmalık biber, which are peppers for stuffing. They are small in size and have thin skin. They are known as the peppers to stuff in Turkey. The thinner their skin is, the better. If you can't find Turkish dolmalik pepper, you can use regular bell peppers too. If they are too large, just cut them lengthwise in half before stuffing.

Filling: It contains white rice, onion, garlic, tomato, tomato paste, parsley, lemon juice, olive oil spices like black pepper, dried mint, paprika or chili powder (or red pepper flakes) and salt. You can use whatever rice you like, but we think long-grain rice works fine.

Garnish: Although it is not necessary, Turkish stuffed peppers are traditionally topped with tomatoes or the pepper tops we cut when preparing the peppers. They act as a lid for stuffed peppers. Also, we love to add some lemon slices in the pot for garnish and richness in the final taste of the dish.

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Tomato Sauce: It is a simple sauce with olive oil, tomato paste, dried mint, garlic and water. This sauce takes these vegetarian stuffed peppers to a whole new level.

How To Make

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Preparing Peppers: Cut the tops of the peppers in the form of a lid (please see the picture above) and remove the seeds. Try not to damage the peppers (see the notes).

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (5)

Make The Filling: In a large bowl, combine all the ingredients for the rice mixture filling.

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (6)

Assemble: Stuff each pepper with 1-2 tablespoons of the filling depending on the size of the peppers. Leave a little space for rice to rise when cooked.

Place each stuffed pepper in a pot. If the pot is oven-proof, things will be easier.

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (7)

Cut the cherry tomatoes in two and place one half over the filling in the peppers. These tomatoes act like a lid for the peppers. Alternatively, you can use the tops you cut from the peppers as a lid too. Place lemon slices on the peppers.

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (8)

Make The Sauce and Cook The Peppers: Combine olive oil, tomato paste, garlic, dried mint and water in a sauce pan and bring it to a boil. Pour it in the pot.

Cook the stuffed peppers covered over medium heat for 15 minutes.

Reduce the heat and let it simmer for 15-20 minutes or until the rice is tender.

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Bake:Preheat the oven at 425F/220C. If your pot is oven-proof, place it in the oven. If not, transfer the stuffed peppers and lemon slices into a baking dish. Pour all the juicy sauce in the pot into this pan. At this step, you can add a splash of verjuice over dolmas. Bake for about 10 minutes or until they get golden brown.

Serve: You can serve these Middle Eastern vegetarian stuffed peppers with rice warm or at room temperature with some yogurt on the side.

Tips

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (10)
  • We either use cherry tomatoes to top the filling in the peppers or put the pepper tops we cut as a lid (please see it in the picture above). You can do whatever you prefer.
  • If the peppers you are using are larger than the ones we use, you can cut them lengthwise into two and then stuff them.You can see a sample in the picture below.
  • You really don’t need to top the stuffed peppers, we do it because we love how they look that way.
  • If you have leftover filling, you can cook it in another pan over low heat, let it cool and keep in the refrigerator. Reheat and serve it as a side dish on another day. Alternatively, you can stuff a few tomatoes with that remaining filling. To do this, cut the top of tomatoes, remove the seeds and stuff. Place them in the same pan.
  • If you want to make these with ground beef, add it (about 250g or ½ pound) into the filling with rice.

How To Serve It

We love to sprinkle sumac on top of the filling right before serving, but it's totally optional. We love the extra tangy flavor of this Middle Eastern spice. Also, it is almost a must to serve these with lemon and plain yogurt on the side. If we make the meatless version, we mostly serve it at room temperature and with extra olive oil.

We serve it either with a dollop of plain yogurt or Turkish cacik on the side. A fresh tomato and cucumber salad like Turkish shepherd salad goes well too if it’s summer time.

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How to Reheat It

When heating the leftover biber dolmasi, take one tablespoon of the liquid in the pan and drizzle over the filling inside the peppers so that it doesn’t get dry and heats equally. Heat covered over medium low heat on the stove. If there is no water left in the pan, add some extra water and then heat.

Other Stuffed Vegetables

  • Stuffed Dried Eggplants (Kuru Patlican Dolmasi)
  • Turkish Cabbage Rolls
  • Stuffed Artichoke Bottoms
  • Peppers Stuffed with Feta

More Recipes You Might Like

  • Stuffed Onions
  • Yaprak Sarma (Turkish Dolma)
  • Turkish Stuffed Eggplant Karniyarik
  • Kabak Dolma - Turkish Stuffed Zucchini

As always: If you make this recipe, let us know what you think by rating it and leaving a comment below. And post a pic on Instagram too—tag @give_recipe so we can see!

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Biber Dolmasi (Turkish Stuffed Peppers)

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (16)

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5 from 3 reviews

Bell peppers stuffed with rice and with or without ground beef makes the easiest weeknight dinner when prepared and frozen beforehand.

  • Author:
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 40 minutes
  • Total Time: 1 hour
  • Yield: 12
  • Category: Dinner
  • Method: Cooking
  • Cuisine: Turkish
  • Diet: Vegetarian

Ingredients

      • 12 small green peppers (or 6 large)

Filling:

      • 12 tablespoons rice (1 tablespoon for each pepper)

      • 1 large onion, chopped finely

      • 4 cloves garlic, chopped finely

      • 1 medium-sized tomato, chopped finely

      • 1 and ½ tablespoons tomato paste

      • ¼ cup parsley, chopped

      • 1 tablespoon dried mint

      • 1 teaspoon black pepper

      • ½ teaspoon paprika

      • 1 and ½ teaspoon salt

      • 1 tablespoon lemon juice

      • ¼ cup olive oil

Garnish:

      • 4-5 cherry tomatoes (to top the filling in peppers)*

      • 5-6 thin slices lemon, for garnish

Sauce:

    • 2 tablespoons olive oil

    • 2 tablespoons tomato paste

    • 2 cloves garlic, mashed

    • 2 teaspoons dried mint

    • 2 cups hot water, divided

Instructions

Preparing Peppers:

  • Cut the tops of peppers in the form of a lid (please see the picture above) and remove the seeds. Try not to damage the peppers.

Make The Filling:

  • In a large bowl, combine all the ingredients for the filling.

Assemble:

  • Stuff each pepper with 1-2 tablespoons of the filling depending on the size of the peppers. Leave a little space for rice to rise when cooked.
  • Place each stuffed pepper in a pot. If the pot is oven-proof, things will be easier.
  • Cut the cherry tomatoes in two and place one half over the filling in the peppers. These tomatoes act like a lid for the peppers. Alternatively, you can use the tops you cut from the peppers as a lid too.
  • Place lemon slices on the peppers.

Make The Sauce and Cook The Peppers:

  • Combine olive oil, tomato paste, garlic, dried mint and water in a sauce pan and bring it to a boil. Pour it in the pot with stuffed peppers.
  • Cook the stuffed peppers covered over medium heat for 15 minutes.
  • Reduce the heat and let it simmer for 15-20 minutes or until the rice is tender.

Bake:

  • Preheat the oven at 425F/220C.
  • If your pot is oven-proof, place it in the oven. If not, transfer the stuffed peppers and lemon slices into a baking pan. Pour all the juicy sauce in the pot into this pan. Bake for about 10 minutes or until they get golden brown.

Serve:

  • You can serve it warm or at room temperature with some yogurt on the side.

Notes

  1. We either use cherry tomatoes to top the filling in the peppers or put the pepper tops we cut as a lid (please see it in the picture above). You can do whatever you prefer.
  2. If the peppers you are using are larger than the ones we use, you can cut them lengthwise into two and then stuff them.
  3. You really don’t need to top the stuffed peppers, we do it because we love how they look that way.
  4. If you have leftover filling, you can cook it in another pan over low heat, let it cool and keep in the refrigerator. Reheat and serve it as a side dish on another day. Alternatively, you can stuff a few tomatoes with that remaining filling. To do this, cut the top of tomatoes, remove the seeds and stuff. Place them in the same pan.
  5. If you want to make these with ground beef, add it (about 250g or ½ pound) into the filling with rice.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 2
  • Calories: 133
  • Sugar: 3.5 g
  • Sodium: 300.3 mg
  • Fat: 7.3 g
  • Carbohydrates: 16.4 g
  • Protein: 2.1 g
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg

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Reader Interactions

Comments

    Leave a Reply

  1. Mac says

    Turned out wonderful! I did cook my rice before hand with chicken broth which was a personal preference. With the rice already cooked, I only boiled the peppers for round 15 minutes (mostly at a rolling boil to soften the peppers) before putting into the oven. Will make again!

    Reply

  2. Nienke says

    Great recipe! Enjoyed making. I was just wondering if i am supposed to pour the sauce over the peppers so they fill up or leave the pepper without sauce and only pour the sauce in the pot.
    Thank you!

    Reply

    • Zerrin & Yusuf says

      Hi Nienke,
      Thank you for this question. We pour the sauce in the pot but no problem if some of it goes into the peppers. What we aim here is to cook the stuffed peppers in the sauce. Hope this helps.

      Reply

  3. Bertha Dager says

    I'm so thankful for finding your page, this is so important to me because my husband eats all of your recipes and I didn't have enough because nobody in my husbands family could share the with me. God bless you for introduce your page on my way.
    Thank you very much.

    Reply

    • Zerrin & Yusuf says

      Hi Bertha,

      You are most welcome! Hope you have a chance to try our recipes.

      Please feel free to ask us any question you might have.

      Cheers!

      Reply

  4. cy says

    Another delicious dish! I just made it tonight. Everyone loved it, even certain picky eaters. Turkish food is easy to prepare and the results are just wonderful! Thank you for sharing your recipes with us.

    Reply

    • Zerrin & Yusuf says

      Such a lovely comment. Thank you! We are so happy to hear you all liked our biber dolma (stuffed peppers) recipe.

      Reply

  5. Helly says

    I'm a novice cook and I made it for dinner today. It came out soooo good! Thanks!

    Reply

  6. momgateway says

    Adding mint is an interesting touch to stuffed peppers...

    Reply

  7. Turkish Food Passion says

    Zerrin, now I am hungry for stuffed green peppers! This is one of my favorite recipes.

    Reply

  8. Trissa says

    I just love stuffed peppers! What sets a great stuffed pepper apart is how it is filled - your stuffing sounds heavenly! I would try it one day with meat instead of rice for a meal!

    Reply

  9. Erica says

    I love the addition of cinnamon! They look delicious!

    Reply

  10. Michelle says

    Love your blog design and the hand drawn pictures! Stunning photographs!

    Reply

  11. Gera @ SweetsFoodsBlog says

    The bell peppers look grand! Perfect timing for my dinner 🙂

    Cheers,

    Gera

    Reply

  12. Cajun Chef Ryan says

    I like how you saved the tops and put them back on the pepper like a cap or hat. Great way of presenting them also.

    Reply

  13. Sophie says

    Now, this is lovely food!!!

    MMMMMMMMMM,...I love stuffed peppers, even yellow & orange one's!

    Reply

  14. Jessie says

    I love stuffed peppers, yours looks amazingly delicious!

    Reply

  15. Diana says

    Pretty Peppers. We love stuffed peppers.

    Reply

« Older Comments

Biber Dolmasi - Turkish Stuffed Peppers - Give Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Do you need to boil peppers before stuffing? ›

Many recipes call for boiling the peppers first, but I prefer to roast them – more flavor and less cleanup! The best way is to slice the peppers in half from the stem end down through the base, remove all the seeds and membranes, and then roast the halves until they're tender-crisp.

What makes stuffed peppers bitter? ›

If your supposedly “sweet” peppers taste bitter, the most likely culprit is lack of water. Pepper plants need to be consistently moist. Drought-stressed peppers go into survival mode, hastily ripening fruits and seeds without putting much energy into flavor. The resulting peppers are thin-walled and bitter.

Why do my stuffed peppers taste bland? ›

Peppers can be quite bland on their own so seasoning the inside of the cavity with salt is very important. Be sure to taste your stuffing prior to filling the peppers and make any adjustments there as well. Marinara. We used our simple marinara sauce for this recipe.

Are you supposed to eat the pepper in stuffed peppers? ›

Cook the meat before stuffing the peppers. I also parboil my peppers so they are easier to stuff. The flavor the peppers impart to the dish is amazing. Don't forget to eat the peppers!

Are you supposed to cook the stuffing before putting it in? ›

Give stuffing a head start by heating it up before placing inside the turkey. Like the turkey, stuffing needs to reach the 165 degree mark. If the bird is done before the stuffing, remove stuffing from the cavities and continue to cook in a baking dish.

How do you keep stuffed peppers from getting soggy? ›

To prevent it from happening, you should try to avoid or reduce excess moisture – here are three of the things you can do:
  1. Pre-cook Peppers. ...
  2. Use Leftover Rice. ...
  3. Save Cheese for the Topping.

How do you make bell peppers taste better? ›

Bell peppers are naturally sweet and but can easily have a lovely savory side to them with the right seasoning (I like to use salt and thyme). Sautéing them with a little olive oil enhances their natural flavors and creates a delicious and colorful addition to a meal that requires little work!

What is the best way to Precook peppers for stuffed peppers? ›

Remove seeds and membranes; rinse. Place peppers, with tops, upright in ungreased 9x12 inch glass baking dish. Cover with plastic wrap; microwave until hot, 3 to 4 minutes--(note: do NOT cook peppers until done, you are just blanching them, 3 to 4 minutes should be plenty, depending on the size of your peppers).

How do you get the most flavor out of peppers? ›

Filleting a pepper is the best way to easily separate the seeds and pith from the flesh. Doing this allows you to get the most pepper flavor possible with the least amount of heat.

Why do my stuffed peppers fall apart? ›

The goal is to tenderize them before they're stuffed and baked, but generally the poor fellas are over-boiled, which results in their tendency to fall apart and, as noted, be flavorless. But peppers can have tons of flavor when given the right treatment. The trick is to roast them at high heat.

Why do my peppers have no flavor? ›

Temperature, watering, feeding, and, in the end, patience are the keys to growing flavorful peppers. If you lack one of these, your peppers will be less tasty than they could be. From the beginning of the season through harvest, you can grow more flavorful peppers if you give peppers what they need.

How long are stuffed peppers good for? ›

TO STORE: Refrigerate stuffed peppers in an airtight storage container for up to 4 days. TO REHEAT: Rewarm leftovers in a baking dish in the oven at 350 degrees F. TO FREEZE: Freeze peppers in an airtight freezer-safe storage container for up to 3 months. Let thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.

What do you eat stuffed peppers with? ›

Even though the stuffed peppers likely contain rice, a starch, they pair very well with mashed potatoes. I also recommend a simple salad with an acidic dressing such as balsamic vinaigrette.

Can you eat the baby pepper inside a bell pepper? ›

But the good news is that it is totally edible! The baby pepper inside varies in shape and size.

Why are my stuffed bell peppers watery? ›

First and foremost, it's essential to precook your peppers. Bell peppers contain more than 90% water, much of which is released during the cooking process. If you cook your stuffed peppers in one fell swoop, that moisture will release and end up in the final dish.

Is it better to parboil peppers for stuffed peppers? ›

ANSWER: Some recipes call for blanching the peppers to soften them slightly; others do not. Green peppers at a local store were stuffed with a raw ground meat mixture and looked as though they were not boiled or blanched. If you bake peppers this way, they will take longer to cook and will hold their shape better.

Do you have to cook peppers before canning? ›

Instructions for Canning Sweet Peppers: The skins of bell peppers or sweet peppers are more tender, so they generally do not need to be blistered and peeled (thank goodness). Simple quarter or roughly chop bell peppers and cover them with water in a pot. Boil for 3 minutes, then transfer to pint or half-pint jars.

Should you cook or raw bell peppers? ›

Eating them raw provides maximum vitamin C content, but cooking bell peppers can increase the availability of other nutrients.

How long do you boil peppers to soften them? ›

To boil bell peppers: Cook peppers, covered, in a small amount of boiling salted water for 6 to 7 minutes or until crisp-tender. To sauté bell peppers: Heat a skillet with 2 to 3 tablespoons of cooking oil over medium-high heat. Carefully add bell peppers and cook until just tender, about 10 minutes.

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