This Bruschetta Dip with Whipped Ricotta is one of those recipes that looks like it took way more effort than it actually did — and that's exactly the kind of recipe I live for. You get a creamy, silky base of whipped ricotta, piled high with fresh garlicky tomato bruschetta, drizzled in balsamic glaze, and served alongside crispy golden baguette slices straight from the oven. It is, genuinely, one of the most impressive appetizers I've ever put on a table.

The whole thing comes together in about 20 minutes, and the most important rule is simple: make the bruschetta last, keep everything chilled, and don't skip the extra salt and glaze at the end. That finishing touch is what takes it from good to obsession-worthy.
I tested this a few times before landing on the exact ratio for the whipped ricotta — two cups of ricotta with two tablespoons of olive oil and one teaspoon of salt blends into something so smooth and creamy it almost tastes like it has cream added. No cream needed!
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Instructions & Video

- Step 1: Whip in the ricotta with olive oil & salt!

- Step 2: Toast the crostinis!

- Step 3: Make the fresh bruschetta mixture!

- Step 4: Serve altogether & enjoy!


Easy Bruschetta Dip with Whipped Ricotta (Best Appetizer Recipe)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Step 1 — Make the Whipped Ricotta Base: Add the ricotta, olive oil, and salt to a food processor. Blend for about 60–90 seconds until completely smooth, silky, and almost fluffy in texture. Taste and adjust salt as needed. Transfer to the fridge to chill while you prep everything else. (WATCH VIDEO BELOW)
- Step 2 — Toast the Baguette: Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Arrange baguette slices in a single layer on a baking sheet and brush each piece generously with olive oil. Bake for 10 minutes until golden and crisp. Remove from the oven and set aside — these are served warm, so time this for just before you're ready to assemble.
- Step 3 — Make the Bruschetta (Do This Last!): This step should be done right before you're ready to assemble and serve — not ahead of time. In a bowl, combine the diced tomatoes, minced garlic, fresh basil, olive oil, and salt. Toss gently to combine. Taste and adjust seasoning. (WATCH VIDEO BELOW)
- Step 4 — Assemble the Dip: Spread the cold whipped ricotta in an even, generous layer on a shallow serving plate or wide shallow bowl — you want it flat and spreadable, not piled high. Spoon the bruschetta topping over the ricotta, leaving a small border of white around the edges if you want it to look beautiful. Drizzle generously with balsamic glaze. Finish with a pinch of flaky salt and a little extra drizzle of olive oil if you like.
- Step 5 — Serve Immediately: Arrange the warm toasted baguette slices around the dip and serve right away. The contrast of warm crispy bread with the chilled ricotta and fresh tomatoes is everything.
Notes
- Make the bruschetta at the very last minute. I cannot stress this enough — the moment salt hits those tomatoes, they start releasing liquid. If you make the bruschetta too early, you'll end up with a watery, soggy topping that pools on the ricotta. Mix it right before you're ready to assemble and serve. This is the single most important tip in the whole recipe.
- Keep everything chilled except the bread. The whipped ricotta should be cold when you assemble — it holds its shape better and the temperature contrast with the warm baguette is genuinely one of the best parts of this dish. Pop it back in the fridge while you prep everything else.
- Don't skip the finishing salt. I tested this with and without the extra flaky salt at the end and the difference was significant. That final pinch of salt right before serving makes every single flavor pop — the tomatoes taste brighter, the ricotta tastes richer, and the balsamic hits differently. Just do it.
- Fridge (unassembled): Store the whipped ricotta and bruschetta topping in separate airtight containers. The ricotta keeps for up to 3 days; the bruschetta is best used within 24 hours (the garlic intensifies and the tomatoes soften over time).
- Fridge (assembled): If you have leftover assembled dip, cover and refrigerate for up to 1 day. The baguette will lose its crunch, so toast fresh bread when serving leftovers.
- Reheat: No reheating needed — this dip is served chilled or at room temperature. Let the ricotta sit out for 15–20 minutes before serving if it's been refrigerated, so it's creamy and spreadable rather than cold and firm.
- Freezer: Do not freeze — ricotta and fresh tomatoes do not freeze well.
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!
Substitutions
- Ricotta: Cream cheese (softened) works as a base — it'll be richer and denser. Whipped cottage cheese also works if you blend it very well.
- Olive oil (in ricotta): You can use a neutral oil like avocado oil, but olive oil gives much better flavor here.
- Tomatoes: Cherry tomatoes work beautifully — just halve or quarter them. Heirloom tomatoes are incredible when in season.
- Fresh basil: Flat-leaf parsley or fresh mint are the closest substitutes. Dried basil will not work — skip it entirely if you're out of fresh.
- Garlic: ½ teaspoon of garlic powder can substitute in a pinch, but fresh minced garlic is strongly preferred here.

Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can prep the components up to 24 hours in advance — but keep them separate. Store the whipped ricotta and the bruschetta topping in separate containers in the fridge, and assemble right before serving. This prevents the tomatoes from releasing liquid into the ricotta and the whole thing going watery.
Pita chips, sturdy crackers, sourdough crostini, and sliced ciabatta all work well. You need something with enough structure to hold up to the ricotta and tomatoes — thin chips or delicate crackers tend to break. Sliced cucumber or endive leaves also work if you want something lighter and lower-carb.
No — dried basil will not give you the same flavor in bruschetta. Fresh basil is essential. If you genuinely cannot find it, flat-leaf parsley is the best substitute. Dried basil is best saved for sauces and soups where it has time to rehydrate.
The tomatoes are releasing their juices — this happens when salt sits on cut tomatoes for too long. The fix is to make the bruschetta topping right before you assemble, not ahead of time. If you do make it early, drain off any accumulated liquid before spooning it over the ricotta.
You can, but fresh is so much better here — especially since the topping only takes about 5 minutes to put together. Store-bought versions tend to be over-seasoned, sometimes sweeter, and don't have that fresh garlic punch. If you're truly pressed for time, it works in a pinch, but try fresh at least once.
The dip itself (whipped ricotta + bruschetta) is naturally gluten-free. Just swap the baguette for gluten-free crostini, pita chips, or sturdy GF crackers and you're good to go.

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