Summer zucchini season is absolutely my favorite time to get creative in the kitchen, and this Zucchini Pasta has become one of my most-reached-for weeknight dinners. The sauce is silky, the whole thing comes together faster than you'd expect, and it tastes like something you'd order at a little Italian spot you stumbled onto by accident. If you're already obsessed with using zucchini every which way (same), you're going to want to check out my Zucchini Noodles with Roasted Tomatoes and my Top 10 Zucchini Recipes for even more inspo. And if you want another creamy, veggie-forward pasta to keep in your rotation, my Creamy Butternut Squash Pasta is seriously next-level.

Zucchini Pasta at a Glance
- 🕒 Total Time: 30 minutes
- 👪 Servings: 6 people
- 🍝 Cuisine Type: Italian
- 🧂 Flavor Profile: Creamy and bright with caramelized zucchini, tangy lemon, and savory parmesan and ricotta blended into a silky, veggie-packed sauce.
- 📖 Dietary Info: Vegetarian, contains dairy and gluten (gluten-free pasta can be substituted).
- 📦 Storage Notes: Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days, adding a splash of water when reheating to loosen the sauce.
- ⭐ Why You'll Love It: This is the pasta I make on repeat every single summer when zucchini is coming at me from every direction. You blend the whole thing into the creamiest, most gorgeous green sauce and it comes together in just 30 minutes. My kids devour it without even realizing they are basically eating a bowl of vegetables, which is a total win. It is cozy, fresh, and honestly feels a little fancy without any of the fuss.
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Why I Love This Recipe
Last year we had a tomato sauce summer, and this year we are going to have a zucchini sauce summer. This Zucchini Pasta is easy, fresh, and packed with veggies. It’s inspired by all the summer zucchini I can’t stop buying at the farmers market - what human needs to buy 10 zucchini every Sunday? Not me... but somehow I cannot stop.. You saute it until golden and caramelized, blend it into a silky sauce with ricotta, parmesan, and a splash of lemon, then toss it with your favorite pasta. This creamy Zucchini Pasta is bright, cozy, and feels like a little hug in a bowl. Bonus: my kids love some homemade chicken nuggets, but they also devour this without realizing it was mostly vegetables.
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Ingredients

Substitutions & Swaps
🥒 Zucchini
- Yellow summer squash - Nearly identical water content and texture to zucchini, blends into the same silky sauce with a slightly sweeter, more buttery finish.
- Chayote squash - Mild and starchy, it caramelizes beautifully in the skillet and blends smooth without adding any competing flavor.
- English cucumber (peeled) - Works in a pinch for a raw blend rather than a sauteed sauce. Skip the caramelization step and blend directly for a cold pasta application.
- Patty pan squash - Same family as zucchini, holds up well to high-heat sauteing and develops great color before blending into the sauce.
🧀 Ricotta
- Full-fat cottage cheese - Blend it smooth before adding to the blender and it mimics ricotta almost exactly. Higher protein and slightly tangier, which brightens the sauce.
- Mascarpone - Richer and creamier than ricotta with a higher fat content, it makes the sauce noticeably more luxurious and coats the pasta beautifully.
- Cream cheese - Cut it into cubes so it blends evenly. Adds a denser, tangier creaminess and holds the sauce together well when tossed with hot pasta.
- Labneh - Strained yogurt cheese with a subtle tang that adds a Mediterranean note perfectly in line with the Tuscan seasoning in this dish.
🌿 Spinach
- Baby kale - Slightly more robust than spinach but wilts just as quickly in the skillet. Adds a deeper, earthier green flavor that stands up well to the lemon.
- Swiss chard (stems removed) - The leaves wilt fast and blend smoothly. The mild bitterness balances the richness of the ricotta and parmesan in the sauce.
- Arugula - Adds a peppery bite to the sauce that plays well against the lemon juice. Add it off the heat so it just wilts rather than fully cooking down.
- Frozen spinach (thawed and squeezed dry) - Works perfectly in the blended sauce since texture does not matter once it hits the blender. Squeeze out all excess water first or the sauce will be watery.
🍝 Pasta Shape
- Rigatoni - The ridges and hollow tubes trap the creamy zucchini sauce inside each piece, making every bite as saucy as possible.
- Casarecce - The twisted, scroll-like shape is designed to grip thick, blended sauces. It holds onto this zucchini sauce better than most other short pasta shapes.
- Pappardelle - The wide, flat ribbons give the sauce a lot of surface area to cling to and make for a more rustic, hearty presentation.
- Orecchiette - The cup shape acts like a little bowl for the sauce, so you get a pocket of creamy zucchini goodness in every single bite.
- Bucatini - The hollow center pulls in the sauce as you eat, and the thick strands hold up to the weight of a blended vegetable sauce without going limp.
🍋 Lemon
- White wine vinegar - Start with half the amount called for since it is sharper than lemon juice. Adds the same bright acidity to cut through the richness of the ricotta without the citrus flavor.
- Champagne vinegar - The most delicate of the wine vinegars, it adds clean acidity without overpowering the zucchini. A great swap when you want brightness without citrus.
- Lime juice - Swaps in 1 to 1 for lemon juice and adds a slightly more tropical, floral acidity that works surprisingly well with the parmesan and spinach.
- Preserved lemon (rind only, rinsed and minced) - Use a small amount blended directly into the sauce for a more complex, fermented citrus flavor that deepens the overall dish considerably.
How to Make Zucchini Pasta

Step 1: Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the zucchini, Tuscan seasoning and a pinch of salt. Cook for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the zucchini is golden and caramelized. Add the spinach and let wilt.

Step 2: Stir in the garlic and cook for 30 seconds more. Remove from heat.

Step 3: Transfer the zucchini mixture to a blender. Add the parmesan, ricotta, remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil, and a squeeze of lemon. Blend until smooth. Taste and season with more salt if needed. Set aside.

Step 4: Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the pasta until al dente, reserving ½ cup of the pasta water. Drain and return the pasta to the pot.

Step 5: Toss the pasta with the zucchini sauce, adding pasta water as needed until the sauce is creamy and coats the noodles evenly.

Step 6: Serve the Zucchini Pasta immediately, topped with fresh basil, shaved parmesan, lemon zest, red pepper flakes, and a drizzle of olive oil.
🥒🍋🍝 Tips & Tricks for the Best Zucchini Pasta
The creamiest, dreamiest summer pasta that's basically sneaky vegetables in the best possible way.
- Salt the zucchini before you cook it. Tossing the cubed zucchini with kosher salt and letting it sit for 10 minutes draws out excess moisture. Less water in the pan means faster caramelization and deeper flavor instead of steaming.
- Do not rush the caramelization step. Those golden, slightly browned edges on the zucchini are where the flavor lives. The Maillard reaction concentrates the natural sugars in zucchini, giving the finished sauce a nutty, sweet depth that raw or barely cooked zucchini simply cannot deliver.
- Add the garlic last in the saute, not first. Garlic burns fast, especially at medium-high heat. Stirring it in for just 30 seconds at the end of the zucchini cook keeps it fragrant and mellow rather than bitter and acrid.
- Let the zucchini mixture cool for 2 minutes before blending. Hot liquids in a blender create steam pressure that can blow the lid off and burn you. A short rest before blending is a simple safety step that also prevents the ricotta from breaking under too much heat.
- Blend the sauce longer than you think you need to. Zucchini has a fibrous cell structure that needs extra blending time to fully break down into a silky, smooth consistency. Stop too early and you get a chunky, uneven sauce instead of that lush, restaurant-quality texture.
- Reserve your pasta water before you drain. Pasta water is loaded with dissolved starch from the cooking process, which acts as an emulsifier when added to the sauce. It helps the zucchini sauce cling to every noodle and creates a creamier, more cohesive final dish.
- Cook your pasta to al dente, not fully soft. The pasta finishes cooking when you toss it with the warm sauce and hot pasta water in the pot. If it is already fully cooked when you drain it, the final toss will push it past the point of ideal texture into mushy territory.
- Warm your sauce in the pasta pot before tossing. Cold or room-temperature sauce added to hot pasta drops the temperature of the whole dish instantly. Pouring the blended zucchini sauce back into the warm pasta pot for 30 seconds before tossing keeps everything at the right serving temperature.
- Use pasta shapes with ridges or curves for this sauce. Rigatoni and casarecce have grooves and hollow interiors that trap creamy sauces. Smooth pasta like linguine lets this thick, blended sauce slide right off instead of coating every bite the way it should.
- Add the lemon juice at the end of blending, not the beginning. Heat and prolonged blending can dull the brightness of fresh lemon juice. Squeezing it in right before you finish blending preserves the sharp, citrusy top note that keeps this sauce from tasting flat or heavy.
- Finish each bowl with lemon zest, not just lemon juice. Lemon zest contains the essential oils from the peel, which deliver a more aromatic, floral citrus hit than juice alone. The combination of both juice in the sauce and zest on top creates a layered brightness throughout the whole dish.
- Add the ricotta to the blender at room temperature. Cold ricotta does not blend as smoothly and can leave tiny white lumps in the sauce. Pulling it out of the fridge 15 minutes before you start cooking ensures it incorporates evenly into the blended zucchini mixture.
FAQ's
Can I make this ahead?
Yes! You can make the sauce up to 3 days in advance and keep it in the fridge. Just reheat gently before tossing with pasta.
Can I freeze Zucchini Pasta?
The sauce - yes! It freezes beautifully! Just freeze in 1-2 cup portions so you can easily thaw enough for a dinner.
Is Zucchini Pasta good cold?
It’s actually delicious as a cold pasta salad too. Add some arugula and it’s a dream.
What else can I use the zucchini sauce on?
It's insane over pasta, chicken, salmon, steak, rice, you name it! Basically it's good on EVERYTHING. I even eat it straight out of the blender with a spoon.
What’s the best pasta shape for zucchini pasta?
Short pasta shapes like rigatoni, casarecce, or penne work best because they hold the creamy zucchini sauce well. Long pasta like spaghetti also works but may not coat as evenly.

Zucchini Pasta
Ingredients
For the Zucchini Sauce
- 4 zucchini cut into medium cubes (roughly 2 lbs)
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste
- 4 tablespoon olive oil divided
- 2 teaspoon Tuscan seasoning
- 2 cloves garlic
- 2 cups fresh spinach
- ¼ cup grated parmesan cheese
- ½ cup ricotta
- juice of 1 lemon plus more to taste
For the Pasta
- 1 pound pasta
- Kosher salt
- ½ cup pasta water
To Serve
- Basil
- Parmesan Cheese
- Lemon Zest
- Red Pepper Flakes
- Olive Oil
Instructions
- Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the zucchini and a pinch of salt and tuscan seasoning. Cook for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the zucchini is golden and caramelized. Add the spinach and let it wilt.
- Stir in the garlic and cook for 30 seconds more. Remove from heat.
- Transfer the zucchini mixture to a blender. Add the parmesan, ricotta, remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil, and a squeeze of lemon. Blend until smooth. Taste and season with more salt if needed. Set aside.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the pasta until al dente, reserving ½ cup of the pasta water. Drain and return the pasta to the pot.
- Toss the pasta with the zucchini sauce, adding pasta water as needed until the sauce is creamy and coats the noodles evenly.
- Serve immediately, topped with fresh basil, shaved parmesan, lemon zest, red pepper flakes, and a drizzle of olive oil.
Notes
- Salt the zucchini before you cook it. Tossing the cubed zucchini with kosher salt and letting it sit for 10 minutes draws out excess moisture. Less water in the pan means faster caramelization and deeper flavor instead of steaming.
- Do not rush the caramelization step. Those golden, slightly browned edges on the zucchini are where the flavor lives. The Maillard reaction concentrates the natural sugars in zucchini, giving the finished sauce a nutty, sweet depth that raw or barely cooked zucchini simply cannot deliver.
- Add the garlic last in the saute, not first. Garlic burns fast, especially at medium-high heat. Stirring it in for just 30 seconds at the end of the zucchini cook keeps it fragrant and mellow rather than bitter and acrid.
- Let the zucchini mixture cool for 2 minutes before blending. Hot liquids in a blender create steam pressure that can blow the lid off and burn you. A short rest before blending is a simple safety step that also prevents the ricotta from breaking under too much heat.
- Blend the sauce longer than you think you need to. Zucchini has a fibrous cell structure that needs extra blending time to fully break down into a silky, smooth consistency. Stop too early and you get a chunky, uneven sauce instead of that lush, restaurant-quality texture.
- Reserve your pasta water before you drain. Pasta water is loaded with dissolved starch from the cooking process, which acts as an emulsifier when added to the sauce. It helps the zucchini sauce cling to every noodle and creates a creamier, more cohesive final dish.
- Cook your pasta to al dente, not fully soft. The pasta finishes cooking when you toss it with the warm sauce and hot pasta water in the pot. If it is already fully cooked when you drain it, the final toss will push it past the point of ideal texture into mushy territory.
- Warm your sauce in the pasta pot before tossing. Cold or room-temperature sauce added to hot pasta drops the temperature of the whole dish instantly. Pouring the blended zucchini sauce back into the warm pasta pot for 30 seconds before tossing keeps everything at the right serving temperature.
- Use pasta shapes with ridges or curves for this sauce. Rigatoni and casarecce have grooves and hollow interiors that trap creamy sauces. Smooth pasta like linguine lets this thick, blended sauce slide right off instead of coating every bite the way it should.
- Add the lemon juice at the end of blending, not the beginning. Heat and prolonged blending can dull the brightness of fresh lemon juice. Squeezing it in right before you finish blending preserves the sharp, citrusy top note that keeps this sauce from tasting flat or heavy.
- Finish each bowl with lemon zest, not just lemon juice. Lemon zest contains the essential oils from the peel, which deliver a more aromatic, floral citrus hit than juice alone. The combination of both juice in the sauce and zest on top creates a layered brightness throughout the whole dish.
- Add the ricotta to the blender at room temperature. Cold ricotta does not blend as smoothly and can leave tiny white lumps in the sauce. Pulling it out of the fridge 15 minutes before you start cooking ensures it incorporates evenly into the blended zucchini mixture.




So rich and refreshing at the same time! I feel like its missing "something". Maybe ricotta isn't tangy enough, someone mentioned cottage cheese which might work well next time (strained). I'll also add the chili flakes with the garlic. Thank you for an amazing foodie adventure!
I almost can’t believe how good this pasta is. Deeply caramelizing the zucchini is key. I made the sauce with cottage cheese because that’s what I had- absolutely phenomenal. The recipe makes a lot of sauce so you may not need all of it. The extra would be delicious on anything- and even as a dip with some chips! Will definitely make this again… and again.
I absolutely love this pasta sauce. The flavor is so bright and the texture is very creamy. I have never has anything this easy to make and so delicious. I was lead to your website because Becky of Acre Homestead used this recipe and posted the link. Now I'm going to look at more of your recipes. I like your style of using fresh ingredients. THANKS IN ADVANCE !!
I’m here via Becky too!
Soooooo good. Wow! This is my new favorite zuchinni recipe. Highly recommend!