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PASTA E PISELLI

PASTA E PISELLI

A Creamy Weeknight Pasta That Brings Spring to the Table

Long before I was introduced to Pasta e Piselli, one of my earliest food  memories began in a garden in Victoria, British Columbia. My grandfather grew peas, and at some pointCreamy green peas in a shallow bowl on a beige towel-lined surface.—early enough that everything still felt slightly magical—I was sent out to pick them.They went straight into my grandmother’s kitchen, where, in what felt like no time at all, they were transformed with the simple addition of cream.

That was it. And yet it felt like far more. Sweet peas, a little cream, and suddenly you had something comforting, immediate, and completely satisfying. This Pasta e Piselli recipe brings me right back to that moment—only now, it’s dinner.

Pasta e Piselli Is the Weeknight Dinner That Delivers

This is the kind of meal you make when you want something real but not complicated. The pasta cooks, the sauce comesPlate of tagliatelle pasta with green peas and diced ham in a creamy sauce on a white decorative plate. together in one pan, everything gets tossed, and you’re done. No juggling, no long simmer, no unnecessary steps. It’s on the table in about 30 minutes and feels like a complete meal. And using fettuccine here makes that point clear. This isn’t a side, and it’s not trying to be delicate. It’s a proper plate of pasta that holds the sauce and gives the dish some weight.

Pasta e Piselli Works Because Peas Do the Work

Spring may get everyone talking about asparagus—we’ll devote an entire post to it next week—but peas are what quietly make a dish like this work. They bring brightness without effort, sweetness without sugar, and when they meet cream, they hold their ground. That balance is what turns this into something you can rely on any night of the week.

Bag of fresh green English peas in a clear plastic bag with a yellow label (reads 'Ready to Use').Pasta e Piselli Fresh Vs Frozen at Trader Joe’s

If you’re shopping at Trader Joes, you already know the truth: peas, asparagus, leeks—they’re all there year-round. Spring doesn’t suddenly make them appear. It simply reminds you to pay attention. Fresh peas, when you find them looking their best, are a pleasure. But they’re inconsistent, and their window is shorter than most people realize. Frozen peas, on the other hand, are always there—and always reliable. Picked at their peak, naturally sweet, and ready the moment you are. In a dish like Pasta e Piselli, that consistency is what matters.

Pasta e Piselli Is Comfort Food That Knows When to Stop

There’s enough richness here to satisfy—bacon or pancetta, butter, Parmesan, a little cream—but not so much that it becomes heavy. The peas keep everything in balance, the sauce stays light, and the whole thing lands exactly where you want it: comforting, but still easy. 

 

PASTA E PISELLI

April 17, 2026
: 4
: 5 min
: 25 min
: 30 min
: Easy

Peas and Bacon, Pasta and Parmesan combined in a cream sauce for a dish as comforting as it is quick

By:

Ingredients
  • 3 cups peas, fresh or frozen
  • 2 Tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 4 slices bacon, diced or 4 oz package of Diced Pancetta
  • 1 small yellow onion, minced
  • 1 lb. pasta, such as fettuccine ( I used Fresh Pasta and cut the cooking time accordingly)
  • 1 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
  • 1/2 cup Heavy Cream
  • 1⁄4 tsp. sugar
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Directions
  • Step 1 Combine peas, butter, bacon, onion, and 3⁄4 cup water in a 12″ skillet over medium-high.
  • Step 2 Cook until water has evaporated and peas are cooked for about 15 minutes.
  • Step 3 Meanwhile, bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil
  • Step 4 Add pasta, and cook until al dente, 10 minutes.
  • Step 5 Drain, reserving 1 cup of water.
  • Step 6 Add pasta, water, parmesan, sugar, heavy cream, salt, and pepper to skillet with peas and toss to coat.
  • Step 7 Transfer to a serving platter and serve immediately. Notes: Fettuccine gives this dish substance and turns it into a true main course. The sauce should coat the pasta lightly—creamy, not heavy.

If You’re Still Hungry for Peas, we have a treasure chest of recipes for you here: https://chewingthefat.us.com/?s=PEAS


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