After a winter that seemed determined to outstay its welcome, Pasta Primavera is the dish that snaps you back to life. Not gently—decisively. A bowl of pasta that looks like a farmers’ market collided with the sea, all glossed in a light, silky Parmesan sauce that somehow feels both indulgent and fresh at once.
What matters here is the method you use to make Pasta Primavera. Everything cooks together in one pan—pasta, vegetables, shrimp—until the starch from the pasta transforms hot water, butter, and cheese into something quietly luxurious. It’s the kind of trick that feels like cheating, and yet delivers every time.

And yes, there’s Parmesan with shrimp. Once upon a time, that would have raised eyebrows in certain Italian kitchens. Even Marcella Hazan –whose influence on Italian cooking in America is difficult to overstate—softened her stance over time, acknowledging that there are moments when butter and cheese can, in fact, play beautifully with seafood. This is one of them. No manifesto required.
Why This Version of Pasta Primavera Works Now
Primavera, at its best, isn’t about rigid seasonality—it’s about contrast. Sweet peas against briny shrimp. Crisp green beans beside tender pasta. Tomatoes just warm enough to release their juices but still bright. It’s Spring as an idea, even if the weather hasn’t quite signed off yet. This version leans into that spirit while keeping things ruthlessly efficient. One pot. Twenty-two minutes. Dinner that looks like you tried much harder than you did.

A Note on the Shrimp
Use the best shrimp you can find. Wild-caught tends to have a cleaner, sweeter flavor and a firmer texture that holds up in a dish like this. Argentine pink shrimp are a particularly good choice—rich, almost lobster-like, and widely available frozen at a reasonable price. If they need cleaning, do it while the pasta cooks. You’ll feel very efficient, which is half the pleasure of this recipe.
The Method That Changes Everything
Instead of boiling pasta in a separate pot and building a sauce on the side, everything happens together. The pasta cooks in a shallow bath of seasoned water, releasing starch as it goes. That starch becomes the backbone of the sauce, binding butter and Parmesan into something cohesive and glossy—no cream required.
Vegetables go in stages so they stay vibrant, not weary. Shrimp at the very end, just long enough to turn tender and opaque. It’s choreography, but forgiving choreography.
Pasta Primavera with shrimp in a silky Parmesan sauce—ready in 22 minutes. A bright, one-pot spring pasta with peas, greens, and cherry tomatoes.PASTA PRIMAVERA WITH SHRIMP

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