Mascarpone Spinach Pasta
Mascarpone Spinach Pasta - One of the easiest pasta sauces you'll ever make is just mascarpone cheese and lemon folded into spaghetti with fresh spinach.
Mascarpone Spinach Pasta
Jump to RecipeI almost wanted this Mascarpone Spinach Pasta recipe to fail. It pretty much spits in the face of years of complicated cream sauce creations.
You see, to make a proper cream sauce for pasta you have to whisk together butter and flour, forming a roux. Then you have to continue whisking in liquid until it reaches the perfect consistency and temperature. Then you have to sacrifice a small animal and pray to the pasta gods that your sauce is neither too thin nor too thick.
Or you could just stir some mascarpone cheese in with your spaghetti and eat it. Take that pasta gods!
Mascarpone Spinach Pasta
- Serves:
- Serves 2 with some leftovers
- Prep Time:
- Total Time:
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One of the easiest pasta sauces you’ll ever make is just mascarpone cheese and lemon folded into spaghetti with fresh spinach.
Ingredients
Instructions
1) Toast hazelnuts in a dry skillet over medium heat until fragrant, about 3 minutes.
2) Cook pasta in salted water until done (about 1 tablespoon kosher salt per gallon).
3) Meanwhile wash spinach well.
4) Stir together mascarpone, lemon juice, salt, and nutmeg.
5) When pasta is done, reserve about 1 1/2 cups of the pasta water.
6) Drain pasta and then add pasta back to pan. Pour over mascarpone sauce as well as about 1/2 cup of pasta water. Stir pasta over low heat.
7) Stir in spinach and continue stirring until spinach is wilted, about 2 minutes.
8) Sauce should thicken as it cooks, if it is too thick than add more pasta water by the tablespoon.
9) Serve pasta immediately garnished with toasted nuts.
Mascarpone Spinach Pasta
This Recipe is Nuts
I think one of the most important steps for this recipe is the topping for the pasta: toasted hazelnuts. It gives the pasta some great texture and complexity so leave them out at your own peril.
Toast the nuts before you even start thinking about the pasta though because the rest of the dish cooks very quickly.
Just roughly chop them and toast them in a dry skillet until they are fragrant, about 3-4 minutes.
Again, because this recipe takes no time, prep all your other ingredients as well.
That includes washing your spinach really well. I use a salad spinner to make sure mine is nice and clean. I used a full bunch of adult spinach, but you could use baby spinach if you wanted.
As far as the pasta sauce goes, it doesn’t get much easier. Just stir together the lemon juice with the mascarpone cheese, nutmeg, and a pinch of salt.
The original recipe used a Meyer lemon for this which I think would be best, but I couldn’t find one so I just used a normal lemon… still delicious.
The Pasta and Water
I would just use plain old spaghetti for this recipe. No reason to get fancy!
Cook your pasta in salted water (about 1 tablespoon kosher salt per gallon of water) until it’s al dente. Then comes the most important part of this recipe: Save some of the pasta water before you drain the pasta!
I just scoop out a few cups of the water when the pasta is almost done. You won’t need more than a cup probably but it’s easiest to just scoop out a bunch.
The pasta water is important because it’s salty and starchy so it will make your sauce really smooth and also give it some seasoning.
Then just drain your pasta and then pour it back into the same pot that you cooked it in. Then pour in your mascarpone mixture and about 1/2 cup of pasta water. Stir this all together. It might look a bit watery at first, but it’ll thicken up so don’t worry about it.
Then just pour all of your spinach into the pot. Keep the pot over low heat and the spinach will quickly wilt and fold into the pasta. The sauce will also continue to thicken as you stir it together.
After a minute or two, you’ll have a lovely pasta!
Serve this up as soon as possible garnished with a big handful of toasted hazelnuts.
Honestly, if I ate this Mascarpone Spinach Pasta without seeing it made, I would think that someone worked way harder on the sauce. It’s the perfect amount of creaminess and the lemon balances the flavors perfectly.
It’s possible that it’s cheating, but I’m not above it.
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About Macheesmo
Read MoreHello! My name is Nick Evans and I write and manage Macheesmo. I started Macheesmo 11 years ago when I was just learning my way around the kitchen. I love to cook and love everything food-related, but I have no formal training. These days I focus on fast, accessible recipes with the occasional “reach” recipe!
I’ve posted almost 2,000 recipes on Macheesmo. For each one, I do my best to give full explanations of what I did and tips on what I’d do differently next time. I’ll bring up the tricky parts and the easy parts.
I hope you can find something and cook something!
This looks so easy! Great midweek dinner! I had no idea marscapone could make a cream sauce. YUM! Have to try this soon!
Yeah, but Nick, then you have to eat green leaves for a week before you step on the scales again. (That’s a Weight Watcher speaking.)
I substituted with laughing cow cheese wedges only because I didn’t have enough mascarpone cheese but the end result was delicious. I think it lightened it up a bit! I’m a fellow weight watcher too :o)
I will definitely try this. Next time, instead of mascarpone, you can try ricotta – with the same dilution method. If you could score real ricotta (or make your own), you will have a delicious, creamy and relatively low-fat main course. If you can only find the tub stuff, it’s ok too, though the result tends to be a bit grainy. I am Pugliese by birth, and ‘pasta con la ricotta’ is a staple of our diet.
Is “adult spinach” a thing……
It’s spinach that is of legal age. :)
This sounds amazing. I’m not a huge fan of warm spinach though, so I was thinking of substituting some steamed broccoli. Do you think I should still add the hazelnuts? The mascarpone and lemon still sound perfect, but I wasn’t sure if the nuts were still in the flavor neighborhood. Thanks! :)
I think the hazelnuts would be optional if you used broccoli. It would be okay, but probably not as necessary. Good luck!
I haven’t bought marscapone so far, but now it is time. Looks fabulous. I can’t wait to try it.
I did a cream sauce without a roux once and I was surprised it worked too. The one I did was a Barefoot Contessa recipe for gorgonzola sauce that just reduced cream.
Looks like yours turned out perfectly!
I had to make a few changes because I was lacking some of the ingredients but the end product was phenomenal. I doubled it to account for 4 people. I ended up using laughing cow cheese wedges along with the marscapone and I substituted the hazelnuts with pine nuts. It was a big hit!
The recipe looks good, and I am grateful for techniques tips very very much ! the only change I’d like to make is to use mushrooms and some garlic in this recipe, instead of hazelnuts.
Would you think, dear author, it will come out well, too ?
Do I keep the rest of the ingredients as they’re ?
Thank you very much for your answer asap.
Hey Elaine, Sure… I would think you could add those without too much issue. I would keep some sort of toasted nut if you can, but if not, that’s fine too. It’s a pretty flexible pasta recipe so feel free to make it your own! Good luck.
Thanks for this recipe Nick. I found some 59 CENTS marked down cheese at the end of a Kroger Grocery Taste of Italy event. I didn’t want to make desserts, but a main meal. Your recipe was so good, it’s a shame that the cheese is rarely in stock and never, ever this price. But I’ll save the recipe and come back to your place for other gems of yours. Thanks again
Me too, except it, was 99 cents.