Creamy Pasta With Smoked Bacon and Peas Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Jamie Oliver

Adapted by Alex Witchel

Updated Oct. 16, 2023

Creamy Pasta With Smoked Bacon and Peas Recipe (1)

Total Time
About 15 minutes
Rating
4(3,635)
Notes
Read community notes

This elegant riff on a childhood favorite came to The Times in 2009 by way of Jamie Oliver, the British chef and cookbook author. It was featured in his cookbook “Jamie’s Food Revolution: Rediscover How to Cook Simple, Delicious, Affordable Meals," and it's a favorite of his daughters, Poppy and Daisy. It's wholesome (no powdered cheese!), and it can be ready in about 15 minutes. —Alex Witchel

Featured in: Putting America’s Diet on a Diet

Learn: How to Make Pasta

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:4 to 6 servings

  • Sea salt
  • 10slices smoked bacon or pancetta
  • 1pound dried mini-shell or other small pasta
  • 2tablespoons olive oil
  • 1tablespoon butter
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 2cups frozen peas
  • 2tablespoons crème fraîche or heavy cream
  • 2tablespoons finely chopped fresh mint leaves
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 6ounces finely grated Parmesan cheese

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

675 calories; 34 grams fat; 13 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 14 grams monounsaturated fat; 4 grams polyunsaturated fat; 66 grams carbohydrates; 11 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 28 grams protein; 749 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Creamy Pasta With Smoked Bacon and Peas Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Bring a large pot of lightly salted to a boil. Meanwhile, cut sliced bacon crosswise into thin slivers, or slice pancetta into julienne. Add pasta to boiling water and cook to taste.

  2. While pasta is cooking, place a large skillet over medium heat, and add 2 tablespoons olive oil and the butter. Add bacon or pancetta and a sprinkling of pepper, and fry until golden and crisp. Immediately add frozen peas and stir for a minute or two. Add crème fraîche or heavy cream and chopped mint.

  3. Step

    3

    Reserve 1 cup of the pasta cooking water, and drain the pasta. Add pasta to the skillet and stir. Add lemon juice, and adjust salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a simmer, then remove from heat. The mixture should be thick; if desired, a splash of the pasta water may be added to the sauce to thin it slightly. Add Parmesan and stir to mix. If desired, serve with a green salad.

Ratings

4

out of 5

3,635

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Vin

Please guys when a recipe says bacon think pork flavoring meat in any form you like. Ham bacon pancetta prosciutto hocks. Chorizo? Yes. Hot dried salami? Yes. Work it how you like it. This is fifty dishes not one. Frozen peas I dump in a strainer and drain the pasta over. You do it your way. Mint and peas love each other. Crema cream creme fraische sour cream yogurt you pick. Orecchiette or shells nice. Mezze rigatoni sure. Spaghetti? If that's what you got? Sure.

Lynn

Here's a secret(?) about peas. You don't really need to cook them. They are their most delicate and delicious when they are just heated through. I always add them to any hot dish at the very last minute and keep them on the heat only long enough to thaw them heat through. If you can get the knack of this, it will change the way you think about peas. They pop in your mouth with flavor and texture and have no hint of the pastiness that peas get when cooked too long.

Kim

Made this for dinner tonight and it was delicious! I didn't change a thing - made just as is.

*Don't fret over things like 'is the bacon thin or thick sliced'. If you do, you'll never be a great cook. An okay cook, maybe, but not a great cook. Cooking is a creative process, not a precision exercise.

Mark

Made this last night for dinner. Excellent! I used orecchiette and it held the peas and sauce in them like little cups. Didn't measure a thing, just kept it close to the recipe and tasted as I went. Some folks just need to relax about the measuring and just use their palette. Hard to learn much about cooking if one is always tied to an exact recipe. Cook. Taste. Breath. Eat pasta.

Josée

I made this tonight with diced pancetta, finely chopped leeks, fresh blanched peas. Omitted the mint, added crushed red pepper flakes and big rigatonis. With a nice green salad and a glass of white wine, this was a dinner worthy of a very good Italian restaurant. A keeper.

DK

It's bacon. It's always "to taste."

CYW

I buy bacon at the butcher and occasionally at the supermarket. It's pretty standard in size. Just use 10 slices and breathe ..... :)

MAFairbank

Simple, delicious, and, for the full effect, don't skip the mint. It adds a powerful delicacy and lifts this dish to new heights.

Curtis Jackson

It's 2016. Can't we have measurements for everything? You rightfully don't say "4 handfuls of small pasta"; you say "1 pound". So why say "10 slices of bacon" instead of e.g. "8 oz sliced bacon"? I'll wager that a thick slice of bacon weighs about 3x as much as a thin slice, so it actually does matter.

Shane Schmidt

This is a winner. I cut the pasta and bacon in half; used more cream, (slightly) less cheese, a couple tablespoons butter, 12 oz peas, lemon juice, salt, & a healthy dose of black pepper. No olive oil (no need) & no mint (forgot it, didn't miss it). It took 15 minutes. Awesome!

Tips: If you are going to try the full recipe, use a huge frying pan. Don't drain the bacon fat after frying. (I did trim a lot of bacon fat before frying). Do save some pasta water. It came in handy.

Evelyn Tan

This is Jamie Oliver’s recipe. He is a Brit. It isn’t dishes like this one but portion size, lack of exercise, junk food and processed, sugary food put together that lead to obesity.

CTH

Great, simple, delicious recipe! Try 1/4 cup of ricotta cheese (as in Marcella Hazan) instead of cream for one of my favorite comfort food recipes.

karen

I'm assuming this is a joke...

Katie

One of the many veggie and pasta dishes that my mother used to make and that I raised my kids on. Any handful of ham will also work--maybe with half a sauteed onion. I love Jamie Oliver for pointing out how quick an easy it can be to feed people if you just know a few basic things.

John94965

Add mushrooms

deven

Added half an onion, used dried mint instead of fresh, and subbed chicken sausage sliced thin! Delish and quick!

caroline

Added asparagus and more lemon juice and left out the cream. I also added a lot of peeper. It was very good!

Marlette

One of my favorite recipes for a quick dinner on nights . I’ve used Slovenian sausage, sweet Italian or country bulk sausage, and hard salami. If you use yogurt add it at the end so you don’t cook it and have it separate. Half and half and evaporated whole milk sub in for the heavy cream. If you need a little thickening, Wondra flour sprinkled into the sauce and stirred in works well or just use all purpose flour and the milk mixed before adding.

Penny Desmond

This is a lovely and very easy dish, and the best part is my twin 2yo toddlers love it! Great family dinner.

added sliced apple over farro….yummy

Used snow peas in lieu of green peas, added 1 tsp chili flakes…yummy

Alea

Delicious although I feel like i should have put in more pancetta or less pasta. I always just assume a bag of pasta is a "pound" but I really never know lol. Also my pancetta wasn't smoked sooo maybe that would have helped too.

Heather

This was a strange dish. My bacon produced about a cup of rendered fat, and I couldn’t imagine leaving it all in. The small amount of heavy cream added nothing. So the end result was bacon grease-y mouthfeel with a sharp lemon hit. I think British bacon must be much more lean than American bacon, otherwise this recipe makes no sense.

julie

I wanted to like this - it was just okay. I thought the heavy cream and mint would be a nice touch but I didn’t really like it. I think a carbonara would have been better than the heavy cream , it felt very lackluster and the mint tasted out of place. I won’t make this again.

Jude

Was a bit greasy. I would just use the pork fat and butter next time. The peas will only take a minute at most. The mint is a must; otherwise would be bland. Used lots of pepper as well. Pretty basic. Good flavor but nothing special.

maggie

for next time: more cream and salt, less parm. and maybe a coarser chop in the mint

Erin

I made this as directed (with one exception), and would probably not make it again. It tasted OK, but was not very creamy, even with adding about 1/2 to 3/4 cup cooking water. For the amount of fat and calories, I would prefer regular stovetop mac and cheese with cubes of cooked ham but that is personal preference. I did not season the pasta/bacon mixture before adding the cheese, as I knew cheese would add a ton of salt.

Ian

Delicious and easy. My one change was it needed more than 2 Tbsp of cream. Just wait until the end and add dashes until it looks like more of a sauce.

Embarrassed

Whatever you do, don't do what I did and drain off the bacon grease. You will end up with a very strange dish. The parmesan is all cobwebby, and there is no creamy sauce. It's edible, but only if you're really hungry. Not good cooking.

Karen O.

I riffed on this to match what I had on hand. For the meat I cooked matchstick slices of Canadian bacon in bacon grease I had set aside. Basil instead of mint. I used a lot more cream than called for - at least twice as much. Wonderful Sunday night supper; I treasure recipes as flexible as this one.

Emily

Followed exactly but drained the bacon fat and used mascarpone instead of creme fraiche. Perfect with a salad. Everyone had seconds including picky toddler.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Creamy Pasta With Smoked Bacon and Peas Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How to jazz up boring pasta? ›

Simply cook chopped garlic cloves in a bit of warm olive oil (not hot!), and add cooked spaghetti (reserve some of the cooking water to add later if necessary). Stir to combine and finish off with a handful of fresh chopped parsley, and grated parmesan cheese. Easy peasy and so delicious!

Does carbonara have peas? ›

There are no peas in the classic carbonara; however, when I was in a little town outside Rome I was served a carbonara with asparagus. And in my restaurants, I always put peas in my carbonara. There's just something about the sonderful taste of peas, creamed pecorino, and guanciale that is wonderful.

How do you pimp up pasta? ›

13 Ways to Make Any Jarred Pasta Sauce Better
  1. Start with the right pasta and sauce. ...
  2. Season with dried herbs. ...
  3. Or flavor with fresh herb sprigs. ...
  4. Double up on tomato goodness. ...
  5. Add more garlic and/or onions. ...
  6. Sweeten and thicken with squash purée. ...
  7. Punch things up with a pinch of chili flakes. ...
  8. Try this secret ingredient.
Dec 9, 2022

What to put on pasta instead of tomato sauce? ›

Instead of red: 20 pasta sauces that aren't marinara
  1. 1 of 20. Alfredo. Tom McCorkle for The Washington Post via Getty Images. ...
  2. 2 of 20. Amatriciana. Keith Beaty/Toronto Star via Getty Images. ...
  3. 3 of 20. Béchamel. ...
  4. 4 of 20. Black truffle. ...
  5. 5 of 20. Bolognese. ...
  6. 6 of 20. Butternut squash. ...
  7. 7 of 20. Carbonara. ...
  8. 8 of 20. Cheese sauce.
Jun 2, 2024

Which ingredient should never be used in traditional carbonara? ›

What not to put in Spaghetti Carbonara? Don't put garlic, cream, milk or butter. It is not needed. It is fine if you want to make a dish with those ingredients, but if you want to learn how to make this dish correctly, use only pecorino, eggs/egg yolks, black pepper, guanciale, and pasta water.

Do Italians eat peas in pasta? ›

It's a green machine that makes everyone want seconds! Pasta with peas is also a very traditional Italian recipe called Pasta e piselli, originating from central and southern Italy. It's not a dish you would find served in restaurants, yet every household makes it for their family with their own family recipe.

What's the difference between carbonara and Italian carbonara? ›

The Italian version doesn't use cream or ham. It is made with pancetta (pork belly meat that is salt cured, also referred to as Italian bacon), Parmigiano Reggiano or pecorino romano cheese, eggs, and black pepper—called the basics. The pork is fried in fat, usually olive oil.

How do you make boring spaghetti better? ›

14 Things You Can Add To Spaghetti Sauce
  1. Fresh Veggies Add Taste And Nutrition. ...
  2. Garlic Is A Classic Addition To Spaghetti Sauce. ...
  3. Fresh Greens Brighten Pasta Sauce. ...
  4. Adding Meat Makes Pasta Sauce Taste Homemade. ...
  5. Acid Adds Brightness To Spaghetti. ...
  6. Sugar Can Balance An Acidic Sauce.
Jun 3, 2024

How to doctor up plain pasta? ›

Depending on how bare your cupboard is, I have done a few things.
  1. Boil with a garlic clove and salt. The garlic adds a bit of flavor and then I remove it, mash it and re-add it to the pasta.
  2. Olive oil or butter and herbs. ...
  3. Butter, eggs, and cheese. ...
  4. Fried eggs and cheese. ...
  5. Tomatoes, onions, bell peppers, garlic, herbs.
Nov 4, 2018

How to make plain pasta nicer? ›

I use parsley, garlic salt, onion powder, garlic powder and a small amount of accent. Sometimes I also use celery salt. Extra-virgin olive oil and garlic, with a bit of salt, pepper and chili flakes added to store-bought spaghetti boiled to an al dente degree. (A sprinkle of chopped parsley is optional.)

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lilliana Bartoletti

Last Updated:

Views: 6457

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lilliana Bartoletti

Birthday: 1999-11-18

Address: 58866 Tricia Spurs, North Melvinberg, HI 91346-3774

Phone: +50616620367928

Job: Real-Estate Liaison

Hobby: Graffiti, Astronomy, Handball, Magic, Origami, Fashion, Foreign language learning

Introduction: My name is Lilliana Bartoletti, I am a adventurous, pleasant, shiny, beautiful, handsome, zealous, tasty person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.