Main Dish Easy Italian

Fresh tomato pasta

A quick pasta sauce made from ripe tomatoes cooked briefly in olive oil with garlic — one of the simplest ways to make peak tomato season taste worth the wait.

A bowl of pasta coated in a light fresh tomato sauce and topped with basil and grated Parmesan.
Prep
10 min
Cook
20 min
Total
30 min
Serves
4

Fresh tomato pasta turns ripe tomatoes into a dinner that feels bigger than the ingredient list — when tomatoes are good, you do not need a heavy sauce, and a pan, a little oil, garlic, and cooked pasta are often enough to make something worth sitting down for.

Fresh tomato pasta

Serves 4

Ingredients (8)

You'll need

  • Large pot (for pasta)
  • Large skillet
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 plate (about 1.5 cups)
350 Calories
11 g Protein
56 g Carbs
9 g Fat
4 g Fiber
8 g Sugar
320 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Cherry or Sun Gold tomatoes — sweet, consistent, burst easily into a quick sauce
  • Plum / Roma — dense, less watery, gives a slightly thicker sauce
  • Heirloom slicers — complex flavor; wetter, but excellent if you want a lighter, more aromatic sauce
  • Early Girl — good acid balance and season-long availability at farm stands

Ripeness

Use tomatoes that taste good raw — fully ripe, deeply fragrant, slightly soft to the touch. This recipe does not improve under-ripe fruit.

Imperfections are fine

Overripe, cracked, or irregular tomatoes are perfect for this recipe — the skillet transforms them regardless of appearance. This is a good home for tomatoes that are past their raw-eating prime.

Good substitutions

  • Canned crushed tomatoes in winter — cook 15–20 minutes for a deeper sauce
  • Half fresh, half sun-dried tomatoes in early summer for intensity
  • Cherry tomatoes roasted on a sheet pan first for a concentrated, sweet sauce

In season

Peak July through September. This is a summer recipe built around in-season tomatoes — use canned the rest of the year.

How much to buy

About 1 1/2 to 2 lb (roughly 6–8 medium or 2 pints cherry tomatoes) serves 4.

From a grower near you

Find your tomato grower on CollectiveCrop

Fresh tomato sauce — not canned — only works when the tomato tastes like something. A shelf-life tomato cooks into thin, pale sauce even with garlic and good olive oil. A field-ripened tomato from a grower near you cooks into deeply sweet, mineral sauce in twenty minutes. CollectiveCrop is how you find the farm selling the right kind. This is the recipe tomato season is for.

  • In season July through September
  • For this recipe 1 1/2–2 lb / about 6–8 medium tomatoes
  • While you're there Fresh basil · Local garlic · Parmesan

At the market

About 1 1/2 to 2 lb (roughly 6–8 medium or 2 pints cherry tomatoes) serves 4.

Best varieties

  • Cherry or Sun Gold tomatoes sweet, consistent, burst easily into a quick sauce
  • Plum / Roma dense, less watery, gives a slightly thicker sauce
  • Heirloom slicers complex flavor; wetter, but excellent if you want a lighter, more aromatic sauce

Good to know

Tips

  • Use ripe tomatoes that taste good raw — the recipe does not hide them.
  • Do not cook the tomatoes longer than 8 minutes if you want a fresh, bright sauce; longer cooking gives a deeper red sauce.
  • A splash of pasta water ties the sauce to the pasta without making it heavy.

Storage

  • Sauce alone: refrigerate up to 4 days; keeps better than dressed pasta.
  • Dressed pasta: refrigerate up to 2 days but absorbs the sauce and dries out.
  • Store leftover sauce separately from pasta for the best texture on reheating.

Reheating

  • Skillet: reheat sauce with a splash of water over medium heat, then toss with freshly cooked pasta.
  • Microwave: covered, 90 seconds, stirring halfway through.

Make ahead

  • Make the tomato sauce up to 3 days ahead and refrigerate; cook the pasta fresh.
  • Roast and freeze a full batch of blitzed tomatoes from peak-season surplus for winter pasta sauce.

Variations

  • Cold pasta: toss hot pasta with raw diced tomatoes and olive oil — no cooking at all.
  • Blistered cherry tomato: roast cherry tomatoes at 400°F for 20 minutes before tossing with pasta.
  • Puttanesca-style: add olives, capers, and a tin of anchovies to the sauce.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make fresh tomato pasta ahead of time?

You can prep the tomatoes ahead, but the finished pasta is best shortly after cooking.

What can you serve with fresh tomato pasta?

Serve it with a green salad, bread, beans, or simple roasted vegetables.

Can you use cherry tomatoes instead of slicers?

Yes. Cherry tomatoes are sweet, consistent, and require no seeding — just halve and cook until they burst.

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