Pasta primavera is the spring meal that looks like a lot of work but takes 30 minutes — a bowl of al dente pasta studded with bright green asparagus, peas, and cherry tomatoes in just enough cream sauce to hold them together. Make it in April or May when local spring vegetables are at their peak and the cream, Parmesan, and herbs make you understand why this became a classic.
Pasta primavera
Pasta tossed with spring's best vegetables — asparagus, peas, zucchini, and cherry tomatoes — in a light Parmesan cream sauce with lemon and herbs.

- Prep
- 15 min
- Cook
- 15 min
- Total
- 30 min
- Serves
- 4
Pasta primavera
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (19)
To finish
You'll need
- Large pot (for pasta)
- Large skillet or sauté pan
- Colander
- Ice bath bowl
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 2 cups)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Asparagus: thick green spears hold shape in pasta
- Peas: fresh English peas or frozen petite peas (both excellent)
- Zucchini: standard green or yellow summer squash
- Cherry tomatoes: Sungold (intensely sweet) or grape tomatoes
- Scallions or spring onions (for allium base)
- Snap peas (halved): work in place of or alongside shelled peas
Ripeness
All vegetables should be crisp, firm, and bright. Asparagus tips tight; peas plump; zucchini firm; cherry tomatoes glossy. Peak-season quality makes this dish.
Imperfections are fine
Minor blemishes and size variation are fine; everything gets chopped. Slightly overripe cherry tomatoes actually make better sauce.
Good substitutions
- Any 4 to 5 spring vegetables totaling ~3 lbs raw weight: snap peas, spring onions, fennel, baby artichokes, fava beans, etc.
- Summer version: swap in corn, green beans, bell peppers
- Fall version: broccolini, butternut squash, kale, mushrooms
- Winter version: leeks, brussels sprouts, cauliflower, roasted squash
- Add 1 lb peeled shrimp in the last 3 minutes for seafood primavera
In season
This dish is specifically about peak spring produce (April – June). Making it with out-of-season vegetables misses the entire point — save it for when local asparagus, peas, and spring onions are available.
How much to buy
1 lb asparagus + 1 cup peas + 1 zucchini + 1 pint cherry tomatoes.
Find your spring vegetable growers on CollectiveCrop
- In season April – June
- For this recipe 1 lb asparagus + 1 cup peas + 1 zucchini + 1 pint cherry tomatoes
- Freshness Picked within 3 days
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Fresh basil, mint, parsley · Parmigiano-Reggiano · Fresh garlic · Cream and butter from a local dairy · Fresh lemons
At the market
1 lb asparagus + 1 cup peas + 1 zucchini + 1 pint cherry tomatoes.
Best varieties
- Asparagus: thick green spears hold shape in pasta
- Peas: fresh English peas or frozen petite peas (both excellent)
- Zucchini: standard green or yellow summer squash
Good to know
Tips
- Use the pasta water for sauce-building. The starch is what makes the sauce cling to every piece of pasta and vegetable.
- Add vegetables at different times based on cook time. Asparagus: blanched. Zucchini: 3 minutes sauté. Cherry tomatoes: 2 minutes. Peas: 1 minute. Respect each one's texture.
- Grate Parmesan fresh. Pre-grated cheese doesn't melt as silky.
- A spoonful of mascarpone in place of some cream makes the sauce even richer.
- Don't skip the herbs at the end — fresh basil or mint brings the dish back to spring brightness.
- For a lighter version, skip the cream entirely — use pasta water plus butter and Parmesan.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 3 days in an airtight container. Sauce tightens dramatically when cold.
- Freezer: not recommended — vegetables and cream sauce both suffer.
Reheating
- Stovetop: medium-low heat with 2 to 3 tablespoons of water, milk, or cream; stir until warmed through.
- Microwave: 90 seconds with a splash of liquid; stir halfway.
Make ahead
- Prep all vegetables (blanch asparagus, halve tomatoes, slice zucchini) up to 24 hours ahead.
- Grate the Parmesan up to 1 day ahead.
- Cook pasta and assemble everything 30 minutes before serving for best texture.
Variations
- Light primavera: skip cream entirely; use olive oil, lemon, and pasta water.
- Pesto primavera: swap cream for 1/3 cup basil or kale pesto.
- Shrimp primavera: add 1 lb peeled shrimp in the last 3 minutes of cooking.
- Chicken primavera: add 1 lb grilled sliced chicken breast with the vegetables.
- Bean primavera: add 1 can white beans (drained) with the cream for a hearty vegetarian main.
- Creamy goat cheese primavera: swap half the Parmesan for 4 oz fresh goat cheese.
- Primavera with ricotta: dollop fresh ricotta over each serving.
- Lemon-forward primavera: double the lemon zest and juice; skip cream.
- Mushroom primavera: add 8 oz sliced mushrooms (sauté first to release moisture).
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use your favorite GF pasta (chickpea or brown rice work well with creamy sauces).
- Vegan: swap butter for olive oil, cream for cashew cream or coconut cream, Parmesan for nutritional yeast (2 tbsp).
- Dairy-free: same as vegan.
- No wine: use pasta water + 1 teaspoon white wine vinegar or lemon juice.
- Lighter: use half-and-half in place of heavy cream; increase pasta water to 1/2 cup.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does "primavera" mean?
What pasta shape works best?
Can I make pasta primavera ahead?
Can I use frozen vegetables?
Is pasta primavera creamy or light?
What spring vegetables should I use?
How do I keep vegetables bright green?
Can I add protein?
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