Skip to main content

Cheesy Baked Pasta With Cauliflower

4.5

(12)

Image may contain Food Pasta and Macaroni
Photo by Alex Lau

Chopping up the cauliflower helps it blends right into the dish, making it much harder for kids to fish out.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    6 servings

Ingredients

1 pound pasta, such as medium shell or tube pasta
1 (14-ounce) can cherry tomatoes, lightly crushed by hand
8 ounces low-moisture whole-milk mozzarella, coarsely grated
4 ounces provolone or other mildly sharp cheese (such as more of the cheddar below), coarsely grated
2 ounces sharp cheddar, coarsely grated
2 ounces Parmesan, grated
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 head of cauliflower, cut into 1/2" pieces
Room-temperature butter or nonstick cooking oil spray (for pan)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat oven to 350°F. Cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water until about halfway cooked (it needs to be very firm at this stage so that it doesn’t overcook when baked). Drain, reserving 1/2 cup pasta cooking liquid, and run under cold water to stop the cooking. Drain well.

    Step 2

    Lightly crush cherry tomatoes with your hands in a large bowl. Add mozzarella, provolone, cheddar, Parmesan, cream, and reserved ½ cup pasta cooking liquid and mix to combine. Season generously with salt and pepper. Add cauliflower and cooked pasta and toss to coat. Butter (or lightly coat) a 3-qt. or 13x9x2" baking dish with butter. Scrape in pasta mixture and spread out into an even layer. Cover dish tightly with foil and bake pasta until hot throughout and steaming when foil is lifted, 20–25 minutes.

    Step 3

    Remove foil and increase oven temperature to 425°F. Continue to bake pasta until sauce is bubbling and top is browned and crunchy in spots, 25–30 minutes. Let cool slightly before serving.

  2. Do Ahead

    Step 4

    Pasta can be assembled 2 days ahead. Cover and chill until ready to bake.

Read More
Creamy and bright with just a subtle bit of heat, this five-ingredient, make-ahead dip is ready for company—just add crudités.
Cabbage is the unsung hero of the winter kitchen—available anywhere, long-lasting in the fridge, and super-affordable. It’s also an excellent partner for pasta.
This is what I call a fridge-eater recipe. The key here is getting a nice sear on the sausage and cooking the tomato down until it coats the sausage and vegetables well.
This sauce is slightly magical. The texture cloaks pasta much like a traditional meat sauce does, and the flavors are deep and rich, but it’s actually vegan!
Spaghetti is a common variation in modern Thai cooking. It’s so easy to work with and absorbs the garlicky, spicy notes of pad kee mao well.
This marinara sauce is great tossed with any pasta for a quick and easy weeknight dinner that will leave you thinking, “Why didn’t anyone try this sooner?”
An ex-boyfriend’s mom—who emigrated from Colombia—made the best meat sauce—she would fry sofrito for the base and simply add cooked ground beef, sazón, and jarred tomato sauce. My version is a bit more bougie—it calls for caramelized tomato paste and white wine—but the result is just as good.
All the cozy vibes of the classic gooey-cheesy dish, made into a 20-minute meal.