The Instant Pot miracle: one pot spaghetti and meat sauce - 1

Whenever I have an Instant Pot win, it feels big, miraculous even.

Take this one-pot spaghetti and meat sauce. It comes from Skinny Taste’s One and Done cookbook , and, as the title suggests, it will leave you with one — one! — pan to clean.

I have made and loved Martha Stewart’s famous one-pot pasta, which is cooked stovetop, but somehow I doubted the idea would transfer to a pressure cooker: in such a short period of time, could good flavor develop?

In turns out yes. Here’s the process: Using the sauté function, cook the onion and brown the meat. Switch to manual pressure, add tomato sauce, water, and pasta. Seal and cook at high pressure for 6 minutes. Uncover to find cooked pasta and a meaty, flavorful sauce. Dinner: one and done.

You may notice I am not using spaghetti, but a short pasta, Campanelle, instead. My children have trouble with spaghetti … can’t win ’em all.

PS: Should I Buy an Instant Pot? Yes, if you like Perfectly Cooked Brown Rice and Eggs that Peel Like a Dream .

Tips: Instant Pot Spaghetti and Meat Sauce

  • It may take a bit of trial and error on your part to get the timing down. The recipe calls for 9 minutes at high pressure, and I’ve reduced it to 6 minutes with success but could even see 5 minutes being OK. Depending on the size of your Instant Pot , it may take more or less time.
  • The flavor of the final dish in part relies on the tomato sauce you use. I’ve found a local brand, It’s a Utica Thing, at my co-op, and I love it. I’ve been using their Maa-Da-Nad Marinara for this.
  • The flavor of the final dish also relies, of course, on the meat. I’ve been using grass-fed ground beef from a local farm, Sweet Tree Farm , which I find at the Honest Weight Food Co-op in Albany.
ingredients for the Instant Pot miracle: one pan spaghetti and meat sauce - 2 ingredients for the Instant Pot miracle: one pan spaghetti and meat sauce - 3

Here’s the Instant Pot one-pan pasta play-by-play: Gather your ingredients.

minced garlic and diced onions on a cutting board with a knife - 4 minced garlic and diced onions on a cutting board with a knife - 5

Finely chop an onion; mince some garlic.

browning the meat and onions in the Instant Pot - 6 browning the meat and onions in the Instant Pot - 7

Sauté the onion; brown the meat; add the garlic.

adding pasta and sauce to Instant Pot - 8 adding pasta and sauce to Instant Pot - 9

Add the pasta, water, and sauce all at once. Seal lid. Set the IP for high pressure, 6 minutes. Quick release.

Instant Pot one-pan pasta and meat sauce, done - 10 Instant Pot one-pan pasta and meat sauce, done - 11

Ta-da! One-pot pasta and meat sauce.

The Instant Pot miracle: one pot spaghetti and meat sauce - 12 The Instant Pot miracle: one pot spaghetti and meat sauce - 13 The Instant Pot miracle: one pot spaghetti and meat sauce - 14

Shave parmesan over top and serve immediately.

Description

Adapted from Skinny Taste ‘s One and Done Cookbook .

This Instant Pot one-pan pasta with meat sauce comes together very quickly. It has been a huge hit with the kids and a godsend on busy weeknights.

Notes:

  • I have the 6-qt Instant Pot IP Duo . The timing may differ for you depending on the size/model of your Instant Pot. The recipe calls for high pressure for 9 minutes. I’ve been doing 6 minutes. It may take some trial and error to get right given your model/pasta shape. The recipe calls for spaghetti, broken in half. My children have trouble with spaghetti, so I use a short pasta.

  • Marinara Sauce: I’ve been liking a local-ish brand called It’s a Utica Thing. I’ve been using their Maa-Da-Nad marinara sauce.

  • 1 pound of ground meat makes for a very meaty sauce. You can use 3/4 a pound of meat with success. Recipe calls for 93% lean ground turkey; I use 85% lean ground beef.

  • Finally, the recipe does not call for any olive oil. I prefer sautéeing the onion (in the Instant Pot) in a little bit of olive oil first, then adding the ground meat, but know that you can skip the olive oil, brown the meat first, then add the onion and garlic.

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • 1 small onion, minced to yield about 1/2 cup

  • 1 garlic clove, minced

  • 3/4 to 1 pound ground beef, see notes above

  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste

  • 1 (25.25-ounce) jar marinara sauce, see notes above

  • 8 ounces dried short pasta, such as Campanelle or rotini, see notes above

  • Freshly grated Pamigiano Reggiano, for serving

  • Freshly cracked black pepper, for serving

  1. Press the sauté button on an Instant Pot or other electric pressure cooker. Add the oil, onion and a pinch of salt. Sauté for 3 to 5 minutes or until beginning to soften. Add the garlic and cook for a minute more. Add the ground beef and salt and brown the meat, using a wooden spoon to break it into small pieces as it cooks, about 3 minutes.
  2. Add the marinara sauce, 2 cups water — I pour some of the water into the empty marinara jar and shake it to get every drop of sauce out — and the pasta to the Instant Pot. Give it a stir.
  3. Seal and cook on high pressure for 6 minutes (see notes above). Quick release, then open when the pressure subsides. Stir. Serve right away, topped with Parmesan and pepper, if desired.
  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Category: Pasta
  • Method: Instant Pot/Pressure Cookier
  • Cuisine: Italian

Description

Adapted from Skinny Taste ‘s One and Done Cookbook .

This Instant Pot one-pan pasta with meat sauce comes together very quickly. It has been a huge hit with the kids and a godsend on busy weeknights.

Notes:

  • I have the 6-qt Instant Pot IP Duo . The timing may differ for you depending on the size/model of your Instant Pot. The recipe calls for high pressure for 9 minutes. I’ve been doing 6 minutes. It may take some trial and error to get right given your model/pasta shape. The recipe calls for spaghetti, broken in half. My children have trouble with spaghetti, so I use a short pasta.

  • Marinara Sauce: I’ve been liking a local-ish brand called It’s a Utica Thing. I’ve been using their Maa-Da-Nad marinara sauce.

  • 1 pound of ground meat makes for a very meaty sauce. You can use 3/4 a pound of meat with success. Recipe calls for 93% lean ground turkey; I use 85% lean ground beef.

  • Finally, the recipe does not call for any olive oil. I prefer sautéeing the onion (in the Instant Pot) in a little bit of olive oil first, then adding the ground meat, but know that you can skip the olive oil, brown the meat first, then add the onion and garlic.

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • 1 small onion, minced to yield about 1/2 cup

  • 1 garlic clove, minced

  • 3/4 to 1 pound ground beef, see notes above

  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste

  • 1 (25.25-ounce) jar marinara sauce, see notes above

  • 8 ounces dried short pasta, such as Campanelle or rotini, see notes above

  • Freshly grated Pamigiano Reggiano, for serving

  • Freshly cracked black pepper, for serving

  1. Press the sauté button on an Instant Pot or other electric pressure cooker. Add the oil, onion and a pinch of salt. Sauté for 3 to 5 minutes or until beginning to soften. Add the garlic and cook for a minute more. Add the ground beef and salt and brown the meat, using a wooden spoon to break it into small pieces as it cooks, about 3 minutes.
  2. Add the marinara sauce, 2 cups water — I pour some of the water into the empty marinara jar and shake it to get every drop of sauce out — and the pasta to the Instant Pot. Give it a stir.
  3. Seal and cook on high pressure for 6 minutes (see notes above). Quick release, then open when the pressure subsides. Stir. Serve right away, topped with Parmesan and pepper, if desired.
  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Category: Pasta
  • Method: Instant Pot/Pressure Cookier
  • Cuisine: Italian

Find it online : https://alexandracooks.com/2019/03/01/the-instant-pot-miracle-one-pan-pasta-meat-sauce/

A bowl of Instant Pot spaghetti and meat sauce. - 15 cauliflower steaks with caper-walnut salsa on a platter - 16

In Joshua McFadden’s Six Seasons, potato chips are used as a metaphor for how a dish should taste — Joshua’s goal when creating dishes is to make them so tasty you can’t help but take one more bite. And then another.

This is how I feel about this dish, which is not a Joshua McFadden creation, but which very much reminds me of his bright, vegetable-centric style of cooking. This one comes from another whiz in that genre, Yotam Ottolenghi, and I find it irresistible: slabs of cauliflower sear stovetop before finishing in the oven while capers sizzle in a pan with olive oil, before mixing with walnuts, currants, and parsley to form a salsa. If you wish, you can stir together Greek yogurt with fresh lemon and any remaining parsley to form an herby schmear to spread across the serving dish, a bed for the burnished steaks to nestle into, a creamy base to balance the sharpness of the salsa.

I first made this recipe about this time last year, when I found myself really feeling the heaviness of winter, as the soup, stew, and braise fatigue neared its peak. It was such a welcomed change to the nightly sheet pan of roasted vegetables and whatever bubbled away in the crock stovetop. I’m finding it equally uplifting and tasty right now, as addictive as a tin of Pringles — once you pop, you can’t stop … or something like that?

PS: All the Cauliflower recipes right here: Cauliflower

ingredients for caper-walnut salsa - 17 ingredients for caper-walnut salsa - 18

Here’s the play by play: Gather your ingredients.

olive oil heating with capers in a small saucepan stovetop - 19 olive oil heating with capers in a small saucepan stovetop - 20

Heat capers in olive oil till they begin to sizzle, about 5 minutes.

stirring together the walnut-caper salsa in a small glass bowl - 21 stirring together the walnut-caper salsa in a small glass bowl - 22

Off the heat, stir in crushed red pepper flakes, toasted walnuts, parsley, vinegar, currants, and lemon zest.

walnut-caper salsa in a small glass bowl - 23 walnut-caper salsa in a small glass bowl - 24

Caper-walnut salsa! This stuff is soooo good.

cauliflower cut into steaks on a board - 25 cauliflower cut into steaks on a board - 26

Cut cauliflower into steaks — you can get about threes slabs per head (depending on the size).

Le Creuset braiser, freshly cleaned on the stovetop. - 27 frying the cauliflower steaks in a large braiser stovetop - 28 frying the cauliflower steaks in a large braiser stovetop - 29

Sear the cauliflower steaks in a little bit of oil — if the cauliflower isn’t laying flat, use two pans. (I normally do; I should have here.)

searing the cauliflower steaks - 30 searing the cauliflower steaks - 31

Flip the steaks.

searing the cauliflower steaks - 32 searing the cauliflower steaks - 33

Transfer pan to the oven — I add all the little bits of cauliflower and greens that fall off during the cutting.

yogurt and fresh lemon in a small glass bowl - 34 yogurt and fresh lemon in a small glass bowl - 35

Meanwhile, make a lemony-yogurt sauce.

adding the parsley to the yogurt sauce - 36 adding the parsley to the yogurt sauce - 37

If you don’t think you’ll use the rest of that bunch of parsley you bought for the salsa any time soon, you can chop it all up and stir it into the yogurt sauce.

lemon-yogurt-parsley sauce - 38 lemon-yogurt-parsley sauce - 39

Sauce, done.

plate smeared with lemon-yogurt-parsley sauce - 40 plate smeared with lemon-yogurt-parsley sauce - 41

Smear sauce across the plate.

plating the cauliflower steaks - 42 plating the cauliflower steaks - 43

Top with the seared cauliflower.

cauliflower steaks with caper-walnut salsa - 44 cauliflower steaks with caper-walnut salsa - 45

Spoon the caper-walnut salsa over top.

cauliflower steaks with caper-walnut salsa - 46 cauliflower steaks with caper-walnut salsa - 47

From last time… see how the steaks are more evenly brown? That’s thanks to using two pans.

Description

Adapted from this Yotam Ottolenghi recipe featured in Bon Appetit . I made a number of changes, so reference the original if you are curious.

For the salsa:

  • 1/2 cup walnuts
  • ¼ cup olive oil, plus more to taste
  • 2 tablespoons drained capers, patted dry
  • 1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, or more to taste
  • 1/3 cup coarsely chopped parsley
  • 1 tablespoon dried currants
  • 1 tablespoon vinegar, such as white balsamic, sherry or red wine, plus more to taste
  • zest of 1 lemon
  • Kosher salt to taste

For the cauliflower:

  • 1 small head of cauliflower
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons grapeseed or olive oil
  • Kosher salt

For the yogurt sauce:

  • 1 cup Greek yogurt, I like Fage 5%
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lemon, from about 1/2 a lemon
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • parsley, optional
  1. Make the salsa. Preheat oven to 350°F. Toast walnuts on a small pan or rimmed baking sheet, until golden brown, 10 to 12 minutes. Let cool, then use your hands to break the walnuts into small-ish pieces. Set aside. Increase oven temperature to 425° for roasting cauliflower.
  2. Heat oil and capers in a small saucepan over medium, swirling often, until capers burst and are golden brown and crisp, about 5 minutes. Carefully pour oil and capers into a small heatproof bowl. Add the crushed red pepper flakes and currants. Let cool. Then, stir in the walnuts (leaving as much papery skin behind), parsley, vinegar, and lemon zest; season with salt. Taste. If it tastes too sharp, add more olive oil by the tablespoon. (I almost always add 2 more tablespoons of oil.) If it needs more salt, add to taste.
  3. Make the steaks. Trim cauliflower stem on the bottom to create a flat base. When I first made this, I trimmed away the greens, but now I like to keep the outer greens attached — they taste good roasted. Remove them if you wish. Cut straight down through the center, then make another cut 1.5 inches away from the center on each side — you’ll likely get 2-3 steaks total. I used to save the cauliflower pieces that broke away for another day, and you definitely can do this, too, or you can sear and roast them right along with the steaks in the pan.
  4. Heat oil in one or two large skillets over medium-high. Add cauliflower steaks and any florets/greens that broke away, if you wish. (If the steaks don’t fit in a single layer, you should use two pans or you won’t get a nice sear.) Cook, gently lifting up cauliflower occasionally to let hot fat run underneath, until steaks are deep golden brown, about 3 to 5 minutes. Turn steaks and season with salt. Transfer skillet to oven and roast until cauliflower stems are fork-tender, 15-20 minutes.
  5. Make the yogurt sauce: Stir together the yogurt, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, and 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt. If you have leftover parsley from the bunch you purchased, and you think you might not use it anytime soon, chop it up finely and stir it in. Taste. Adjust seasoning to taste.
  6. To finish: smear the yogurt sauce over a large platter. Top with the cauliflower steaks. Spoon the caper-yogurt sauce over top. Serve immediately or at room temperature.
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Category: Dinner
  • Method: Stovetop/Oven
  • Cuisine: Vegetarian