Vodka Pasta – RecipeTin Eats


This Vodka Pasta, or Penne alla Vodka, tastes like it came straight from a cosy Italian trattoria. The secret lies in the tomato-cream Vodka Sauce. It’s rich, silky, and just a little bit fancy thanks to a splash of vodka, yet dead easy. I’m completely besotted!

Late to the Vodka Pasta party!

I feel like this wastheviral pasta about 5 years ago. I vaguely remember lots of cool young people and rad chefs making it.

Naturally, I missed the trend because I’m just not hip enough to keep up! 😅 So I only made it for the first time a few weekends ago and understood the hype. The sauce is rich and velvety, and tastes far more luxurious than the short ingredients list would suggest. And I imagine the use of vodka gives it extra street-cred with the younger generation.

Meanwhile, this un-hip dork is more chuffed over the convenience of using a whole packet of pasta and an entire tub of tomato paste – quite handy!

All jokes aside though, vodka is the magic. Like wine in cooking, it adds depth and complexity that takes a simple cream and tomato sauce into wow territory. But, it doesn’t taste alcoholic at all! (Unless you want it to – just keep pouring).

What goes in vodka pasta

You’ll see versions around that use both canned tomato or passata and tomato paste, and the ratios of vodka, parmesan and cream are all over the place. But there’s general consensus on the ingredients that go in, so I don’t use any groundbreaking. Though in shocking news, I strayed from my usual trusted sources (NYT Cooking, Ina Garten, Lidia Bastianich and America’s Test Kitchen) by only using tomato paste because I prefer the flavour, with the bonus that it shaves 15 minutes off the cook time. See FAQ below for more dorky development chatter!

Ingredients in Vodka Pasta

Ironically, even though vodka is in the name, this is still absolutely worth making without vodka. 🙂 Though I’d substitute with either a slosh of wine or chicken stock, else the sauce is a little too one dimensional.

If you’re cooking for kids, add the vodka earlier so you can thoroughly cook out all the alcohol. For grown ups, it’s nice to add it in towards the end (don’t worry, won’t taste boozy, but you get more of the floraly notes).

  • Vodka – Use whatever you’ve got! And now you all know what my go-to is. 🙂 Avoid flavoured vodkas – not sure now is the time to use that Apple Vodka you were mad for last summer!

    Substitute with gin (not one too herbaceous though), white wine or for non alcoholic, use chicken stock/broth instead.

  • Pasta – Penne is classic, ziti is basically the same (it’s penne, but with ridges), rigatoni is also very popular. Though really, you can make this with any shape pasta – long or short – and it’s going to be fab. Oh wait – I’d avoid tiny pasta though, like risoni/orzo, ditalini, dinosaur pasta. I think there’s too much sauce.

  • Tomato paste – I love that this recipe uses a whole standard tub of tomato paste! I use regular though “double concentrate” is fine too. Use the same amount as I find the flavour is not any stronger though it does have richer tomato flavour. However, we cook off the tomato paste in this recipe which improves the flavour so the quality difference doesn’t come into play here.

    Note: US standard tubes are 133g (4.5oz), Aussie ones are 140g. That 7g difference won’t ruin your dinner, promise! 🙂

  • Garlic and onion – Essential aromatics for the sauce.

  • Cream – Use thickened cream (US: heavy cream, UK: whipping cream) as it is a little thicker than regular pouring cream. Though actually, any pourable cream should work fine in this recipe as it uses so much tomato paste which does much of the heavy lifting to thicken the sauce.

  • Red pepper flakes (chilli flakes) – Optional extra, I use 1/2 teaspoon which gives this a lovely background hum of warmth which I really like in this creamy sauce. Also feels a little grown up for a grown-up sauce. 🙂

  • Parmesan – Adds salt into the sauce that’s more interesting than just using salt. Plus, extra for garnish!

  • Pinch of parsley for sprinkle, if you’re feeling fancy.

How to make Vodka Pasta

The timing of this recipe works well so the sauce is ready once the pasta is cooked. It’s a great no stress recipe!

  1. Boil the pasta in a large pot of salted water for the time per the packet directions until it’s al dente (just cooked, not soft and mushy).

  2. Save pasta water – Just before draining, give the pasta a big stir to agitate the starch (ie make the watery murky) then scoop out 1 cup of the water. We’re going to use this when tossing the pasta in the sauce.

    💡This is a key step for making pasta dishes to make the sauce cling to the pasta (and therefore ending up in your mouth!) instead of pooling in the base of your bowl. The starch in pasta water emulsifies with the sauce’s fat, naturally thickening it and making it stick to the pasta. Cooking science at work!

  1. Sauté the onion and garlic on medium high until translucent, about 1 1/2 minutes. Then cook off the tomato paste. This isn’t a standard step in all vodka sauces but I think it really makes a difference – it takes off the sour edge and deepens the flavour. It also levels the playing field whether using a good Italian brand (like Mutti double concentrated tomato paste) or generic brands.

  2. Simmer – Add the cream, mix to dissolve the tomato paste in, then add the vodka, chilli flakes, salt and pepper. Lower the heat to medium so it’s simmering gently and cook for 3 minutes, stirring regularly so the base doesn’t catch – important, because this cream sauce is thicker than usual because of the amount of tomato paste in it. Then stir the parmesan in until melted (literally takes seconds).

    TIPS: If your pasta isn’t ready yet, turn off the stove at this point. Cooking for kids? Add the vodka before the tomato paste and cook until mostly evaporated to cook out the alcohol.

  1. Toss toss toss! Add the pasta and 1/2 cup of the reserved pasta cooking water (see step 2 for what this does). Toss on medium heat for 1 to 1 1/2 minutes or until the pasta is coated in the pasta sauce.

  2. Serve immediately with a shower of extra parmesan and a pinch of parsley!

I warm the pasta bowls

I know this is a random place to talk rant about this, but I like to warm pasta bowls for creamy pastas – have I mentioned this before?? Creamy sauces thicken fast and a warm bowl helps keep them silky for longer, and by the time you’re halfway through (especially if you spent the first few minutes attacking garlic bread), it’s gone from silky to……. well, less so.

So I warm bowls in the microwave while the sauce is simmering – 30 seconds for one, 1 minute for four, then leave them in there until I’m ready to serve. A small thing that makes a big difference!

Anyway, enough about warm bowls 😅 Hope you give this one a go – classic Italian trattoria food, made easily at home! – Nagi x

PS A side of Garlic Bread, Mega Italian Salad and Tiramisu will really make you feel like you’re at a rustic Italian restaurant!

Vodka Pasta FAQ


Watch how to make it

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Penne alla Vodka

Servings4 – 5 people

Tap or hover to scale

Recipe video above. I think this was THE viral pasta about 5 years ago – but I totally missed the trend (not cool enough 😅). While the young probably love that it’s got vodka in it, I love it because you get to use a whole packet of pastaanda whole tub of tomato paste – no measuring, no waste!Jokes aside, vodka adds depth and almost floral-like notes into the sauce without tasting boozy, and though not a standard step, cooking off the paste really lifts the flavour and cuts the sourness. Makes regular taste just as good as the pricier double-concentrate paste!

Ingredients

  • 500g / 1 lb penne or ziti (rigatoni is also a fave, else any other pasta)
  • 2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt , for pasta cooking water
  • 1 1/2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1/2 small onion , finely diced (smaller dice than usual is better)
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 1 1/4 cups heavy / thickened cream (UK, use whipping cream – Note 2)
  • 1/3 cup vodka , or chicken stock/broth for alcohol free (Note 3)
  • 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (chilli flakes), 100% optional
  • 3/4 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt (halve for table salt)
  • Pinch black pepper
  • 50g / 1 loosely packed cup freshly grated parmesan , plus more for serving (Note 4)
  • 1/2 cup+ pasta cooking water (Note 5)
  • 2 tsp parsley , finely chopped, for serving (optional)

Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED:

  • Sauté garlic and onion, cook off tomato paste, simmer with cream, vodka, chilli flakes, S&P 3 min, stir in parmesan at end. Toss with pasta and 1/2 cup pasta water, eat!

FULL RECIPE:

  • Cook pasta – Bring a large pot of water to the boil with the pasta salt. Cook pasta per the packet directions until al dente. (Meanwhile cook the sauce)

  • ⭐️ Reserve pasta water – Just before draining, give the pasta a big stir to agitate the starch then scoop out a cup of the water. Then drain the pasta.

Vodka sauce:

  • Sauté – Heat the oil in a large pot or non-stick pan over medium high heat. Cook the onion and garlic for 1 1/2 minutes until translucent. Add the tomato paste and cook, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes until it darkens in colour (lower heat if catching on base).

  • Make sauce – Add the cream, stir well to dissolve the tomato paste. Then add the chilli flakes, salt, pepper and vodka. Simmer on low for 3 minutes, stirring regularly. Stir in the parmesan until melted, then turn off the heat until the pasta is ready.

  • Toss! Add the pasta and 1/2 cup of the pasta cooking water. Over medium heat on the stove, stir for 1 – 1 1/2 minutes until all the pasta is nicely coated with the rust coloured sauce, using extra pasta cooking water to loosen if needed.

  • Serve immediately in warmed pasta bowls* with a dusting of extra parmesan and pinch of parsley. Add a side of garlic bread and big Italian Salad, then finish with Tiramisu for a classic trattoria meal at home!

Recipe Notes:

1. Tomato paste – I use regular, “double concentrate” is fine too, but use the same amount (flavour not any stronger to me though does have richer tomato flavour). Note: US tubes are 133g (4.5oz), Aussie ones are 140g. That 7g difference won’t ruin your dinner, promise! 🙂
2. Cream –I rarely say this, but low fat cream will work quite well here I think, the tomato paste thickens the sauce.
UK – Your whipping cream (unwhipped!) is like our thickened cream in Australia. Single cream works too – the parmesan and pasta water will thicken it.
3. Vodka – Like wine in cooking, vodka adds depth and complexity without leaving an alcoholic taste. You can swap it with a neutral gin or deglaze the pan with 1/2 cup dry white wine after the tomato paste. For alcohol-free, use chicken stock – it won’t give the same flavour but adds depth. Without, the sauce would be flat.
Cooking for kids? Add the vodka before the tomato paste and simmer to reduce by half to cook out the alcohol more thoroughly.
4. Freshly grated parmesan – Use a fine grater like a microplane and avoid pre-grated, which doesn’t melt smoothly and can make sauces grainy. 1 cup of parmesan may sound like alot but it’s not, it’s only a small 50g/1.75oz piece ((~4cm/1.6″ cube) which increases massively in volume when finely shredded.
5. Pasta cooking water – key for pasta cooking! It increases the sauce volume so it’s not overly rich, and helps it cling to the pasta instead of pooling. The starch in pasta water emulsifies with the sauce’s fat, naturally thickening it. Cooking science at work!
* I like to use warmed pasta bowls as it prolongs the life of creamy pastas (30 seconds on high in the microwave for 1 bowl, 1 minute for 4 bowls).
Leftovers – Keeps 3 to 4 days in the fridge, actually keeps better than most creamy pastas because the sauce is thicker. Microwave reheating is best, give it a good stir and splash of water if needed to loosen.
Nutritionper serving assuming 5 servings, reduce by 95 cal per serving if you use low fat cream instead (see Note 2).

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 693cal (35%)Carbohydrates: 78g (26%)Protein: 19g (38%)Fat: 30g (46%)Saturated Fat: 16g (100%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 9gCholesterol: 74mg (25%)Sodium: 1465mg (64%)Potassium: 314mg (9%)Fiber: 3g (13%)Sugar: 5g (6%)Vitamin A: 1016IU (20%)Vitamin C: 2mg (2%)Calcium: 185mg (19%)Iron: 2mg (11%)

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Dozer spends a lot of time sleeping under the table – so I spend a lot of time under there too. 🙂



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