Fresh Zucchini and Tomato Linguine {30-Minute Meal}
This garden fresh zucchini tomato linguine is bursting with flavor…AND it will only take 30-minutes or less to get it on the table. Fast, fresh, delicious! My kind of meal.
I haven’t always been the biggest fan of vegetable gardening over the years.
I love reaping the benefits of fresh produce, but the actual gardening part stresses me out.

I’m not good at it (see evidence on this old post).
I kill things (yes, even zucchini). Little seedlings refuse to grow in my presence.
Bugs abound and weeds threaten to destroy every piece of my happiness.
Last year, when Brian and I embarked on our first ever square foot gardening experience (vs planting out back in our acres of pasture), I finally caught a glimpse of gardening joy.
Small scale gardening has become my jam.
I like it. It seems to like me (so far).
And even better, on year two, there are still no weeds in sight AND I’m having bumper crops of the three things I look forward to most in a garden: fresh basil, cherry tomatoes, zucchini.
{Sidenote: Thankfully after thinking my beloved zucchini plants had been lost to a weed whip/lawn mowing incident, as noted in last week’s newsletter, I’m happy to report that one blessed plant was salvaged. Phew.}
I don’t know that I’d go so far as to say I love gardening (a tiger can’t quite change her stripes that much so soon), but I’m not saying bad words about it this year.
I can, however, declare unabashed, longterm love for this pasta.
So delicious and so simple, this fresh zucchini tomato linguine is definitely one of those dishes that is so much more than a total sum of its parts.
Making great use of my three favorite garden bounties, this zucchini tomato linguine comes together so quickly (especially if you start the homemade, fresh sauce while the pasta cooks).
It is the sunny, fresh taste of summer all twisted up in a big bowl of pasta.
The pop of fresh basil and salty punch of Parmesan cheese take the simple simmered sauce and noodles to crazy delicious heights.
This lightly dressed pasta dish is one of my main (and favorite) go-tos for summer nights when dinner needs to be fast, light, and yummy.
Now Tell Me: how goes your vegetable garden this year?
One Year Ago: 20-Minute Tomato Pesto Pasta
Two Years Ago: Glazed Orange Zucchini Bread
Three Years Ago: Good Morning Power Muffins {Full of Whole Grains and Superfoods!}
Four Years Ago: Salted Peanut Butter Cup Chocolate Chip Cookies
Five Years Ago: Brownie Batter Dip
Fresh Zucchini and Tomato Linguine {20-Minute Meal}
Ingredients
- 12 ounces (340 g) linguine
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- ½ cup finely diced shallot or onion
- 2 cloves garlic, finely minced or pressed through a garlic press
- Pinch of red pepper flakes, optional
- 4 cups (about 510 g) diced zucchini
- 2 cups (about 340 to 397 g) cherry tomatoes, halved
- 1 cup chicken or vegetable broth
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 1 cup chopped fresh basil
- ½ to 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Instructions
- Bring a pot of lightly salted water to a boil and cook the linguine until al dente, according to package directions. Drain and either rinse quickly in cool water (pasta purists look aside) or toss with a drizzle of olive oil to prevent sticking.
- WHILE THE PASTA COOKS (to maximize time), heat the oil in a nonstick 12-inch skillet over medium heat. Add the onion, garlic and red pepper flakes, if using, and cook, stirring often, until the onion turns translucent, 3-4 minutes.
- Add the zucchini, tomatoes, broth and a pinch of salt and pepper. Bring the mixture to a simmer, and cook until the zucchini and tomatoes soften, 5-10 minutes (or longer, if desired); the mixture will thicken a bit as the liquid evaporates and it cooks down. Stir every once in a while to prevent sticking and moderate heat, if needed. Season to taste with additional salt and pepper, if needed!
- Toss the drained pasta with the zucchini/tomato mixture. Add the basil and Parmesan cheese and toss again. Serve immediately.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe
This dish is scrumptious!!
I did use yellow squash instead of zucchini because that’s what my garden is producing right now and the cherry tomatoes were garden fresh too.
My pasta was linguine because that’s what was in the pantry and there really isn’t much difference anyhow.
If you have lemon pepper, use it, or better yet, a little fresh lemon zest on the finished dish is absolutely blissful.
Thanks for a great recipe!
I love zucchini and linguine, so this recipe is the bomb…I love your recipes, I try to cook different things instead of always the same old thing and yours is at the top of my list, especially for zucchini, since I have an over abundant supply from my garden I needed different ways to fix it, this and your cheesy Tex-mex, recipe, will be used a great deal during our summer months… Thank you for adding to my recipes for something different to enjoy at mealtime and to share with others… Awesome, that’s you..
Thanks again, Holy
Thanks, Holly!
So yummy! I didn’t have basil so I used Italian seasoning like another commenter suggested. 10/10 will make again! Family approved, even picky eaters enjoyed!
What is the Nutritional Information for this recipe.
I haven’t calculated it yet, but I’ll be updating it with nutrition facts soon.
Easy and delicious!!!
Do you think this will freeze well?
I actually don’t think it will – I haven’t tried it, but the fresh ingredients and pasta may not be best for freezing.
I made this recipe as per instructions. I found it to be so fresh and delicious tasting! I will definitely be making it again and want to thank you for sharing.
Thanks, Cynthia!
You guys! I was looking through Mel’s recipes looking for something to use my zucchini in and I came across this recipe. But, I also needed to use some rice that was cooked in the fridge from my earlier in the week stir fry dinner. So instead of pasta, I added the cooked rice after the sauce was finished cooking. It was delicious!! Try it the next time you have my same predicament or if you are looking for a new rice dish. We loved it! (I also subbed left out the parmesan and basil because we didn’t have them and just added italian seasoning. We sprinkled a bit of a cheddar cheese inside of our individual servings because we are crazy like that.) I dare you to try it for a super quick and delicious meal. Thanks Mel for the great sauce. (slurp)
haha I meant cooked rice that was IN the fridge
I just tried this pasta and it tastes amazing!!! Thank you.
I love this pasta so much! I was looking for a way to get rid of my grape tomatoes from my CSA share since I don’t like raw tomatoes. I was planning to give them away, but decided to try this recipe since I had some zucchini too. I also added some fresh corn, which is AMAZING in this – you should try it 🙂 I ended up making this 4 weeks in a row, and I was actually disappointed when they stopped sending the tomatoes in the CSA box. Thank you for this quick, easy, delicious recipe. ps. I follow about 50 food blogs, and yours is my favorite, and it’s my gold standard if I am looking for a specific recipe.
I made this tonight and turned it into a skillet meal by adding a pound of browned ground pork with the noodles. DELICIOUS! I love the light taste. I think it would be good with some cooked chicken too. So glad to use some of the millions of cherry tomatoes.
I understand this racy-race (TM, Me, 2017) calls for “fresh” zucchini, but suppos’n’ mine is starting to look a little…um…less-than-fresh… Like, I think it may be fermenting inside a five gallon bucket full of excess zucchini that I can neither stomach nor find a home for in my zucchini-infested-neighborhood… Do you think it would still work ok? I think all of us would appreciate it if you posted a few recipes that called for borderline inedible zucchini, since those seem to be more in abundance than the fresh alternative. Especially for any of us who planted more than 1 zucchini plant this year (I planted 48).
Also, side note, but be careful with small-scale gardening. MANY reports indicate that small-scale gardening dramatically increases one’s carbon footprint and also encourages seed manufacturers to develop GMOs and other modified food products whose long-term effects are unknown, but very likely to cause cancer and dementia. If you insist on small-scale gardening just to satisfy some self-imposed craving to master mother-nature (judgment free zone here, sista’), you should infuse the soil with aloe based essential oils to help offset the environmental damage you are doing with your micro-garden.
I never comment here Mel, but yours is one of the only good blogs I read where ALL of the recipes turn out and taste delicious! My kids all time fave is the chipotle chicken skewers This pasta was so yummy! I let the sauce cook down like the recipe says and it was perfect!
Thanks, Christine! Totally made my day. 🙂
You’ve done it again Mel! I LOVE this recipe soooo much! I’m always looking for ways to cook zucchini and this was a home run for sure. It has parmesan and basil what’s not to love! I made it twice this week (wince). I did tell my kids don’t worry I’m all out of zucchini for now so it will be a while before it makes another appearance. The kids only complained because I made them eat each bite of zucchini, but really everyone loved this meal. Me personally I could eat it without the noodles just with the veggies. Such great flavor. Thank you thank you for doing the hard work for all of us so that we get to bring these yummy dinners to our tables! 🙂
We have such similar food tastes, Nicole! 🙂 Miss you!
I am trying to use my tomatoes and zucchini more this summer. I have been saute ing zucchini with thinly sliced onion and salt and pepper in avocado oil. YUM. This fresh zucchini and cherry tomato dish was reallygreat. I did half for just my hubby and I. I wish I wouldn’t have halved the liquid though. The flavor was great even though it was rather dry. Thanks Mel.
Thanks for the review, LeAnne!
Hi Mel…just a quick question on the full cup of chopped basil. Seems like a lot of basil. Is that right? Do you chop it to the point of a fine chop or just tear?
Yeah, it’s definitely a lot of basil mostly because I love that flavor, but you could cut down the amount. I just tear it into pieces (sometimes julienne it with a knife – I have a tutorial here) and loosely fill a measuring cup (I don’t pack it in).
Oh wow, loved this one! So fast and so good. I noticed my sauce cooked down pretty fast but I had it at a pretty good rolling simmer (is that thing?). Loved the flavor.
I made this tonight, because I have tomatoes and zucchini fresh for my garden. All I had were two tomatoes so I chopped up a red bell pepper and added it. It was a light and delicious meal with sourdough bread and kefir smoothie. I didn’t have any fresh basil so I just stirred in some pesto and parmesan cheese. I’m loving all the good zucchini recipes because I have a plentiful amount this summer! But, I have even more yellow squash than I know what to do with so I guess I’ll just have to make some of these skillet recipes and use squash instead of zucchini
After seeing this recipe in my inbox yesterday, I immediately ran outside, picked the required ingredients from my husband’s garden, and made the pasta for lunch. I followed the instructions exactly, including weighing the ingredients when you provided measurements in ounces. Unfortunately, the sauce was super runny. I think 1 cup of chicken broth is too much. After making your recipes for several years with great results, I can’t complain about one miss. Thank-you for sharing your recipes, they are part of my daily life.
Sorry you didn’t love this one, Laura – the sauce will definitely be less runny the longer it simmers (it kind of reduces to a yummy, flavorful concoction). 🙂
I am thinking of making this for a family reunion. Would it be ok served cold?
I haven’t tried it that way, but I think it sounds delicious – kind of a pasta salad vibe.
Happy to see this! Our veggie garden is alive and well. Tomatoes, butternut squash, cucumbers.
The native vegetable season in New England has been running a bit late this year due to a particularly cool spring and a rainy summer, but this might be the first thing I’ll make when tomatoes have ripened–which should be any moment now! I hope!
We gave up our 4’x4′ raised garden beds several years ago, when the woodland trees started shading them too much and cutting their productivity, and switched to some EarthBoxes on our deck. We’d been delighted with those, and the tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and squash those had produced, plus had used a terra cotta strawberry jar for a compact supply of kitchen herbs. Just 2 tomato plants in one EarthBox had produced a stunning 168 regular tomatoes (Early Girl & Better Boy) that first year, so the next year we’d added a box with a Beefsteak and an heirloom variety tomato plant too. I can highly recommend the EarthBox systems as being an excellent small-space option for a sunny patio, deck, or likely spot in one’s yard. The complete growing kit (regular or organic) comes with everything necessary to assure growing success, has a soil cover to keep excess rain out while also preventing weeds and soil evaporation draining the self-watering tank prematurely. After setting up the box and planting according to the instructions, it only requires topping up the water tank for the rest of the season, and making sure climbing plants get supported by their trellises. Having had home grown vegetables since childhood, I’d had been rather skeptical about how good vegetables grown in a box on wheels would be, but have been quite impressed with the results. (One caveat: my sister used one to grow tomatoes in FL and had some problems due to the intense heat there, and tomatoes tending to remain green unless the temperature drops below 86-degrees often enough for them to turn red.)
This year, however, we’ll be buying native produce from one of the many small farms in town, instead, because we’ve had entirely too many bears paying us visits the past couple of years to make the effort worthwhile.
Thanks for the insight into those boxes, Katwyn!
Wow, thank you Katwyn! I looked up the Earthboxes and what a great thing and not spendy either.
I live on wooded acreage in Northwest Montana. I keep saying I’m going to do some container gardening. This might be just the ticket for me.
But, I, also buy from local farms and farmer’s market and feel so fortunate to have several markets supplied by a number of organic farms. I bought a partial CSA share and “my farmer” is a 30-something couple with 3 young boys farming 2 acres and supplying 100+ CSA shares , plus farmer’s market, PLUS a local grocery! The 2 acres supports the family of 5 plus 2 full time and 3 part time people. Additionally, I am thrilled that they grow a huge variety of heirloom produce.
Back to this recipe – I pick up my CSA share on Thursday so made this recipe with fresh tomatoes, zucchini, onions … subbed CSA parsley for the basil and homemade broth. Yum, Yum, Yum!!
I had a feeling you might make this one, Liz! Love your changes!
Small-scale gardening is where it’s at. Though truth be told, I daydream of the day when I have space for more than my 5-gallon buckets that I currently call my garden. My cherry tomatoes are just starting to ripen, my onions have been awesome, and it’s time to plant some more spinach for fall harvesting. My basil has been a total dud this summer though, and I can’t figure out why, and I’m really bummed about it. Especially since I have everything else I need for this recipe!
I make this or a version of it often in the summe sometimes as a main course with the addition of scampied shrimp or sometimes as a side dish to our protein…Ive even done a cold version leaving the tomatoes and zucchini raw and tossing in a vinagairette..try adding some cream cheese and its almost like an alfredo…super yummy…Zucchini and tomatoes are meant to be together..I have a love hate relationship with my garden too…I love the bounty hate the work…this year is our first ever organic garden 🙂
Apartment living doesn’t allow a garden but, we hit the local Farmers Markets weekly..
This recipe is ideal for us.. As we are older and eat less now, we get extra meals out of a 16oz package of pasta… :O)
Totally making this tonight! Thanks, Mel!
This looks so fresh and yummy! A perfect way to use up those garden veggies!
Paige
http://thehappyflammily.com