Pasta Primavera is a beautiful spring vegetable pasta made famous by Le Cirque, a swanky French restaurant in New York. I visited Le Cirque many years ago as a youngster and the memory of this swoon-worthy pasta has always stayed with me. This is the actual recipe from Le Cirque! You will love it.

Pasta Primavera
Today’s recipe is a big, wholesome vegetable fix disguised in the form of a creamy pasta. So you can pitch it to your clan as a decadent creamy pasta for dinner but know that there’s also a good hit of nutritious vegetables in it too. Life is all about balance, after all!
Primavera means “spring” in Italian, and this meatless dish is all about celebrating the best green bounty the season offers up. In this spirit, don’t feel bound by the vegetables I’ve used! Use the best seasonal spring produce you find, or check out my recommendations for substitutions.


The Pasta Primavera story
It is said that this pasta dish was invented in the 1970’s by Sirio Maccioni, the restaurateur behind Le Cirque, a renowned French restaurant in New York City (now closed). I will always have fond memories of Le Cirque. It was the first and only top-end fine dining restaurant I had the luxury of dining at when I travelled to NYC as a broke uni student. My entire trip food budget evaporated in one dinner at Le Cirque, such were the prices (hot dogs and pizza slices it was for the rest of the trip!) But for this starry-eyed greenhorn new to the world of fine dining, it was worth every penny.
Of all the amazing dishes I savoured that night, Pasta Primavera is still burned in my mind as the standout. Invented as a dish to celebrate spring produce, there are now many versions of Pasta Primavera around. While researching a recipe for Pasta Primavera, Chef JB and I discovered the origins of the dish could be traced back to Le Cirque, and were able to hunt down the actual recipe from Le Cirque. So it seems sharing the original recipe in all it’s perfect glory is just meant to be!

What you need for Pasta Primavera
1. The vegetables
The vegetables I used in this recipe are as per the Le Cirque restaurant recipe. They’re mostly spring vegetables, as explained. However, absolutely feel free to switch and change to your tastes and/or what’s in season where you are!

For each vegetable, I’m including suggestions for substitutions for similar vegetables. However, you can always just use more of another vegetable already in the recipe – or not. Make this dish your own!
Broccolini – With longer, thinner stalks than regular broccoli, the natural shape of broccolini is perfect for tossing through long strand pasta. Substitute: Regular broccoli cut with more stem than you ordinarily would include, stems cut into long thin wedges or thick batons. ie try to mimic the shape of broccolini as best you can.
Cherry tomatoes – Or cut regular tomatoes into chunks.
Mushrooms – Any kind sliceable! If you only have large ones (like portobello) then just slice and chop into pieces so they are a similar size to slicing mushrooms around 3.5cm / 1.5″.
Snow peas – Substitute with green beans, trimmed and cut in half lengthwise.
Zucchini – Carrot probably gives the most similar texture in the end result but will take a minute or so longer to cook.
Asparagus – More broccolini or zucchini are probably the best substitutes for this.
Peas – Just frozen is totally fine in my books. Frozen peas really are better than old fresh peas. If you have home-grown-garden-fresh-organic-peas you’ve shelled yourself, I want to be you. 🙂
Basil – A handful of fresh basil really adds that taste of warm weather brightness to this dish. But if you don’t have it, just leave it out because this recipe is absolutely still worth making. Substitute: I’d probably add a squeeze of fresh lemon juice instead, for a touch of freshness.
2. Sauce and pasta
This recipe I’m sharing today is the original as sourced from Le Cirque restaurant in New York City. So it is unapologetically luxurious with a good whack of butter and cream, giving it that truly restaurant-quality finish. I’ve added a note in the recipe for the best way to lighten it for the calorie-counters out there!

Pine nuts – This is the signature ingredient that’s a hallmark of Le Cirque’s version. It adds a distinctive flavour and texture that really makes this recipe unique. I urge you not to skip it!!
Parmigiano reggiano – This is true parmesan cheese, with a firm and dry texture perfect for finely grating over dishes and stirring in so it melts into sauces like this. It made according to strictly-regulated Italian methods and is aged a minimum of 24 months, giving it a more complex flavour than regular industrially-produced parmesan cheese.
Substitute with non-reggiano parmesan or grana padano. But you MUST finely grate it yourself! If you buy pre-grated, the grains are too large and usually coated with anti-caking agent so it won’t melt smoothly into the sauce.
Cream – For the sauce. Thickened / heavy cream is best though regular cream also works. As for low fat? Well, it’s still good but obviously changes the end result. The mouthfeel is less full and rich, and the sauce won’t be as thick so it won’t cling to the pasta as well.
Butter – Melted and stirred into the sauce.
Garlic – To add tasty flavour to the sautéed vegetables.
Olive oil – For cooking the vegetables.
Linguine or fettucine. Other long strand pastas also work fine but I do think that flat pastas like linguine work best because the bigger surface area means more sauce cling!
How to make Pasta Primavera
The key to making Pasta Primavera well is to sauté the vegetables in the right order so they all end up perfectly cooked at the same time. Nobody wants soggy, floppy, dull vegetables in their Pasta Primavera! We want perky, green and vibrant vegetables – spring is about the new and fresh remember!
1. Cutting the veg
I won’t cover cutting all the vegetables. Just the ones sliced in non-typical ways (but it’s not hard, I promise!)

Asparagus – Grab a few and snap the base off with your hands. Asparagus will naturally break at the point of the stringy woody base starts that we don’t want. Handy tip! 🙂
Cut off the top 3cm / 1.2″ tips and set aside. Then slice the stems on the diagonal into 2.5 cm / 1″ lengths.
Broccolini – Cut off the bushy florets with enough of the stem so you don’t end up with a mess of floret falling off everywhere. Then split the floret in half lengthwise (or quarter if you have abnormally fat ones).
Slice the stems on the diagonal into 2.5 cm / 1″ lengths.
Snow peas – Pinch off the stem end with your fingers then pull downwards to remove the tough “string” running along the “seam” side of the snow pea.
Slice and slice – Stack 2 or 3 snow peas then slice on the diagonal around 1 cm / 0.4″ wide.
2. Cooking

Sauce – Melt the butter in a saucepan, and add cream and parmesan. Bring it to a simmer and stir just to melt the cheese, then turn off the stove and set aside. The sauce will seem thin but it will thicken later when we toss through the pasta with a splash of pasta cooking water (see step 7)
Cook pasta – Start the pasta at this point. This way, the pasta and vegetables should be done around the same time to bring the dish together.
Mushrooms – In other pan, sauté the mushrooms in half the oil until light golden, remove from the pan and set aside. (Don’t try to cook the mushrooms with the other vegetables, they will just stew and go watery!)
Cook green veg – In the same pan, heat the remaining oil and cook the broccolini, snow peas and asparagus together for 2 minutes. Then add the zucchini, tomato, peas and garlic and cook for 3 minutes.
By this time, all the vegetables should be almost cooked with a slight bite to them still. By this time we finish tossing with the sauce they will be crisp-but-tender, the perfect doneness where the vegetable are cooked but retain some texture. It’s the point at which vegetables are at their most vibrant and sweetest when cooked!

Reserve pasta water – Just before draining the pasta, scoop out a mugful of the cooking water. This is our secret weapon for thickening the sauce, read Step 1 above for an explanation.
Sauce and vegetables – Return the drained pasta back to the empty pasta cooking pot. Then add the vegetables plus creamy sauce.
Pasta cooking water – Add 1/3 cup of the reserved pasta cooking water. What happens now is that the starch in the pasta cooking water thickens the sauce so it coats the pasta strands. It also emulsifies the sauce (ie. helps fats and water mix), like how when you shake oil and vinegar to make a salad dressing and it magically becomes uniform and viscous!
Toss over heat – Turn the stove up to medium. Toss the pasta for 1 to 2 minutes until the cream sauce has thickened and is clinging to the pasta strands rather than being watery and pooled at the bottom of the pot.
Basil & pine nuts – Right at the end, quickly toss through the basil just to disperse, then serve in bowls sprinkled with the pine nuts.
Serve the pasta up immediately! Creamy pastas stay at peak eating for only a short time. The longer you leave it sitting around, the less creamy and silky the sauce will be. The sauce will tend to congeal as it cools, and also gets absorbed by the pasta, making it the dish gluggy. If this happens, just add a splash of pasta cooking water and toss again on the stove to loosen it up again!

I actually filmed this recipe this time last year (Aussie spring 2021) but never got around to publishing the recipe because I put new recipes on pause while I worked on my cookbook. So my team and I have made it again just before sharing the recipe today to double check that it was still as good as we remembered.
And it is. I forgot how great this dish really is! I do hope you try it, no matter what season it is where you are. Because while it is hailed as a spring-celebration recipe, you really can make it all year round with whatever vegetables are in season! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Pasta Primavera
Ingredients
- 300g / 10 oz linguine (fettucine, or other long and flat pasta, Note 1)
Vegetables (Note 2):
- 150g / 5oz white mushrooms , sliced 0.4cm / 1/6″ thick (~8 pieces)
- 1/2 large zucchini , cut into 0.5cm / 0.2" rounds (100g/4 oz piece)
- 1 bunch broccolini
- 1 1/2 cup snow peas (~10 pieces, 75g/2.5oz)
- 1 bunch green asparagus (~8 to 10)
- 1 cup green peas , defrosted
- 10 cherry tomatoes , cut in half
- 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
Cream sauce:
- 5 tbsp / 75 g unsalted butter
- 1 cup thickened / heavy cream (Note 3)
- 1/2 cup Parmigiano reggiano , finely grated (sub regular parmesan, Note 4)
Cooking:
- 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1/3 cup pasta cooking water , scoop out just before draining (Note 6)
- 1 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 1/2 cup fresh basil leaves , finely sliced (Note 5)
- 2 tbsp pinenuts , toasted (Note 7)
Instructions
Cut vegetables:
- Broccolini – Cut off florets then cut in half lengthwise. Then slice the stems diagonally into 2.5 cm / 1" lengths.
- Snow peas – Remove the tough string running down the "seam" of the pea. Stack several peas and slice on the diagonal about 1cm / 0.4" wide.
- Asparagus – Snap the base off the asparagus, it will naturally break where the woody stem stars. Cut tips off, leave whole and set aside. Slice the stems diagonally into 2.5 cm / 1" lengths.
Cream Sauce:
- Melt butter in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Add cream and Parmigiano reggiano. Stir, and once the cream starts simmering gently, stir until the cheese melts then take it off the stove and set aside.
Pasta:
- Bring a large pot of water to the boil over high heat. Add 1 tablespoon of salt and add the pasta. Cook for the time per the packet minus 1 minute. Meanwhile, cook vegetables.
- Reserve pasta water: Just before draining the pasta, scoop out a mug of pasta cooking water and set aside. Drain the pasta.
Cook:
- Mushrooms: Heat half the olive oil in a large skillet over high heat. Cook mushrooms for 4 minutes until golden, remove to a plate.
- Veg: Heat remaining oil in the same skillet. Cook broccolini, snow peas and asparagus for 2 minutes. Add zucchini, tomato, green peas, garlic, salt and pepper. Cook for a further 3 minutes. Add mushroom back in, toss, then remove from heat.
- Toss! Return pasta into the now-empty pot. Add vegetables, cream sauce and 1/3 cup pasta water. Toss over medium heat using 2 wooden spoons until the sauce thickens and clings to the pasta strands rather than pooling in the base of the pot, about 1 to 2 minutes. (If at any stage the pasta gets too thick, add a splash more pasta water and toss on stove).
- Basil & pine nuts – Quickly toss through basil. Divide between 4 bowls. Sprinkle with pine nuts. Devour immediately!
Recipe Notes:
- Skip butter in Cream Sauce
- Skip all the oil
- Use 3 tbsp / 50g butter instead of oil for sautéing the vegetables
- Per serve nutrition: 145 calorie reduction, 17g less fat.
1. Pasta – Use any long strand pasta you want. Short pasta (like penne) also works. 2. Vegetables – Feel free to substitute as you wish, make this your own! Either use other spring vegetables, or if you’re in a different season use whatever is seasonal. See in post for substitutions. 3. Cream – Any full fat cream will work just fine here. Low fat will work but the end result won’t be as luscious and the sauce will be thinner. 4. Parmigiano reggiano – Finely grate using microplane so it melts smoothly! Substitute with regular grade parmesan. Do not use store bought pre-grated parmesan as it won’t melt in the sauce. 5. No fresh basil? It’s still worth making! I like to add a squeeze of fresh lemon juice instead, to compensate with a different type of freshness. 6. Starchy pasta cooking water – The secret to thickening the cream sauce so it clings to every pasta strand and ends up in your mouth rather than a watery pool in the bottom of your bowl. 7. Toasted pine nuts – Toss raw pine nuts in a small skillet (no oil) over medium heat until it has light golden spots and smells nutty, about 2 minutes. 8. Nutrition per serving and worth every calorie, and remember there is lots of veg in this! But see top of Notes for how to lighten it up.
Nutrition Information:
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Life of Dozer
Dozer’s debut on TV as part of the cookbook publicity tour!! Is this really happening?? 😂 Watch him on Channel 10’s Studio 10 here.

His chef toque, hand made by the publicity manager at my publisher! (in the Uber en route to the studio 😂).

I did a cooking demo of the 12 Hour Slow Cooked Lamb…. wearing my lamb print skirt! Fashion faux pas??

Hi Nagi, you’re probably really busy at the moment, but I have been a big fan of yours and of course Dozer, for several years now, well as soon as I discovered you.
You have resurrected my passion for cooking and I tell absolutely everyone about you. I love the charity work you do too. I’ve tried lots of your recipes and bought 3 books, one for me, my sister and my son. All my family love you guys too. You’re inspirational.
Thanks for being you. Hi to gorgeous Dozer.
Haha, what a treat to see (and hear) you, plus Dozer, in motion. When I read your recipes you have a Canadian accent. Oops! Great plug for the philanthropic branch, too. My only concern was your top five tips. What about “Add pasta cooking water”? 😉
Hi Nagi & Dozer!
You both looked wonderful on your TV appearance. Thank you for sharing the link with all of us. I’m not much of a lamb person (I keep seeing those cute little lamby faces), but my son will flip over that recipe! Keep up the great work! Love to you both.
Very nice recipe,I am not surprised at all ,what ever you make is very good.
Thank you!
Oh, yum! That looks so easy & made me so hungry! 😄🙋😘
Love your video Nagi , it was so funny the guy could not wait to eat the lamb .
And Dozer was so cute with his chef hat ,and so good .
I will be making this lamb slow roast it looks so good ,and also the spring vegetable pasta with cream sauce ,it look so easy and good .
I ordered your cookbook on Amazon Canada last week ,I cant wait to get it .
Your the Best !!
I’ve made a Pasta Primavera before but your version looks sublime! I will try it soon.
I watched you and Dozer on your TV appearance and it was wonderful to see you in person. You are so personable and fun. I live in the U.S. and was excited to know your new cookbook is available here. I’ve already pre-ordered it on Amazon. Best of continued success and I look forward to receiving your book!
I haven’t tried this recipe yet but know it will be sublime. It is very close to a Pasta Primavera recipe from Bon Appetite that I have been making since the late 70’s. Every spring when the asparagus is fresh and tender. Yummy yummy yummy! Can Google the Bon Appetite recipe to compare.
That video was so very special, it brought tears to my eyes. Nagi, what you do for everyone is so very special and we all applaud you!
Nagi, I also remember Le Cirque in NYC. I took my daughter there for her 16th birthday. It was so fancy and wonderful, we both remember it very fondly. I remember the “chocolate stove” dessert. I have not yet tried this pasta recipe but I will. Can’t wait for your cookbook to be available in the US
Fabulous, Nagi!
What a wonderful guest appearance on the telly that you and Dozer had! Thank you for sharing this!
The thing that struck me most was that you are exactly as I imagined you to be in person – gracious, humble, and ‘down-to-earth’.
And . . . so giving and beneficent you are!
I always felt that by the way you communicate with ‘us’, and that your talent in the kitchen is undeniable, but to really feel like what I imagined is real, is such a delight!
Simply, “Thank you” for being “YOU”, Nagi, and allowing us to share in Dozer’s life too. How lucky we are!
May you and Dozer have many, many more years of success and happiness together.
Warmest Wishes from the Canadian Prairies.
Your Studio 10 interview went so well, Nagi! I love how your big compassionate heart shone through when you mentioned your Food Bank. You deserve all these wonderful things coming your way. 🤍
Wonderful, Nagi!
What a wonderful guest appearance on the telly that you and Dozer had! Thank you for sharing this!
The thing that struck me most was that you are exactly as I imagined you to be in person – gracious, humble, and ‘down-to-earth’.
And . . . so giving and beneficent you are!
I always felt that by the way you communicate with ‘us’ and that your talent in the kitchen in undeniable, but to really feel like what I imagined is real, is such a delight!
Simply, “Thank you” for being “YOU”, Nagi, and allowing us to share in Dozer’s life too. How lucky we are!
Warmest Wishes from the Canadian Prairies.
Looks fantastic! Tried to pin to Pinterest- didn’t work. Please make recipe ‘pinnacle’- thank you
Dozer the TV star!!! My husband and I had a good giggle over this. Camy wait to try the primavera once spring rolls around on this side of the globe.
Congratulations! YOU & Dozer are ROCK STARS! Dozer is so handsome with his chef’s hat.
I have been dreaming of and looking for this recipe for over 30 years. Well, I didn’t know it was this recipe, but of course it is. My mom and I had pasta primavera in Denver, Colorado in the mid 80’s, and I’ve tried so many times to replicate that taste. I’m sure this must be the one. I’m making this asap (for my mom and I!). Thank you!!!!
Hi Nagi and Dozer* I can’t wait to get out of the hospital and make this!!!! It looks fabulous. Dozer looks SPLENDID in his new Chef Hat…AND, you look lovely as ever.
Congratulations for the newc cook bookend the book tour. Super happy for you and can’t wait to receive your cook book in February 2023 I preordered. Wish you all success and happinesses. Best recipes and food blog ever . You are my cooking Bible . Love you and Dozer🤗
This was soooo good I resisted the urge to change anything and was so glad I did! I had some homemade pasta left over which I cut into fettuccine and can’t think of a better sauce to accompany it! Yum!