Italian Pasta Aglio e Olio: The 20-Minute Dinner That Costs Almost Nothing

Okay, real talk — there are nights when the fridge is basically a still life of condiments and false hope.

Italian Pasta Aglio e Olio: The 20-Minute Dinner That Costs Almost Nothing

Okay, real talk — there are nights when the fridge is basically a still life of condiments and false hope. Last week I had exactly that situation: half a box of spaghetti, a jar of pre-minced garlic, some olive oil, and a block of Parmesan I’d been rationing like it was gold. Italian pasta aglio e olio was born for exactly this moment. This dish is literally just pasta, garlic, olive oil, and a little pasta water magic. That’s it.

Here’s what I love about aglio e olio — it doesn’t apologize for being simple. There’s no seven-layer sauce, no fancy technique, no ten-minute trip to a specialty store. This is the kind of cooking my Lola Cora would have recognized immediately, even though she never made Italian food a day in her life. She always said the best meals come from what you already have and knowing how to treat it right. Aglio e olio is that philosophy in pasta form.

Marcus ate two bowls. Lily ate hers without picking anything out — I skipped the parsley because I know my audience — and then asked if we could have “the garlicky noodles” again on Friday. This whole pot cost me right around $4, it was on the table in 20 minutes, and I didn’t dirty a single extra pan. If that’s not a weeknight hero, I don’t know what is.

Ingredients

  • 1 lb spaghetti (or linguine — whatever you’ve got)
  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 8 garlic cloves, thinly sliced (or 2 tablespoons pre-minced from a jar — no judgment here)
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional — skip if you’re feeding little ones who run hot)
  • 1 cup reserved pasta water
  • 1 teaspoon salt, plus more for the pasta water
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/2 cup grated Parmesan, plus more for serving
  • 2 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped (optional — I skip it for Lily)

Instructions

    1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Salt it well — it should taste like the ocean. Add the spaghetti and cook according to package directions until just al dente, usually 8-9 minutes.
    1. Before you drain the pasta, scoop out about 1 cup of the pasta water and set it aside. This starchy water is the secret weapon. Do not skip this step.
    1. While the pasta cooks, heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-low heat. Add the garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook slowly, stirring often, until the garlic is light golden and fragrant — about 4-5 minutes. Watch it carefully. The line between golden and burnt is fast, and burnt garlic will ruin the whole thing.
    1. Drain the pasta and add it directly to the skillet with the garlic oil. Toss everything together with tongs until the pasta is coated.
    1. Add the reserved pasta water a splash at a time, tossing as you go, until the pasta is coated in a glossy, slightly creamy-looking sauce. You probably won’t use the whole cup — stop when it looks right.
    1. Remove from heat. Add the Parmesan and toss again. Taste and adjust salt and pepper.
    1. Plate it up, scatter parsley on top if you’re using it, and hit it with more Parmesan at the table. Serve immediately — aglio e olio does not like to sit.

Nutrition

Nutrition information not yet available.

Tips

1. Low and slow on the garlic. I cannot stress this enough. Medium-low heat, not medium-high. You want golden and sweet, not brown and bitter. Set a timer if you have to — 5 minutes at low heat feels like forever when you’re hungry, but it’s the whole game here.

2. Don’t skip the pasta water. I know it sounds weird to save that murky water, but the starch in it is what makes the oil and water come together into an actual sauce instead of a greasy puddle. Pour it in a little at a time and watch the magic happen. This is not negotiable.

3. Serve it right away. Aglio e olio is a straight-from-pan-to-table situation. If it sits, the pasta absorbs the oil and gets dry. Time it so everyone’s already at the table when you’re plating — this one waits for no one.