Pasta With Green Bean Ragù
Updated May 28, 2025

- Total Time
- 35 minutes
- Prep Time
- 10 minutes
- Cook Time
- 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 12ounces green beans, trimmed and cut into 1-inch pieces
- 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1yellow onion, diced
- 8ounces hot or sweet Italian sausage links, casings removed
- 1teaspoon fennel or cumin seeds
- ½teaspoon crushed red pepper
- 1lemon, halved
- 1pound short pasta, such as orecchiette, macaroni or wagon wheels
- 3ounces grated Parmesan (about ¾ cup), plus more for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Bring a large saucepan of salted water to a boil. Add the green beans and cook, adjusting the heat as needed to maintain a simmer, as you cook the sauce. (Don’t worry about overcooking the beans; they can simmer for 10 to 30 minutes total.)
- Step 2
While the beans simmer, heat the oil in a large Dutch oven over medium. Add the onion and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion is soft and translucent, about 3 minutes.
- Step 3
Add the sausage and cook, breaking it up with a wooden spoon and stirring occasionally, until well browned and starting to stick to the bottom of the pan, about 7 minutes.
- Step 4
Reduce the heat to low. Stir in the fennel seeds and red pepper and cook until fragrant, just a few seconds.
- Step 5
Add the juice of ½ lemon and ½ cup of the cooking water from the green bean pot. Raise the heat if needed to simmer, stirring constantly, until the ragù is glossy, about 5 minutes. Add more water from the pot if necessary; the ragù should be saucy like gravy. Keep warm over very low heat.
- Step 6
Add the pasta to the saucepan with the green beans and cook according to package instructions. Reserve 2 cups of the cooking water. Drain the pasta and green beans and transfer to the Dutch oven with the ragù. Add the Parmesan and 1 cup of the reserved cooking water, stirring vigorously, until the pasta is saucy and shiny and lightly coated with sauce. If needed, stir in more water, a little at a time. Taste and add more salt, pepper, lemon juice and cheese as desired.
Private Notes
Comments
No Italian has ever measured salt, in any dish but especially not in pasta water. How much to add? “Quanto basta.” Just enough.
@Mimi I find that dry pasta cooked in totally unsalted water tastes fundamentally different from pasta cooked in salted water, and that no matter how salty the other ingredients are, the pasta cooked in unsalted water tastes flat to me because the pasta hasn’t soaked up any salt while it’s cooking. It just tastes different (not as palatable). To me.
Made this. Yum! Mr. Kim, who we are starting to call "Dr. Kim" in this household for his science-driven flavor-forward recipes. Would love to see a Kenji / Eric cooking fest!
Loved this recipe! In my house we aren’t huge on sausage so we swapped it for lamb and it was delightful!
Just chiming in to say that I thought the green beans cooked down deliciously - different and tasty. (Don’t be afraid of simmering them for so long!) If eyeballing the salt — generous pours of Diamond Crystal — and the crushed red pepper and and the fennel seed doesn’t disqualify me from saying I followed the recipe as written: I followed the recipe as written and thought it would be a great addition to our weeknight rotation. The simple ragu was delightful. PS: I do agree that you could probably halve the pasta and/or double the green beans.
This dish reminded me of poor college students cooking for our other house mates & making those dollars stretch. TOO much pasta, over cooked beans, glad I went w/ chicken Italian sausage. Had to w/hold 1 C of pasta due to no room in sauce pan w/ 12 oz of green beans. And added more boiling water to the pasta & bean pan. Also added more cheese since it needed more taste-or something. Both my wife and I did not care for this recipe. Not v healthy.
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