The 3-Ingredient Pasta that Ina Garten Calls 'Crazy-Good'

The recipe has 5 stars on the Food Network Kitchen app for a reason.

By: Drew Anne Salvatore

Related To:

Ina Garten's Lemon Cappellini, as seen on Food Network's Barefoot Contessa.

Ina Garten's Lemon Cappellini, as seen on Food Network's Barefoot Contessa.

Photo by: Matt Ball

Matt Ball

Get a Premium Subscription to the Food Network Kitchen App

Download Food Network Kitchen to sign up and get access to live and on-demand cooking classes, in-app grocery ordering, meal planning, an organized place to save all your recipes and much more.

We have to hand it to Ina — she always knows what we need, when we need it. Like the comically large cosmo she made on Instagram in April. And this three-ingredient, five-minute pasta dish on the Food Network Kitchen app that's undeniably delicious and perfect for when you have no time to put dinner on the table.

Made with just lemons, butter and pasta, this dish is one of Ina's go-to recipes. In her class, she shares that she makes it every New Year's Eve after spending the evening working up an appetite gallivanting around Paris (oh, Ina). For the rest of us, it makes for a tasty and easy weeknight dinner after you've spent the day juggling work, kids, pets and life in general.

According to Ina, this lemon cappelini is "officially one of [her] favorite dishes of all time." And reviewers agree, calling it "my go-to lemon-butter sauce", "wonderful and so easy to prepare after work", "a keeper for sure" and "honestly the best pasta I've ever had."

What's so great about it, you ask? Ina gives three reasons: One, it's incredibly fast to make. Aside from boiling water, the whole dish takes just five minutes. The secret? Capellini. According to Ina, it's a little thinner than spaghetti so it cooks in just four minutes. Imagine what you can accomplish in the other 25 minutes you normally take to make dinner!

The second reason Ina loves this dish is because it has only three ingredients: lemon, butter and pasta. Together, the lemon zest and juice combine with the melted butter and the residual starchy pasta water to create a rich and velvety sauce that the pasta absorbs for maximum flavor. "I was afraid the lemon would be overpowering and the butter really rich and heavy," said one reviewer. "But it was light and fresh!"

And finally, the third reason Ina calls this pasta "amazing" is its versatility. You can eat it plain as your standalone supper or as a side dish. Or, you can top it with some roasted shrimp or — as Ina suggests, of course — caviar for a heftier main course. Since this recipe is part of the Best of Barefoot Contessa course on the app, we suggest watching the rest of the classes and pairing it with Ina's Skillet Roasted Lemon Chicken. How easy is that?

Related Links:

Next Up

The Best Instant Pot Creamy Pastas

Imagine comfort food in minutes.

These 7 Lemon-Poppy Seed Desserts Taste Just Like Spring

If you thought this flavor was reserved for pound cake, think again.

What Is Lemon Zest?

Should you be zesting the white part of the peel too?

Precisely How to Freeze Lasagna

Enjoy one now and freeze a second one for later — your future self will thank you.

How to Make Pasta

A step-by-step guide with photos.

Cozy Baked Pastas for Cold Weather

The best way to beat the winter chill is with comforting pasta dishes straight from the oven.

Skillet Lasagna — Meatless Monday

Prepare Food Network Magazine's lasagna on the stove and serve with Giada's Mixed Green Salad With Sherry Vinaigrette and Rachael's Garlic Bread.

When All Else Fails, Make Pasta

Easy to prepare, inexpensive and a staple in most people's pantries, pasta won't let you down come dinnertime.