Skillet Summer Vegetable Lasagna
This skillet vegetable lasagna is packed with summer veggies and is so fast to put together. Made start to finish in one skillet, it is a summer dinner staple…and wow, is it tasty!
This skillet vegetable lasagna is hands down one of my favorite meals to make during the summer. For, like, a million reasons.
First and foremost, it’s fast, which means you aren’t slaving over a hot stove for hours OR turning on your oven to heat up dinner and the house.
But mostly, my one-pot dinner loving heart appreciates that it is made start to finish in the same little skillet; the result is a super delicious veggie-loaded pasta dish that is equal parts comforting and refreshing.
I’ve been making this skillet vegetable lasagna for years (and years and years). Even when my garden is pathetically pathetic, I still find a way to harvest and save zucchini and yellow squash for this dish (that is, if I have any leftover after hoarding it for this best-ever zucchini bread).
And it’s one of the main recipes that leads me to plant fresh basil every year even though I rank as one of the worst gardeners in the history of ever. That fresh pop of basil flavor is magic.
This recipe also adapts very well to other vegetables, like fresh tomatoes, spinach, broccoli, asparagus, bell peppers, etc. And if you use a larger pot (read on for details), you can load as many vegetables in there as you like without fear of overflowing the skillet. I’ve learned with my kids that if I throw enough pasta and cheese in with their veggies, they’ll eat just about anything.
Skillet vs Pot
This lasagna recipe is written to use a 12-inch {nonstick} skillet. I’m not going to lie, it’s a pretty full skillet by the end, but it gets the job done. However, many times when I make it, I pull out one of my wider saucepans or pots and use that. Works like a charm, although if the pot is stainless steel, you want to stir it often to ensure the pasta isn’t sticking.
So basically, if you don’t have a 12-inch skillet, that should not be the reason to avoid making this dish. A 6-quart pot (or thereabouts) will work great. I guess it makes me feel better to hash that out so that this skillet lasagna is accessible to one and all.
If it’s been a while since you’ve made this recipe, be sure to read through the recipe and the recipe notes in full; I’ve added a few details to make it all a bit easier and offer a few substitute suggestions. {And yes, an update on this sister recipe: meaty skillet lasagna is coming soon – those pictures! Yikes!}
There’s a reason this skillet vegetable lasagna has been on repeat for the last 7+ years around here. It’s incredibly delicious. Promise me you won’t let this summer end without making it, ok?
What To Serve With This:
Divine Breadsticks
Honey Lime Fruit Salad (or a big bowl of fresh watermelon)
One Year Ago: Grilled Hawaiian Chicken
Two Years Ago: Mediterranean Quinoa Salad
Three Years Ago: Dan Dan Noodles {30-Minute}
Four Years Ago: Blueberry Custard Pie with Buttery Pecan Streusel
Five Years Ago: Peach Frozen Yogurt {Quick, Easy, Healthy}
Six Years Ago: Black Bean Hummus
Seven Years Ago: Sweet and Spicy Pork Tenderloin
Eight Years Ago: Festive Fruited Cheesecake Flag
Skillet Summer Vegetable Lasagna
Ingredients
- 1 to 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- ½ cup chopped yellow or white onion
- 4 garlic cloves, minced or 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 (28-ounce) can diced tomatoes (see note)
- 1 teaspoon salt, I use coarse, kosher salt
- 10 curly-edged lasagna noodles, broken into 1 or 2-inch lengths
- 1 small zucchini, cut into 1/2 inch chunks
- 1 small yellow squash, cut into 1/2 inch chunks
- ¼ cup chopped fresh basil
- 1 cup ricotta cheese, whole milk or part skim
- 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Instructions
- In a large 12-inch skillet heat the oil over medium heat until hot and rippling. Add the onion and cook until softened, 2-3 minutes. Add the garlic or garlic powder, and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds.
- Drain the diced tomatoes into a 2- or 4-cup liquid measure. Add water to the tomato liquid to make 2 cups. Add tomato/water mixture and 1 teaspoon salt to the skillet.
- Scatter the broken noodles into the skillet, layer the drained tomatoes over the noodles and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat to medium and cook, covered, stirring occasionally (so the noodles won’t stick!) for about 10 minutes.
- Stir in zucchini and squash. Cook, stirring occasionally (again, to prevent sticking – add broth or water, if mixture seems dry), until noodles and squash are tender, 6-8 minutes.
- Off the heat, add the basil, half of the ricotta cheese and half of the Parmesan cheese. Stir until creamy. Dollop the remaining ricotta cheese over the noodles, season with salt and pepper to taste, and sprinkle with remaining Parmesan cheese and fresh basil, if desired.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: adapted slightly from America’s Test Kitchen
Recipe originally published July 2011; updated June 2019 with new photos, recipe notes, etc.
I’m coming up on squash season myself and this looks delicious. Since hubby will turn his nose up at anything lacking a meat product, any thoughts on a good, marinated chicken (perhaps one of yours on the blog here?!) that would pair with this? I could do plain grilled, but was looking for a little something more adventurous. 🙂
Mel I need a new skillet, so do you have a favorite? I’ve seen you mention a 12″ a few times, but is there a brand you like?
I loved this! My kids ate it but didn’t love it, hubby was just ok with it – he’s anti-vegetable.
So good. Even my toddler liked it. I sliced the zucchini a little thin (1/4″) and added them after the noodles had been in for 8 mins. It’s definitely better with freshly grated Parmesan and fresh basil. It needs the saltiness of fresh Parmesan since I don’t add salt. Makes a ton. Could half for my family of four (2 little kids). Thanks!
This is an awesome recipe. I added some hamburger since hubby
would swoon if I made a main dish without meat and it was a
great summer supper. Thanks
Just made this tonight and I think its my new fav! I only made half the recipe for my husband and I- it was plenty too. I cut up a whole tomato instead of the canned along with a can of tomato sauce and some water. The ricotta cheese really makes this dish- I can’t wait to make it again. Thanks!
Ah! I reread the instructions a more closely. 🙂 My bad…. even though I did it the way described for the regular skillet lasagna recipe, I think I will be okay. 🙂
Should the liquid/tomato mixture read “to measure 4 cups” instead of 2 cups? One 28-0z can is 3 cups… I checked my recipe for Skillet Lasagna on Cookscountry.com and it reads for 4 cups.
This is an awesome skillet dish! My whole family loved it. At least you have a garden and it’s green! I love your site!! Thank you!
I made this recipe the other night and it was SO good! My husband prefers to eat meatless meals during the summer and so he was very happy with this one. And I decided that it is easily one of my new favorite meals! We will be making it again and again! Thank you!
I made this recently and it was so delicious, definitely a keeper! Thanks for sharing it!
Mel,
I absolutely love your recipes. I don’t cook as often now that my hubby is deployed, but I decided I would cook me one great meal a week. I chose this one this last week and it was sooooo delicious! I even had leftovers (which I really am picky about reheated food) and they tasted just as delicious! Thank you!
mel, this was AMAZING and SO easy!! it was so great to be able to have lasagna and not run my oven in july 😉 a definite keeper to add to the collection. thanks!
Mel,
This one was so stinkin’ good. My husband and I had two huge helpings. My 4 year old gobbled it up. This is a keeper so easy and fresh and good. Thanks.
Made this, love this! You are amazing. Thank you.
I made this last night and it was delicious! I didn’t have ricotta on hand, so I had to substitute cottage cheese and it still worked out great. My husband cringed when he saw it was a meatless dish, but after one bite, he loved it. I will be making this again! Thank you!
Made this last night with whole grain lasagna noodles- delicious! Thanks for a recipe everyone enjoyed.
Well, you’ve done it again! This was a huge hit at our house! We loved it. This is a repeat for sure! Thanks! FYI…I have never made anything from your site that wasn’t an instant family favorite. You are amazing!
I just made this today and it was SO good! My self proclaimed 5 year old vegetarian had seconds!
Made this for dinner tonight. I like to make homemade pasta, and decided it would just be easiest to cook the pasta on its own then add it to the skillet with the basil and cheese. Next time I wouldn’t use as much water. I could have let it simmer longer to boil off, but was short on time, so it ended up being a bit soupy. But it was still tasty! Enough to convince my carnivore husband to take it for lunch tomorrow.
Mel, could your soil be depleted and in need of a boost?? That can be accomplished even with plants growing. If nothing else, try miracle gro. Also, save egg shells, grind up, and dig around plants, add the ground up shells, cover; water.
Healthy and delicious recipe–yum! I am so excited to try it with the zucchini and squash from my garden. Don’t worry, there is hope for your garden! I killed everything until I went to square foot gardening. I have three magic words for gardening–compost, vermiculite and peatmoss. These three soil ingredients will make your garden grow like gang-busters. I realized I wasn’t the issue with my garden, the soil was. Now that I figured that out, my garden grows with literally NO effort. It is awesome! Maybe next year you can give that a try and your garden will be even better than your neighbors..haha 😉
I have done square foot garden for years now. This year we got two new dogs that have ran over my garden. Your garden looks really good compared to mine.
I’ve loved your website! I have a black thumb; even trees I suggest for our yard die. But, square foot gardening has changed that! Oh, and turkey pooh for the compost. If you rig up sometime of automatic watering system, you can be lazy like me and have a great garden!
My daughter and I made this for dinner Friday night. It was wonderful! Thanks!
Mel, if it makes you feel any better, last year we managed to kill our zucchini plants, it can be done!. And this year, one died immediately and the other produced 2, yes 2 zucchini. No more, no less.
What a wonderful summer recipe – homegrown veggies are just the best!
Mary
While I do love the step-by-step pictures I get on most of my other food blogs I read yours is really becoming my favorite because everything is soo organized and there really isn’t a lot of crazy or wasteful things on here. And your recipes really relate well to a stay at home mom on a budget. So thanks so much for all you do! I check every day for new up dates tried like five things from your blog just this week, every one loved your wheat bread. Plus I love your “the best recipe” section.
Ha, I managed to kill not one, not two, but three zucchini plants last year. Well, they technically didn’t “die”, but we never got a single zucchini out of any of them. And I was even out there helping pollinate them with q-tips and everything. It was certainly pathetic. Didn’t even try them this year. Maybe next. You are not alone. 🙂
This looks so yummy. Dumb question, you add the noodles un-cooked, right? If so, that makes this lasagna that much better. If it makes you feel better, I did kill my zuchinni plant this year. Maybe I could submit a photo of my garden to make yours look like Eden?
Holly – yes, you add the lasagna noodles uncooked. Just break ’em up and throw them in there. Thanks for making me feel better about my garden. Trust me, it looks better in the picture than it really is. 🙂
Your garden looks fab to me. I love the sound of this lasagna with all the great veggies in it!
Oh Mel, your garden looks just fine. It’s just amazing how your garden is so close to your neighbors garden. Wow! I live so far out, and own acreage I couldn’t imagine that. Your dish looks amazing, and yummy. Great post, and keep your chin up my friend. Your garden is just fine the way it is 🙂
Mel, That looks tasty; I’ll have to try this for a mission meal sometime. Also, did you label your photo in picassa? What photo editor do you use to add text?
Hi Jackie – I use Photoshop for my photo editing so I labeled it there.
Excellent photo… I love it and I feel your pain. I gave up this year b/c the deer always eat everything. Will have to build a garden fence at some point in the future if I want to try again. But more impressively – your kids eat zucchini!?! Mine are good about most veg, but “squash” is just one they won’t do. But they get in honestly – I came to zuc late in life as well. 🙂 Looks delish.
Haha! Mel you crack me up! If it makes you feel any better I recently attempted an herb garden. I bought all the plants already full grown and sprouting so all that I would have to do is maintain it. I kid you not, just three days later ALL of the herb plants were dead! So you are doing WAY better than me!
Also this skillet veggie lasagna sounds so easy. I recently made veggie lasagna in the crock-pot that turned out great! I will have to try your version next though because sometimes I am just too impatient to wait for food to ‘slow cook’!
I honestly was just wishing I could make lasagna without turning on the oven! And I do believe I’ve got all the ingredients except the yellow squash so I’m almost good to go…off to the farmers’ market!
My husband and I have too many projects to speak of going on our lives, and just to add to the pain we started a garden. I have exactly one zucchini and one squash as well from our very “humble” plot. I’m looking forward to this dish making it’s way onto our table tonight. Bless those of you out there who CAN grown–something. We’d go hungry without you. 🙂
The garden dramatics are funny 🙂 I love this meal and the broken peices of lasagna noodles is a great way to use up all of those “last 2” noodles in the package when I make the real lasagna. Skillet meals are the best! I have a ton of fresh basil right now from my kitchen window garden, lol. I think this may be on the dinner menu tonight.
Yum! This looks great. Totally perfect for summer. Thanks for sharing. 🙂
Yummy! This is on my menu for next week. 🙂
Also, about the gardening…don’t feel bad. I didn’t even attempt a garden this year because last year mine was so pitiful!
This is so my kind of pasta! Your post put a smile on my face…the woes of gardening! The photo of the two gardens side by side cracks me up…BUT…be proud, you have a garden! 🙂
This is exactly what we needed. Something delicious and easy. Can’t wait to make it next week, or sooner if I can drag myself to the store. Thank you for sharing your amazing ideas and talents with us. They are always a hit.
I love skillet meals too! Can’t wait to try this one this weekend 🙂
I think you should be proud of yourself for at least trying to have a garden, and giving it your best effort. Even the smallest gardens can bring great joy. Keep up the good work. And thank you for sharing this delicious recipe with us and your talents. You are amazing.
Oh- I feel your pain, Mel! I don’t have a garden at my house, but my MIL has one. This year is the worst her garden has ever produced! I am not sure why (maybe because it’s been extremely hot without much rain- even though she waters it almost daily), but the fruits of her labor are slim pick’ins this year! I can only imagine how you must feel with your neighbor’s garden right there next to yours. I agree with Stephanie though…we women have to stop comparing ourselves (and our gardens) to others! 😉
That said, when you said “I feel like shouting from the rooftops, “I LOVE SKILLET MEALS!” Because I really, really do.” I wanted to shout, ME, TOO! My family asks for your skillet sausage pasta recipe at least once a week, and now everytime I try a new recipe I think…how can I make this a one skillet (or pot) dish? 🙂
I can’t wait to try this recipe. I can already imagine all the ways that I can twist it up. I know my family will love it, because I have yet to make one of your recipes that they didn’t love! 🙂
Your garden looks like mine, or maybe 10x better than mine. The only thing I can get to grow in this TX heat is basil and rosemary. Rosemary loves the heat and drought.
Well, I’m the one that can kill the zucchini. This is the first year I have had such poor results from my squash. I have lots of tomatoes, I picked a 26 pound watermelon last night, but I only got 1 zucchini before the plants died. (I’m thinking we had some bad luck with the squash vine borer, but we’ve never had them before.) Thanks for all you do. I always get excited when I see you have a new post up. I love your blog and make lots of your recipes regularly.
This post made me laugh! Thanks for the picture and your honesty! Will we as women ever stop comparing ourselves to others? Nope! Glad we can all encourage each other in that – and then make some of your delicious meals to make us all feel better. Your blog continues to be my “go-to” for pretty much everything I make. Thanks!
Three words: Square Foot Gardening. Nothing planted in my ground grows, but we built two 4×4 boxes and the plants grow like crazy. We have an over abundance of cucumbers! This skillet meal looks so yummy. We are trying to eat more meatless meals, and this looks like a great contender for dinner on Sunday. Thanks Mel!
I’ve had serious thoughts about skillet lasagna lately. Thinking, though, that I will wait for cooler weather. I love what you’ve done, and we too struggled with gardening and had mixed results. Still, it was fun to go out and find a nice bunch of yellow wax beans and a huge quantity of kale.