Close up view of spicy sausage pasta

Simple Weeknight Pasta with Olives and Fresh Herbs

Fast. Easy. Delicious.

dog supervising dinner

There are weeknights when dinner needs to be fast, forgiving, and a little bit scrappy — the kind of cooking that feels like you’re getting away with something. This pasta recipe was exactly that. A quick, rustic, almost–puttanesca situation that came together with ingredients on hand… plus a few lazy shortcuts that made it even better.

And yes: there was a dog nearby. Supervising.

Jump to our past pairings (with recipes).

Start with the Basics

the sauce basics - herbs, onion, and italian sausage

All great weeknight pasta sauces start the same way: olive oil, heat, and Italian sausage hitting the pan.

Herbs fresh from the garden? Snip, tie, toss in. No fresh herbs? No problem — dried works perfectly. Don’t want to chop? Don’t. This is lazy cooking at its finest.

Canned tomatoes from the pantry simmered into a thick, chunky base. A mix of pitted green Castelvetrano olives and pitted Kalamata olives brought that briny, puttanesca-adjacent punch.

While the sauce bubbled, the pasta simmered, and Texas toast went into the oven (on-hand ingredients: bread slices, butter, garlic powder, onion powder, and salt). Winter lettuce was on hand, too, so with a chopped tomato and some chives and a cucumber, there was salad. And dinner was done except for the serving.

Worth-It Tips

Pasta Water

A scoop of starchy pasta water went straight into the sauce to bring everything together.

A Splash of Wine

This recipe improves if you add the wine you’re drinking. So a splash went in (no judgement on the size – chef’s choice) of the local Italian-style red we opened for the night.

Fall Pasta and Wine Pairing

The pairing? A Washington red Italian varietal mix – “Super Italian” from Bartholomew – grapes grown here in Washington wine country.

Tasty, a bit spicy, and perfect for a sunny fall-to-winter day when there was not a lot of energy left for cooking.

dog getting a treat

And not to worry – the supervisor got a final bite at the end of the meal, rewarding all of his hard work.

Past Pairings

Carbonnade

Pico de Gallo and Wine Pairing – Why Not?

Homemade Mac and Cheese with Washington Chardonnay

What Makes a Great Pizza? (plus pair it with rosé)

Relax with Simple Spaghetti and Washington Sangiovese

Comfort Food: Grilled Cheese, Tomato Soup, and a Washington Syrah (but try the alternate version with jalapeno!)

Leftovers Supreme Crunch Wrap and a Washington Petit Verdot

Jambalaya and a Washington Cabernet Sauvignon

Cashew Chicken and a Washington Red Blend

Mushroom Puff Pastry Pizza and Washington Sauvignon Blanc

Cheese and Charcuterie Edition

ICYMI: More ABR Wine and Food Pairings

And don’t worry. We’re spending the rest of our time finalizing everything needed to actually bring you these small production Washington wines. Soon, you can try them along with us.