Easy Manicotti Recipe
This manicotti is the cozy, cheesy hug your weeknight dinner table has been begging for — tubes of pasta stuffed with ricotta and spinach, tucked into a herby tomato sauce, baked until the top is gloriously bubbly. It’s easier than the name sounds, forgiving if you overstuff or under-season, and it feeds a crowd or makes lovely leftovers for the next day.
My husband calls this “the one where you disappear into the kitchen and come out smelling like garlic.” True story: the first time I made it he ate two whole manicotti and then asked if we could freeze the leftovers “so I don’t have to admit how much I liked it.” Our kiddo thinks the cheese is a magical paste and requests this for birthday dinners now, which is as good a stamp of approval as any. It’s become the dish I reach for when I want something showy but not fussy — and when I’m trying to impress sensible people who love garlic and gravy.
Why You’ll Love This Easy Manicotti Recipe
– Classic comfort with very little drama: stuffed pasta + good sauce = automatic family peace.
– Forgiving assembly: mess it up, tuck it in, sprinkle extra cheese, nobody cares.
– Makes great leftovers that reheat like a dream — or become a heroic breakfast (no shame).
– Fancy enough for guests, simple enough for a weeknight.

Kitchen Talk
This recipe is where I learned that a little patience with simmering sauce pays off in the most blue-cheese-without-being-blue way: depth. I once tried using no-boil lasagna sheets to make manicotti (because I’m an optimist), and they turned into a mushy sad pillow; since then I stick with tubes or pre-boiled shells. Also, pro tip from a chaotic night: if the filling gets too watery, throw in another handful of ricotta and an egg and call it a day. I’ve also swapped frozen spinach straight into the warm filling when I forgot to thaw it — it worked, though it made things wetter, so I squeezed it out with a clean towel next time.
This easy manicotti recipe is a total game-changer for busy weeknights—super straightforward with simple ingredients like ricotta, mozzarella, and marinara that come together into the creamiest, cheesiest comfort food ever.[1][2] I love how you can prep it ahead and just bake when ready, and my family devoured it with zero leftovers.[2] Honestly, it's become our new family favorite!
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Shopping Tips
– Grains/Pasta: Look for manicotti tubes or jumbo pasta shells if tubes are hard to find; make sure the pasta isn’t fragile in the box.
– Cheese: Buy whole-milk ricotta and a good melting mozzarella; a wedge of Parmesan is worth it for grating fresh over the top.
– Canned Goods: Use a quality crushed tomato or marinara — low-sodium is nice so you control the salt, but a rich-flavored brand saves time.
– Fresh Herbs: Fresh basil or parsley brightens the filling and the sauce; grab a small bunch rather than a big clamshell that will wilt.
– Eggs: One or two eggs help bind the filling; a medium egg is fine if you’re following a mental recipe and eyeballing it.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Make the sauce a day ahead — flavors bloom overnight and reheating is fast; store in a sealed container in the fridge.
– Mix the filling (ricotta, egg, herbs, spinach, seasonings) and refrigerate up to 24 hours; keep it covered so it doesn’t dry out.
– If you want to speed dinnertime, stuff the pasta the night before and keep assembled (covered) in the fridge, then bake when you’re ready.
– Use shallow airtight containers for prepped filling and sauce so they reheat evenly without mystery-steaming.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a jarred marinara you love instead of starting from canned tomatoes; doctor it with a pinch of sugar and some red pepper flakes.
– Fill tubes using a large piping bag (or zip-top bag with a corner snipped) — it’s way faster and less gloppy.
– If your pasta brand is delicate, pre-boil shells for a minute less than package says; they’ll finish in the oven without falling apart.
– Don’t rush resting time: let baked manicotti sit 5–10 minutes to set so it slices pretty instead of collapsing.
Common Mistakes
– Overfilling the tubes: I did this once and lost half the filling to the pan; scoop a little out if they look like they’ll burst.
– Watery filling from thawed spinach: squeeze it dry in a towel or use fresh wilted spinach so the filling isn’t soupy.
– Saucing too thin: too little sauce = dry pasta tops; be generous on the bottom and over the tubes so everything steams and mingles.
– Skipping the binding egg: without it the filling can crumble when you serve; one egg holds things together without being eggy.
What to Serve It With
– Simple green salad with lemon vinaigrette for brightness.
– Garlic bread or a crusty loaf to soak up that sauce.
– Steamed broccoli or roasted Brussels sprouts to cut the richness.
– Light Italian salad or marinated artichokes if you want something a little tangy.
Tips & Mistakes
– Salt the ricotta a little; it can taste bland straight from the tub.
– If your sauce tastes acidic, pinch of sugar fixes it — no big drama.
– Oven temps vary: if the cheese browns too fast, tent with foil and finish baking.
– Reheat leftovers in a 350°F oven covered to avoid drying; microwave works in a pinch but texture changes.
Storage Tips
Leftovers keep tightly covered in the fridge for 3–4 days; reheat in the oven for best texture or microwave in short bursts for a quick lunch. You can freeze assembled manicotti in a baking dish (tightly wrapped) for up to 3 months — bake from frozen, covered, then uncover to brown. Cold manicotti is perfectly acceptable (don’t judge yourself), and a slice for breakfast with a fried egg on top is something I will absolutely defend.

Variations and Substitutions
– Spinach swap: baby kale or Swiss chard works if you cook and squeeze the greens first; arugula gives peppery notes but use less.
– Cheese variations: swap part of the ricotta for cottage cheese if you want a lighter filling, or add shredded provolone for a smokier flavor.
– Meat option: brown some Italian sausage or ground beef, mix into the sauce or the filling for a heartier version.
– Gluten-free: use gluten-free pasta tubes or shells and follow the same bake method; texture will vary, but flavor holds.
Frequently Asked Questions

Easy Manicotti Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 12 shells manicotti pasta uncooked
- 3 cups marinara sauce divided
- 15 oz ricotta cheese whole milk
- 2 cups shredded mozzarella divided
- 0.67 cup grated Parmesan divided
- 1 large egg
- 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped plus extra for garnish
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 0.75 tsp kosher salt
- 0.5 tsp black pepper freshly ground
- 0.75 tsp Italian seasoning
- 1 tbsp olive oil
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Preheat oven to 375°F.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook shells until very al dente, 6–7 minutes.
- Drain and rinse with cool water. Toss shells with olive oil to prevent sticking.
- Combine ricotta, 1½ cups mozzarella, ½ cup Parmesan, egg, parsley, garlic, salt, pepper, and Italian seasoning until creamy.
- Spread 1 cup marinara over the bottom of a 9x13-inch baking dish.
- Fill each shell with the cheese mixture using a spoon or piping bag.
- Arrange stuffed shells in a single layer in the dish.
- Pour remaining marinara over shells. Sprinkle with remaining mozzarella and Parmesan.
- Cover tightly with foil and bake 25 minutes. Uncover and bake 10–15 minutes more until bubbling and lightly browned. Rest 10 minutes; garnish with parsley.
Notes
Featured Comments
“Super easy and turned out amazing! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Impressed! Clear steps and turned out amazing results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“Super easy and so flavorful! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“New favorite here — so flavorful. wholesome was spot on.”
“New favorite here — family favorite. handheld was spot on.”
“New favorite here — turned out amazing. fluffy was spot on.”
“New favorite here — family favorite. crunchy was spot on.”
“New favorite here — will make again. charred was spot on.”
“Super easy and family favorite! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Made this last night and it was turned out amazing. Loved how the light came together.”
