The first time I made orecchiette with sausage and broccoli, I stood at my stove and watched the little pasta cups fill with crumbled sausage and tiny florets. It felt like magic. That was three years ago, and I still get that same satisfaction every single time.
My grandmother never wrote recipes down. She cooked by feel, by smell, by the sound of water hitting hot oil. When I finally nailed this dish, I understood what she meant. The broccoli turns almost sweet when it hits the rendered fat, and the pasta water creates this silky sauce without any cream.
This is the kind of weeknight dinner that feels like you tried harder than you actually did. If you want something richer on a cold night, I still make this creamy kielbasa smoked sausage pasta when I need extra comfort.
What You Need to Make This Recipe
You need four things that matter: orecchiette, because those little ears catch everything; Italian sausage with fennel, which perfumes the whole dish; broccoli cut into small florets, not chunks, so they cook fast and get slightly charred; and a good hunk of Pecorino. The cheese is non-negotiable. I learned that the hard way after trying Parmesan once and wondering why it felt flat. For another creamy twist using yogurt, I love this avocado Greek yogurt pasta when I want something lighter.

How to Make Orecchiette with Sausage and Broccoli
I start cold water boiling and immediately turn to my cutting board. The broccoli needs to be small, thumbnail-sized, so it cooks in the same time as the pasta. I crumble the sausage into a cold skillet, then turn the heat to medium. This lets the fat render slowly, and that smell, fennel hitting warm metal, is how I know dinner is going to be good.
When the sausage is browned and the broccoli hits that same pan, it sizzles aggressively. I add a splash of pasta water and cover it for two minutes. The broccoli steams and chars at the same time. I drain the orecchiette a full minute before the package says, because it finishes in the skillet with that starchy water and cheese. Everything emulsifies into a sauce that clings instead of pools. A similar technique works beautifully in this sausage broccolini pasta when I want a slightly more elegant version.
Pro Tips
Save more pasta water than you think you need. I grab a full two cups. The starch concentration is what makes the sauce silky, and you can always reduce it, but you cannot create it later.
Cut broccoli florets in half through the stem. Flat surfaces hit the hot pan and caramelize. Rounded surfaces steam. That browning adds depth you cannot get from boiling alone.
Let the sausage stick slightly before stirring. Those stuck bits dissolve into the pasta water and become the foundation of your sauce. I wait until I smell fond forming, about three minutes.
My Secret Trick: I toss the hot drained pasta with half the cheese in a separate bowl before adding it to the skillet. This creates a coating that helps the sauce adhere instead of sliding off into the plate.

How to Store Orecchiette with Sausage and Broccoli
- Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days. Glass preserves the texture better than plastic.
- Freeze individual portions in freezer bags with air pressed out for up to 2 months. The broccoli softens but the flavor holds.
- Reheat in a skillet with a splash of water over medium-low heat, stirring frequently, until just warmed through. The microwave makes the pasta gummy.
- Do not store with extra cheese on top. Add fresh Pecorino after reheating.
Nutritional Benefits
Orecchiette with sausage and broccoli delivers real substance without heaviness. The broccoli provides actual fiber and vitamin C that survives quick cooking, and the sausage fat helps your body absorb the fat-soluble nutrients in those florets. I skip the cream and butter because the emulsified pasta water does the work instead, which means I can eat a full bowl and not need a nap.

FAQs
Can I use a different pasta shape?
Small shapes with ridges or cups work best. Cavatelli and small shells catch the sausage and sauce similarly. Long noodles slide past everything and leave you chasing bits around your plate.
What if my broccoli turns mushy?
You cut pieces too large or cooked too long. Next time, go smaller than you think and pull a piece at four minutes to test. It should bend slightly but still snap when you bite.
Can I make this with turkey sausage?
Yes, but add a tablespoon of olive oil to the cold pan. Turkey sausage lacks the fat that renders and carries flavor. The dish works, but tastes leaner.
Why is my sauce watery instead of creamy?
The pasta water was not starchy enough, or you added too much at once. Next time, use less water and add it in splashes while tossing vigorously. The motion matters as much as the liquid.

Orecchiette with Sausage and Broccoli
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Meanwhile, remove sausage from casings and break into small pieces. Cut broccoli into florets no larger than 1 inch. Slice garlic thinly.
- Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add sausage and cook, breaking it up with a wooden spoon, until deeply browned and crispy in spots, about 8 minutes. Transfer to a plate, leaving the rendered fat in the pan.
- Add broccoli to the skillet with a pinch of salt. Cook undisturbed until charred in spots, about 4 minutes, then stir and continue cooking until nearly tender, 3 minutes more. Add garlic and red pepper flakes; cook 1 minute until fragrant.
- Salt the boiling water aggressively and add orecchiette. Cook 2 minutes less than package directions. Before draining, scoop out 1 cup of pasta water and set aside. Drain pasta.
- Add pasta to the skillet with broccoli. Pour in 3/4 cup pasta water and the remaining olive oil. Cook over medium heat, tossing constantly, until the water reduces to a glossy sauce that coats the pasta, about 2 minutes. Return sausage to the pan, add parmesan, and toss vigorously. Remove from heat.
- Divide among bowls. Squeeze fresh lemon over each portion and shower with more parmesan. Serve immediately.
Notes
Conclusion
This orecchiette with sausage and broccoli lives in my permanent rotation because it respects my time and still tastes like I cared. The little pasta cups filled with sausage and charred broccoli never get old. For another broccoli-forward dinner, try this simple broccoli pasta that skips the meat entirely. Make it once, and you will understand why I keep coming back.
