This 3-ingredient slow cooker golden cheese pasta using ditalini is the kind of set-it-and-forget-it comfort food that fits beautifully into a busy Sunday, especially when you’re heading out the door for morning Mass or errands. You stir three pantry-friendly ingredients together, walk away, and come home to a slow cooker full of velvety, spoonable pasta with a bubbly, golden-cheese top.
The texture lands somewhere between a loose mac and cheese and a creamy casserole, and the small ditalini shape makes it especially appealing to kids and picky eaters—my grandson licks his bowl clean every time. While there’s no grand historical origin here, it borrows from Midwestern-style baked macaroni and cheese and the hands-off ease of modern slow cooking, making it a practical, nostalgic dish for everyday family tables.
Serve this golden cheese pasta straight from the slow cooker while it’s hot and creamy, with that just-set, lightly browned top still intact. It pairs well with a simple green salad dressed in a sharp vinaigrette to cut through the richness, or with steamed or roasted vegetables like broccoli, green beans, or carrots.
For a heartier spread, offer it alongside roasted or grilled chicken, ham, or meatloaf. A basket of crusty bread or soft dinner rolls is great for scooping up the extra sauce, and if you drink wine, a light, crisp white such as Pinot Grigio or a dry rosé balances the cheese beautifully.
3-Ingredient Slow Cooker Golden Cheese Pasta
Servings: 6

If you’d like a slightly firmer, more casserole-style texture, cook closer to the 2 1/2-hour mark and let it rest a full 20 minutes on “keep warm” before serving. For a deeper golden top, you can carefully transfer the finished pasta to a broiler-safe dish, add a bit more cheese from your existing 3 cups if you reserved extra, and broil briefly until browned—just watch closely.
Ditalini is ideal because its small shape cooks evenly and holds sauce in every nook, but if you must substitute, use another small, hollow pasta like small elbows or small shells and check for doneness a bit early. To avoid grainy sauce, keep the heat on LOW and resist the urge to cook on HIGH; slow, gentle cooking keeps the cheese smooth. Leftovers reheat well with a splash of milk stirred in before warming on the stovetop or in the microwave, restoring that velvety texture.