This 5-ingredient slow cooker creamy poor man’s pasta is my go-to when I want dinner handled hours ahead while I’m running around prepping for the upcoming Easter weekend. As someone who’s usually juggling work emails, errands, and whatever else the week throws at me, I love having a dinner like this quietly doing its thing on the counter.
It’s built around budget-friendly pantry staples and tender curled pasta shapes that soak up a glossy, ultra-creamy, savory sauce. Think of it as a cross between mac and cheese and a cozy casserole, but with almost no effort: you dump, stir, walk away, and come back to a slow cooker full of steamy, golden, umami-rich goodness. It’s not fancy, just honest comfort food that stretches a few dollars into a big, satisfying meal for the whole family.
I like to scoop this creamy pasta into bowls and top it with a little extra black pepper and a sprinkle of dried herbs if I have them. It pairs well with a simple green salad or raw veggie plate (think carrot sticks, cucumbers, and cherry tomatoes) to add something fresh and crunchy alongside all that creaminess. Garlic bread, toast, or even buttered hamburger buns make a great, inexpensive side to mop up the extra sauce.
For Easter weekend prep days, I’ll often set out a bowl of this pasta on the counter buffet-style with a dish of frozen peas or leftover roasted veggies so everyone can add what they like and feed themselves while I focus on the holiday cooking.
5-Ingredient Slow Cooker Creamy Poor Man’s Pasta
Servings: 6

To keep this a true 5-ingredient, wallet-friendly base, I rely on pantry staples, but there are lots of ways to tweak it depending on what you have.
For extra protein without spending much, stir in 1 to 2 cups of cooked leftover chicken, ham, or crumbled sausage during the last 20 minutes of cooking so it can warm through. If you want to sneak in veggies, frozen peas, corn, or mixed vegetables can be folded in at the same time; they’ll thaw and heat quickly in the hot sauce.
For a stronger cheese flavor, swap half the cheddar for shredded mozzarella, Colby Jack, or whatever odds and ends you’re trying to use up in the fridge. If you only have water and bouillon cubes instead of broth, that works too—just dissolve the bouillon in hot water before adding. To make it vegetarian, use vegetable broth and a cream of celery or cream of mushroom soup made without meat.
If your slow cooker runs hot or you’re using a very small shape of pasta, start checking for doneness at 1 1/2 hours to avoid overcooking. Leftovers reheat well with a splash of milk stirred in to bring back that silky, glossy sauce.