This oven baked 4-ingredient sheet pan ham and pea fusilli is exactly the kind of weeknight comfort my family leans on. My brother threw it together for me once—using what he had in the fridge and pantry—and I’ve craved it every single day since. It’s a Midwestern-style baked pasta: simple pantry fusilli, salty diced ham, sweet peas, and a creamy sauce that bubbles and browns at the edges on a foil-lined sheet pan. No chopping, no roux, no separate pots; everything bakes together until the spirals are tender, the ham caramelizes, and the peas stay bright. It’s the sort of “how is this only four ingredients?” dish that quickly becomes part of your regular rotation.
Serve this ham and pea fusilli straight from the sheet pan while it’s still bubbling, with a simple green salad dressed in a sharp vinaigrette to cut through the richness. Warm crusty bread or garlic toast is lovely for scooping up the extra creamy sauce from the corners of the pan. A crisp white wine like Pinot Grigio or a light, hoppy beer pairs nicely, but iced tea or sparkling water with lemon works just as well for a family table. If you like, finish each serving with a grind of black pepper at the table to wake up the flavors without adding more ingredients to the base recipe.
Oven-Baked Sheet Pan Ham and Pea Fusilli
Servings: 4

Ingredients
8 ounces dry fusilli pasta
2 cups diced cooked ham (about 10 ounces), small cubes
1 1/2 cups frozen peas (no need to thaw)
3 cups heavy cream or half-and-half
Directions
Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Line a rimmed sheet pan with aluminum foil, making sure the foil comes up the sides to catch the creamy sauce and make cleanup easier.
Scatter the dry fusilli evenly over the foil-lined sheet pan in a single, fairly even layer. It’s fine if some pieces overlap, but try not to pile them too high in one spot so they cook evenly.
Sprinkle the diced ham evenly over the dry pasta, aiming for good coverage so each bite gets some caramelized ham. The small cubes will brown nicely on the exposed surfaces as the pasta bakes.
Distribute the frozen peas over the ham and pasta. They will thaw and cook in the oven, keeping their bright green color and adding sweetness to balance the salty ham and rich cream.
Slowly pour the heavy cream or half-and-half over the entire pan, moving in a zigzag pattern so it seeps down through the pasta. Gently tilt the pan back and forth to help the cream settle; most of the pasta should be at least partially submerged, with some tips poking out for texture.
Cover the sheet pan tightly with a second piece of foil, crimping the edges all around to trap steam. This helps the dry fusilli absorb the cream and cook through without boiling it separately.
Place the covered sheet pan on the middle rack of the preheated oven and bake for 25 minutes. During this stage, the pasta will soften, the peas will cook, and the ham will warm through in the creamy sauce.
After 25 minutes, carefully remove the top foil (watch for hot steam). Use a spoon to gently stir the pasta, ham, and peas, bringing any very dry pieces of fusilli down into the sauce so they can finish cooking.
Return the uncovered sheet pan to the oven and bake for another 12–15 minutes, or until the pasta is tender, the cream has thickened into a glossy sauce, and the ham edges are lightly caramelized. The surface should look bubbly with some golden spots around the edges.
Let the pan rest on a heatproof surface for 5–10 minutes before serving. The sauce will thicken slightly as it cools, clinging to the spirals. Serve straight from the sheet pan, scooping up plenty of ham, peas, and creamy sauce in each portion.
Variations & Tips
For a slightly lighter version, use half heavy cream and half low-sodium chicken broth, keeping the total liquid at about 3 cups so the pasta cooks properly. If you prefer more chew in the pasta, shave 3–4 minutes off the covered baking time and check for doneness earlier during the uncovered phase. To lean into smokiness, choose smoked ham or leftover holiday ham; the edges will caramelize beautifully and deepen the flavor. For extra peas, you can increase them to 2 cups without adjusting the liquid. If your sheet pan is very large and the pasta layer is thin, check a few minutes early to avoid overcooking. Conversely, if your pan is smaller and the pasta layer is deeper, add a splash more cream and bake a bit longer under foil before uncovering. You can also make this ahead: assemble everything on the foil-lined pan up to 2 hours in advance, cover, refrigerate, then bake straight from the fridge, adding 5–10 minutes to the covered baking time so the cream comes up to temperature. Finally, if you miss a bit of sharpness but want to keep the base recipe at four ingredients, finish individual portions with pantry staples like black pepper or a squeeze of lemon at the table rather than building them into the core dish.