This 4-ingredient slow cooker creamy garlic shrimp pasta is exactly the kind of Sunday dinner you can set before church and come home to feeling like you hired a private chef. It leans on simple grocery store staples and a dump-and-go method, but the end result tastes like an elegant white-tablecloth meal: tender shell pasta catching every bit of velvety garlic cream sauce and plump pink shrimp on top. It’s perfect for busy weekends when you want to spoil Mom (or yourself) without anyone having to lift a finger once you walk back through the door.
Serve this creamy garlic shrimp shell pasta in warm shallow bowls so the sauce stays silky. A simple green salad with a lemony vinaigrette helps balance the richness, and a side of steamed broccoli or roasted asparagus looks pretty and feels special without much extra work. Add warm crusty bread or garlic toast for dipping into the extra sauce, and if you like, finish each plate with a sprinkle of black pepper and a squeeze of fresh lemon. A chilled glass of white wine, sparkling water with lime, or iced tea fits the relaxed Sunday vibe.
Slow Cooker Creamy Garlic Shrimp Shell Pasta
Servings: 6

Ingredients
1 pound medium raw shrimp, peeled and deveined (tails removed for easier eating)
12 ounces small shell pasta (dry, uncooked)
4 cups jarred creamy garlic Alfredo sauce (about 2 standard 15–16 oz jars)
2 cups low-sodium chicken broth
Directions
Lightly spray the inside of a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker with nonstick cooking spray for easier cleanup.
Pour the dry shell pasta into the bottom of the slow cooker and spread it into an even layer so it cooks evenly.
In a large bowl or measuring pitcher, whisk together the creamy garlic Alfredo sauce and the chicken broth until smooth and fully combined. This thins the sauce so the pasta can cook properly.
Pour the garlic cream mixture over the dry pasta in the slow cooker, pressing down lightly with a spoon so all the shells are mostly submerged in liquid.
Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on LOW for 2 to 2 1/2 hours, stirring once around the 1 1/2-hour mark if you’re home. The pasta should be just tender but not mushy before you add the shrimp.
When the pasta is nearly done (al dente with a slight bite), quickly stir in the raw peeled and deveined shrimp, making sure they are tucked down into the hot sauce and pasta so they cook evenly.
Cover the slow cooker again and continue cooking on LOW for 20 to 30 minutes, just until the shrimp are opaque and pink and the pasta is fully tender. Avoid overcooking or the shrimp can become rubbery.
Once cooked, give everything a gentle stir to coat the shells and shrimp in the creamy garlic sauce. If the sauce seems too thick, stir in a splash of warm water or extra broth; if it’s too loose, let it sit with the lid off for 5 to 10 minutes to thicken.
Taste and adjust seasoning if desired (the Alfredo and broth are usually salty enough), then spoon the creamy garlic shrimp pasta into warm bowls and serve immediately.
Variations & Tips
To keep this recipe truly effortless and still elegant, you can play with the four core ingredients while staying within the same structure. For a slightly lighter version, use one jar of creamy garlic Alfredo sauce and one jar of a lighter Alfredo or a garlic Parmesan cooking sauce, keeping the total to about 4 cups. If you prefer a stronger garlic flavor, choose an extra-garlicky Alfredo or add a small splash of garlic broth in place of some of the chicken broth (still keeping the total liquid to about 6 cups). You can also swap the chicken broth for vegetable broth if you’d like to avoid poultry. If your family loves spice, serve with crushed red pepper flakes at the table instead of mixing them into the slow cooker, so everyone can customize their own bowl. For a slightly fancier presentation that still fits the “no one has to lift a finger” goal, garnish the finished pasta with a little chopped fresh parsley and grated Parmesan right before serving—these don’t change the core four ingredients but make the dish look restaurant-ready.
Food safety tips: Always start with fully thawed, cold shrimp—do not cook shrimp from frozen in the slow cooker, as it can stay too long at an unsafe temperature. Keep the shrimp refrigerated until you’re ready to add them in the last 20 to 30 minutes of cooking. Make sure the shrimp are peeled and deveined, and discard any with an off smell or slimy texture. Once the shrimp are opaque and pink all the way through, turn off the slow cooker or switch it to warm; prolonged holding on high heat can overcook seafood and may affect quality. Refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours in shallow containers, and reheat gently on the stovetop or in the microwave until steaming hot, adding a splash of broth or water if the sauce thickens too much.