Trending viral Feta baked pasta recipe made of cherry tomatoes, feta cheese, garlic, and herbs in a casserole dish. Great sauce for rigatoni or penne.

Baked Feta Pasta: How to Make the Internet’s Most Famous Recipe (And Then Make It Better)

Healthy Fact of the Day

Baked feta pasta is more balanced than it looks. Feta is actually lower in calories and fat than most hard cheeses, and the cherry tomatoes bring in a solid hit of lycopene and vitamin C. To lighten the dish further, use a whole grain or legume-based pasta — the sauce is rich enough that you won't notice the swap. And don't skip the fresh basil at the end — it's not just garnish, it adds brightness that keeps the dish from feeling too heavy.

Why This One Still Holds Up

Baked feta pasta went viral in early 2021 and caused a genuine feta shortage in Finland. That’s the level of impact we’re talking about. A few years later, the trend has faded but the recipe hasn’t — because it works. A block of feta baked in a sea of cherry tomatoes becomes a creamy, tangy, deeply savory sauce with almost no effort. Here’s how to make it correctly, and a few ways to make it even better.

What Makes It Work

The magic is in the bake. The feta softens and becomes almost spreadable, the tomatoes burst and caramelize at the edges, and the olive oil ties everything together into a sauce that looks like it took skill to produce. The key is using a full block of feta — not crumbled — and giving everything enough oven time to really collapse and meld.

The Base Recipe

What you need:

  • 1 block of feta cheese (7–8 oz)
  • 2 pints of cherry tomatoes
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 4 cloves of garlic, smashed
  • Red pepper flakes, salt, and black pepper
  • 10 oz pasta (rigatoni or penne work best)
  • Fresh basil to finish

How to make it: Place the block of feta in the center of a baking dish. Surround it with cherry tomatoes and smashed garlic. Drizzle everything generously with olive oil and season with red pepper flakes, salt, and pepper. Bake at 400°F for 35–40 minutes, until the tomatoes have burst and the feta is golden on top. Meanwhile, cook your pasta and reserve a cup of pasta water. Remove the baking dish from the oven, smash everything together with a fork, and toss with the hot pasta. Add pasta water as needed to loosen the sauce.

Three Variations Worth Trying

Spicy Calabrian Chili Version Swap red pepper flakes for a tablespoon of Calabrian chili paste mixed into the olive oil before baking. It adds a deeper, fruitier heat that plays really well against the tangy feta.

Roasted Garlic and Spinach Version Add a full head of garlic (top sliced off, drizzled with oil) to the baking dish alongside the feta. When it comes out of the oven, squeeze the roasted cloves into the sauce. Stir in two big handfuls of fresh spinach while the pasta is still hot — it wilts right in.

Sun-Dried Tomato and Olive Version Add a handful of sun-dried tomatoes and sliced Kalamata olives to the baking dish before it goes in the oven. The result is briny, rich, and more complex than the original — closer to a Mediterranean pasta than a simple tomato sauce.

Your Grocery List

  • Block feta cheese (not crumbled)
  • Cherry tomatoes (2 pints)
  • Olive oil
  • Garlic
  • Red pepper flakes
  • Rigatoni or penne pasta
  • Fresh basil
  • Calabrian chili paste (for variation)
  • Fresh spinach (for variation)
  • Sun-dried tomatoes + Kalamata olives (for variation)

The Bottom Line

Baked feta pasta earned its moment on the internet — and it’s one of the few viral recipes that holds up completely outside of it. Twenty minutes of hands-on time, one baking dish, and dinner is handled. Make the base once, then start riffing.

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Whether you're roasting a chicken, grilling steak, or baking pork tenderloin, letting cooked meat rest for 5–10 minutes before slicing allows the juices to redistribute evenly. This simple step keeps your meat juicy and tender, ensuring every bite is flavorful and moist. Bonus: It gives you a moment to plate your sides or garnish for a perfect presentation!

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