This baked feta pasta is the meal prep recipe I keep coming back to, and once you see those macros, you’ll understand why. Made with budget Greek-style cheese (just 75p!), smoky cooking bacon, and a tray of roasted veggies, it comes together in 45 minutes and gives you five generous portions to see you through the week. If you’re already a fan of high-protein meal prep like my creamy corn pasta, this feta pasta bake is going to become your new Sunday staple.

Table of Contents

Here’s what makes this feta pasta recipe worth making every week:
See the recipe card for full information on all ingredients and quantities.

Step 1: Preheat your oven to 200°C FAN. Add the cherry tomatoes, courgette, bacon and red pepper into a large baking tray and coat with extra virgin olive oil, Italian mixed herbs and a pinch of salt and pepper.

Step 2: Place the Greek-style cheese/feta on top then cover the tray with foil. Pop in the oven for 20 minutes, then remove the foil and cook for a further 20 minutes.

Step 3: During this time, cook your pasta according to packet instructions in heavily salted boiling water, reserving a mugful of pasta water before draining.

Step 4: When your oven timer goes off, remove 1/3 of the veg/bacon from the tray. Add 200ml of pasta water and stir/mash the feta to form the sauce. Pour the pasta into the tray and stir everything to combine. Divide into meal prep containers, then top with the reserved bacon/veg. Finish with a sprinkle of parsley and a crack of black pepper.

This baked feta pasta is a full meal in itself, but if you want to round things out, a crisp green salad on the side works brilliantly. If you’re building a week of meal prep, it pairs really nicely with lighter options alongside it, something like my Cajun steak salad for the days you want something fresher.
Or my pork tenderloin in the oven if you’re after another easy, oven-based dinner that reheats just as well. A slice of good bread to mop up any extra sauce is always a shout with this.
Refrigerator: Divide into five airtight containers and store in the fridge for up to 4 days. Keep the reserved veg and bacon separate if possible, and add it on top when reheating for the best texture.
Freezer: Yes, this baked feta pasta is freezable for up to 3 months. Freeze portions individually and defrost overnight in the fridge before reheating.
Reheat: Microwave for 2 minutes, adding a small splash of water before heating to loosen the sauce. Give it a stir halfway through.
Absolutely, and it’s one of the best pasta recipes for it. This baked feta pasta recipe makes five portions, stores in the fridge for up to 4 days, and reheats in minutes. The key is reserving a third of the roasted veg and bacon to top each box rather than mixing it all in, which keeps the texture much better after reheating. Add about 1-2 tbsp of water to the container before popping in the microwave to loosen the sauce slightly.
This usually comes down to not adding enough pasta water when mixing everything together, or using tomatoes with a high water content that haven’t had long enough in the oven to blister properly. Make sure your cherry tomatoes are fully jammy before you pull the tray out, and always add a good mugful of pasta water to bring the sauce together.
Yes, of course. Real feta works beautifully. The Greek-style cheese swap is purely to keep the budget down. It behaves the same way in the oven and gives you the same creamy, salty sauce for a fraction of the cost.
Short pasta shapes with ridges or tubes work best as they hold onto the sauce. Rigatoni, penne, and fusilli are all great choices. Avoid long pasta like spaghetti as it doesn’t combine as easily with the chunky veg and bacon.
The pasta will absorb more sauce as it sits, which can make it dense. Adding that splash of water when you reheat it loosens everything back up. Storing the reserved veg and bacon on top rather than mixed in also helps keep the texture better over the 4 days.
Yes. Leave it out and add a tin of chickpeas or some extra veg in its place. You’ll want to season a little more generously to compensate for the flavour the bacon brings, but it’s a solid vegetarian version of this feta pasta recipe.
If you tried this Baked Feta Pasta, it would mean so much to me if you could leave a review & a star rating to let me know how you found it! I love hearing about your experiences – it motivates me to keep creating more and more recipes for you guys 💛 Let’s get cooking! – Mimi x
