My one-pan tuna pasta with capers, lemon and chilli. Ready in 15 minutes with almost no washing up and pantry ingredients you already have.
Tuna Pasta with Capers, Lemon and Chilli
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Category
Dinner
Servings
1
Prep time
5 minutes
Cook time
10 minutes
This is my go-to solo weeknight pasta. Fifteen minutes from start to finish, one pan, and every ingredient is either already in your pantry or a two-minute stop on the way home. Canned tuna, capers, lemon, chilli, garlic and parsley. That’s it. The whole thing hangs on cooking the pasta in the same pan we’ll build the sauce in, with just enough water to cover it, so the starchy cooking water becomes the base of the sauce. It’s the kind of meal you can throw together after work when the last thing you want is a sink full of dishes.

Tuna Pasta Explained
Use one pan
The trick to this recipe is cooking the pasta in the same pan you’ll build the sauce in, with about 500ml of water rather than the usual 3 or 4 litres. Less water means the starch coming off the pasta stays concentrated instead of being diluted, and that starchy water is what becomes your sauce. When you toss the pasta back in with the oil and tuna, the starch grabs onto the fat and lemon juice and turns into something creamy without any cream. Pasta water is often called “the tears of the gods” and this is why.
Build the sauce in stages
Once the pasta is cooked, scoop it out and drain most of the water off, but keep half a cup or so aside. Sauté the chilli and garlic in the pan with the olive oil for 30 seconds, then the drained tuna goes in gently. Don’t break it up. We want big flakes, not paste. The pasta comes back to the pan with the capers and a splash of the reserved starchy water, and you toss it all through until the liquid tightens into a glossy sauce that clings to every strand.
Lemon at the end
The lemon zest and juice go in off the heat, at the very end. Adding lemon juice while the pan’s still hot can dull the acid and make the flavour flat. Off the heat, the lemon stays bright and fresh, which is the whole point of this dish. Start with the juice of half the lemon, taste, and add more only if you want it sharper.

Ingredient Notes
Tuna in olive oil: I prefer tuna packed in olive oil because the oil adds richness to the sauce as it cooks. Look for a decent brand. Italian tuna in extra virgin is worth the extra couple of dollars for a dish this simple. If you’re avoiding the extra fat, tuna in spring water works too, just add an extra splash of olive oil to the pan to make up for it.
Capers: Small, briny and the punch this dish needs. Salt-packed capers have a purer, more concentrated flavour but need to be rinsed thoroughly before use. Brined capers straight from the jar are easier and work fine. Drain them but don’t rinse. That extra brine helps the sauce.
Lemon: Use an unwaxed lemon since we’re zesting it. The zest is where most of the perfume lives and it adds a lot of flavour to the dish. Wax on supermarket lemons can be scrubbed off under hot water if that’s all you can find, but unwaxed is better.
Equipment
Large frying pan (deep enough to hold the pasta and water)
Chopping board
Chef’s knife
Zester or microplane
Tongs
Small heatproof cup or jug (for the reserved pasta water)
Ingredients
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150g spaghetti or linguine
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500ml water (roughly, enough to half-fill the pan)
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sea salt, for the water and to taste
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1 can tuna in olive oil (around 95g drained)
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1 tbsp capers, drained
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1 lemon, zested and juiced
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½ long red chilli, finely diced (or ½ tsp dried chilli flakes)
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1 garlic clove, finely diced
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1½ tbsp good-quality olive oil
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2 sprigs flat-leaf parsley, leaves roughly sliced
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freshly cracked black pepper, to taste
Directions
Cook the pasta
Place a large frying pan over high heat. Add roughly 500ml of water (enough to half-fill the pan) and bring to a simmer. Season with a light pinch of salt.
Add the pasta and cook until al dente, around 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally to stop it sticking to the base of the pan.
While the pasta cooks, finely dice the chilli (seeds in or out depending on your spice preference). Crush and finely dice the garlic. Roughly slice the parsley leaves. Drain most of the oil off the tuna.
Once the pasta is al dente, use tongs to lift it out into a bowl. Reserve about ½ cup of the starchy cooking water in a heatproof cup or jug. Drain the rest and return the empty pan to the heat.
Build your sauce
Add the olive oil to the pan and let it warm for a few seconds. Add the chilli and garlic with a pinch of salt. Sauté for 30 seconds until fragrant. Add a little more oil if the pan feels dry.
Add the drained tuna and gently break it into a few large flakes with the back of a wooden spoon. Don’t over-mix, you want chunks not paste.
Return the pasta to the pan along with the capers and about ¼ cup of the reserved pasta water. Toss through until the water tightens into a glossy sauce that coats the strands. Add more pasta water in splashes if the sauce feels dry.
Finish and serve
Take the pan off the heat. Stir through the lemon zest and the juice of half the lemon. Taste and add more lemon juice, salt or pepper if needed.
Toss half of the parsley through the pasta. Plate up, garnish with the remaining parsley and a crack of black pepper. Serve immediately.
Recipe notes
Chef Tips
Add lemon off the heat
Lemon juice can go dull if it hits high heat for too long. Pull the pan off the burner before the zest and juice go in. The acid stays bright and fresh that way, and you actually taste the lemon rather than a vague sourness.
Don’t break up the tuna
Add the drained tuna gently and let it break naturally as you toss the pasta through. You want big flakes that you can see and taste in the finished dish, not a paste that disappears into the sauce. It looks better and eats better.
Storage
This dish is perfect for one-day meal prep. Double the recipe (in a bigger pan, or fall back to a normal pot with more water) and keep the second serve in an airtight container in the fridge for lunch the next day. Any longer than a day and the pasta dries out and loses its bounce. Reheat in the microwave with a splash of water or a drizzle of olive oil to loosen it back up. Don’t bother freezing.
FAQs
Can I scale this up? Yes, easily double it for 2 serves, but only add another cup or so of water when you cook the pasta, not double. Two people is about the practical limit for one pan though. For 3 or 4 servings, go back to a normal pasta pot with plenty of water.
Can I use a different pasta shape? Spaghetti and linguine are ideal because the long strands catch the sauce well. Fettuccine and bucatini also work. Short shapes like penne or rigatoni are fine too, just a bit harder to twirl. Stick to something with texture or a hollow that will hold the sauce.
Can I swap the tuna for something else? Yes. Canned salmon works well and gives a slightly richer result. Smoked chicken from the deli is another option if canned fish isn’t for you.
Can I make this without capers? The capers add a briny hit that’s tricky to replace. If you don’t have them, chopped green olives are the closest sub. Anchovies melted into the oil at the start of the sauce are another good option. They’ll give you the salt and umami but not the same texture.
Why cook the pasta in the pan instead of a separate pot? Concentrated starch. When you boil pasta in a large volume of water, the starch coming off the pasta gets diluted. In a smaller pan with less water, the starch builds up in the water and turns it into a natural sauce thickener. Toss it through the oil and lemon juice at the end and it emulsifies into something creamy (without using cream).