Loaded Bacon Cheeseburger Pasta

Loading…

By Reading time

Pasta coated in a velvety cheddar sauce with crispy bacon, seasoned ground beef, and a little tang from ketchup and mustard hits that cheeseburger craving in the most practical way possible. It eats like comfort food, but it cooks in one skillet and lands on the table with the same bold, savory bite you’d expect from a loaded burger.

The trick is building the flavor in layers instead of just stirring cheese into noodles and hoping for the best. Bacon drippings season the beef, the onion softens into the base, and the ketchup, mustard, and Worcestershire give the sauce that unmistakable burger-house taste before the cheese ever goes in. The pasta simmers right in the broth and milk, which means it absorbs flavor instead of tasting like plain noodles under sauce.

Below, I’m walking through the small details that keep the sauce creamy, what to do if you want it a little lighter or a little spicier, and the reheating method that keeps leftovers from turning gluey.

The pasta cooked right in the sauce and stayed tender without getting mushy, and the cheddar melted into this smooth, burger-style sauce that my kids kept asking for seconds of.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Love the bacon, beef, and cheddar combo? Save this Loaded Bacon Cheeseburger Pasta for the nights when you want burger flavor in a creamy one-pan dinner.

Save to Pinterest

The Creamy Sauce Stays Smooth When the Cheese Goes In Last

The most common mistake in a pasta skillet like this is adding cheese while the pan is still boiling hard. That’s how you end up with a grainy sauce or one that turns oily at the edges. Once the pasta is tender and the liquid has thickened, pull the pan off the heat before stirring in the cheddar. The residual warmth is enough to melt it into a smooth, glossy sauce without breaking it.

The other thing that matters is letting the pasta cook directly in the broth and milk. That does two jobs at once: it seasons the noodles from the inside out, and it releases just enough starch to help the sauce cling. If the pan looks a little loose before the cheese goes in, that’s fine. It tightens as the cheddar melts and sits for a minute.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Skillet

Loaded Bacon Cheeseburger Pasta, cheesy, bacon-studded, creamy
  • Ground beef — This is the savory backbone of the dish. An 80/20 blend gives the best flavor, but leaner beef works too as long as you don’t skip draining the excess fat after browning.
  • Bacon — The bacon adds smoky depth and crisp texture on top. Reserve a little drippings for cooking the beef; that’s where a lot of the burger flavor starts.
  • Ketchup, yellow mustard, and Worcestershire sauce — This is the cheeseburger flavor trio. Ketchup adds sweetness and body, mustard brings the tang, and Worcestershire adds the savory edge that makes the sauce taste like more than just cheese and meat.
  • Sharp cheddar — Use a block and shred it yourself if you can. Pre-shredded cheese often has anti-caking starches that can make the sauce less silky, especially in a skillet dish like this.
  • Rotini or penne — Short pasta catches the sauce in all the ridges and curves. Long pasta doesn’t hold up as well here, and smaller shapes can overcook before the sauce thickens.
  • Beef broth and milk — The broth seasons the pasta while it cooks, and the milk gives the sauce its creamy base. If you need to lighten it up, use low-fat milk, but don’t swap in all water or the sauce will taste flat.

Building the Cheeseburger Flavor Before the Pasta Softens

Crisping the Bacon First

Cook the bacon until it’s fully crisp, not just limp and browned. You want pieces that stay crunchy after they’re sprinkled over the finished pasta, because they lose a little texture once they hit the warm sauce. Save about a tablespoon of the drippings in the pan; that’s enough to season the beef without making the dish greasy.

Cooking the Beef in the Burger Base

Brown the beef with the onion in the bacon drippings until the meat is no longer pink and the onion has gone soft around the edges. Drain off any excess fat before adding the garlic, or the final sauce can end up slick instead of creamy. Stir in the garlic for just 30 seconds; any longer and it can turn bitter once the liquid goes in.

Simmering the Pasta in the Sauce

Once the ketchup, mustard, Worcestershire, pasta, broth, and milk are in the pan, bring it to a boil and then settle it into a steady simmer with the lid on. Stir every few minutes so the pasta doesn’t stick to the bottom, especially near the end when the liquid gets low. If the pan looks dry before the pasta is tender, add a splash of broth or milk rather than turning up the heat.

Finishing With Cheese and Toppings

When the pasta is tender, take the pan off the heat and stir in the cheddar until the sauce turns smooth and coats the noodles. If it looks thick at first, give it a minute; cheddar often relaxes into the sauce as it sits. Top with bacon crumbles and pickle chips right before serving so you get that burger-shop contrast of creamy, salty, and sharp.

How to Tweak It Without Losing the Burger Feel

Make it lighter without losing the creamy finish

Use lean ground beef and low-fat milk, but keep the cheddar sharp so the flavor doesn’t get dull. The texture will be a touch less rich, but the sauce still comes together if you don’t rush the final melt.

Make it gluten-free with a pasta swap

Use your favorite gluten-free short pasta and watch the liquid closely, because some versions soften faster than wheat pasta. Start checking a minute or two early so it doesn’t turn soft before the sauce thickens.

Add a little heat

A pinch of red pepper flakes with the garlic or a few dashes of hot sauce in the liquid gives the dish a spicy burger-joint edge. Don’t overdo it; this works best when the heat sits in the background and doesn’t drown out the ketchup-mustard balance.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The pasta will absorb more sauce as it sits, so it gets thicker by day two.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the sauce can separate a little after thawing. For the best texture, freeze only if you don’t mind a slightly looser, less creamy finish.
  • Reheating: Warm it gently on the stove or in the microwave with a splash of milk or broth. High heat dries out the pasta and can make the cheese turn grainy, so reheat just until hot.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use a different pasta shape?+

Yes. Any short pasta with some ridges or curves works well, like shells, cavatappi, or farfalle. Just keep an eye on the liquid level, because different shapes cook at slightly different speeds and some absorb more broth than others.

How do I keep the cheese sauce from getting grainy?+

Take the pan off the heat before stirring in the cheddar. Cheese melts smoothly in residual heat, but direct boiling can cause it to seize or separate. Shred the cheese yourself if you can, because pre-shredded cheese is often coated with starch that makes the sauce less smooth.

Can I make this ahead of time?+

You can cook it a day ahead, but it thickens as it sits. Reheat it with a splash of milk or broth and stir gently over low heat until the sauce loosens again. I’d wait to add the bacon topping until just before serving so it stays crisp.

How do I make it taste more like a real cheeseburger?+

Don’t skip the mustard and Worcestershire, because those two ingredients are doing a lot of the burger-style work. Pickle chips on top add the sharp finish that makes the whole bowl taste like a loaded cheeseburger instead of just cheesy beef pasta.

Can I leave out the bacon?+

Yes, but you’ll lose some of the smoky depth that gives the dish its loaded burger feel. If you skip it, add a little extra salt and a touch more Worcestershire so the sauce doesn’t taste flat.

Loaded Bacon Cheeseburger Pasta

Loaded bacon cheeseburger pasta is a one-pot ground beef pasta skillet with crispy bacon and a velvety cheddar sauce. Tender rotini or penne simmers in beef broth and milk, then gets finished with melted sharp cheddar and classic cheeseburger flavorings like ketchup, mustard, and Worcestershire.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 730

Ingredients
  

ground beef
  • 1 lb ground beef
bacon
  • 6 slices bacon cooked and crumbled
onion
  • 1 onion small, diced
garlic
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
ketchup
  • 2 tbsp ketchup
yellow mustard
  • 1 tbsp yellow mustard
Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
pasta
  • 2 cup pasta rotini or penne, uncooked
beef broth
  • 2.5 cup beef broth
milk
  • 1 cup milk
salt and pepper
  • 1 salt and pepper to taste
sharp cheddar cheese
  • 2 cup sharp cheddar cheese shredded
pickle chips
  • 1 pickle chips for topping

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Cook bacon
  1. Cook the bacon in a skillet until crispy, then crumble it and set aside. Reserve 1 tablespoon of the bacon drippings in the pan for browning.
Brown beef and build the cheeseburger base
  1. Brown the ground beef with the diced onion in the same skillet using the reserved bacon drippings. Drain excess fat, then add the minced garlic and cook for 30 seconds while stirring.
  2. Stir in ketchup, yellow mustard, Worcestershire sauce, pasta, beef broth, and milk with salt and pepper, then bring the mixture to a boil. Keep stirring until the pasta is evenly submerged.
Simmer and finish
  1. Cover and cook on medium heat for 12–14 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the pasta is tender. Look for a thickened sauce that clings to the noodles.
  2. Remove from heat and stir in shredded sharp cheddar until melted and creamy. The sauce should look smooth and glossy with no dry cheese streaks.
  3. Top the pasta with bacon crumbles and pickle chips before serving. Add the pickles last for a bright tang and crunchy bite.

Notes

For a smoother cheddar sauce, add cheese off-heat and stir until fully melted before topping. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 4 days in a covered container; reheat gently with a splash of milk or broth to loosen the sauce. Freezing is not recommended because the dairy sauce can separate after thawing. For a lighter option, use lean ground beef (90% lean) and swap whole milk for 2% milk.

Loved this recipe?

Save it to Pinterest for later or print a clean copy for your kitchen.

Save to Pinterest

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating