The Curse of the 12-Ounce-Pasta Recipe [View all]

Trying to correctly portion pasta for those youre feeding is like trying to mathematically solve love. There is no right answer. A 4-ounce (quarter-pound) serving to one person will feel like a woefully insufficient 2 ounces to a voracious eater. Some guides recommend one-third pound (precooked) per person for a main course, a volume that may make the carb-conscious pass out. But theres one thing about pasta cooking that I think most of us out here in the home-kitchen trenches can agree on: Recipes that call for only 10 to 12 ouncesmany of them, as any home cook can attestinstead of the whole 16-ounce box seem designed to drive us crazy.
The 12-ounce-pasta problem is indeed one of the internets great food gripes, and to add insult to injury, recipe writers are keenly aware of their sins. Megan Ginsberg, over at Americas Test Kitchen, wrote dismissively about the situation a few years ago:
I have come to learn that it is infuriating to some people when recipes dont call for an entire 1-pound box of dried pasta. They get seriously bent out of shape about it. Are you one of those people? If so, I have to ask, what is so wrong about having partial boxes of pasta hanging around?
Well, heres the issue: These boxes arent just partially empty; theyre almost fully empty. Ten- and 12-ounce recipes leave an annoying remnant of noodles in the box. Its a pain-in-the-ass amount of pastaenough to awkwardly rattle around the now unsealed package, barely enough to make a meal. Whats more, if said opened box is not closed properly, sometimes those stiff strands or shapes spill out in tight cabinets, creating a mess and bringing curses down upon the haughty recipe writer.
https://slate.com/life/2025/06/food-recipe-cooking-perfect-pasta-dinner.html