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A pasta bowl filled with cavatelli and pork ragu, topped with a dollop of whipped ricotta.
Cavatelli with pork ragu from Campana.
Jenny Kang

The Best Pasta Dishes in Portland

Hand-rolled tagliatelle, pillowy gnocchi, and more

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Cavatelli with pork ragu from Campana.
| Jenny Kang

At classic red sauce joints and modern Italian restaurants throughout Portland, chefs dedicate themselves to the art of making pasta. Whether restaurants extrude pasta dough or cut it by hand, it’s essential to pair noodles and various other pasta shapes with sauces that will best adhere to them. Cooks strive for the ideal al dente consistency, a balance of firm-yet-tender with a slight chew, so that Portlanders may tuck into bowls of toothsome pasta, keeping a side of bread at the ready to mop up sauce.

Below, you’ll find some of Portland’s most crave-worthy pasta dishes, enveloped in hearty ragus, tangy tomato-based sauces, or velvety cream sauces, and showcasing seasonal produce. Those looking for pizza or a wider breadth of Italian cuisine can find dedicated maps to each.

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Tagliatelle at Pastificio d’Oro

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Chef Chase Dopson hand makes his pasta the old-school way, using a mattarello, a three-foot-long Italian rolling pin, to smooth out dough. The small-batch nature of the restaurant means only two pastas are available nightly, making it doable for small groups to order the entire menu. Start with Maggie’s Salad, and order the tagliatelle — delicate ribbons of pasta entangled with a rich wild boar ragu or white wine-sauced mushrooms — if it’s on offer.

Cavatelli at Campana

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The cavatelli with pork ragu is a constant on Campana’s menu, built with an aromatic base of flavors typical to Tuscany, such as sofrito and rosemary. Owner George Kaden has refined the recipe over a decade, first workshopping the dish when he worked at New York City’s acclaimed Hearth. Kaden makes the cavatelli in-house with Pacific Northwestern flour while grinding pork shoulder and adding salumi trimmings to the ragu; the dish is finished with whipped ricotta and Parmigiano-Reggiano.

Squid ink spaghettini at Gumba

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Food cart-turned-restaurant Gumba prepares some of the most inventive pasta dishes in town, taking inspiration from Italian cuisine and adding Pacific Northwest ingredients. The restaurant’s squid ink spaghettini is a must-order — the dish has a citrusy heat and brims with scallops, Manila clams, and mussels, with a crumbly cheese frico topping it off. Daily specials are posted to the restaurant’s social media accounts in the afternoon.

Radiatori at Tartuca

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Couples and small parties hover over antipasti and pastas at this intimate scratch Italian restaurant, where giant slabs of focaccia sit at the end of the chef’s counter, waiting to be sliced to order. Menus here are dictated by what’s in season, but the radiatori is one of its fixtures. The pasta’s squiggly folds are perfectly suited to trap Bolognese, which is complemented with fresh torn basil and a dusting of Parmesan. Gluten-free pasta is available.

Pappardelle al cinghiale at Piazza Italia

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Diners at this laidback Pearl District trattoria sit under a ceiling festooned with football scarves to scarf down plates of thinly sliced prosciutto with arugula and fresh mozzarella and classic red sauce dishes like bucatini all’Amatriciana. Piazza Italia has a robust menu of pastas, but only its pappardelle is made in-house. Order the pappardelle al cinghiale, a pasta with wild boar meat sauce typical of Tuscany, or substitute fresh pappardelle in any other pasta dish for $3.

Spaghetti with garlic, chile, and clams at Luce

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Part-market, part-Italian restaurant, meals at this cozy Burnside spot are highly customizable by ordering dishes from each of the menu’s sections, starting with $2 antipasti and moving on to salads, pastas, protein specials, and sides. All pasta dishes are available by the half order, making it easy for solo diners and groups alike to try corzetti with walnut ricotta pesto, fettuccine with wild mushrooms, and cavatelli with arugula and pine nuts. Luce’s garlic chile spaghetti is a perennial favorite, available with sweet clams in the shell.

Pork belly mac and cheese at Grassa

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Pastas come and go from the menu at Rick Gencarelli’s fast-casual pasta chainlet, but the restaurant’s pork belly mac and cheese is a mainstay. Made with handcrafted lumache noodles, pieces of smoky pork belly kick the dish up to another level. The mac and cheese carries on its barbecue vibe with a touch of heat from jalapeños, red onion, and cornbread crumbs.

Tortelli al funghi at Mucca Osteria

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Downtown Italian restaurant Mucca Osteria has been serving house-made pasta since 2011. Menus, and therefore pasta offerings change on occasion, but the customer favorite tortelli al funghi is a mainstay. Chef Simone Savaiano smothers mushroom and ricotta-filled tortelli and Brussels sprouts in a white wine shallot cream sauce, and garnishes the dish with sliced almonds. Mucca also offers a customizable four-course prix fixe menu, with pastas available for the primi course.

Gnocchi at Nostrana

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On Thursdays, chef Cathy Whims observes the Roman tradition of gnocchi Thursday, swapping out Nostrana’s regular pasta dishes for hand-formed gnocchi specials. The soft, pillowy dumplings are comfort food at its finest, with variations including leek and pancetta, ragu di prosciutto, and saffron cream. Meatball fans should make a point to dine here on Mondays, when pork and chicken meatballs are served atop a bed of pasta or on wood-fired pizza.

Lobster agnolotti at a Cena Ristorante

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Since the late aughts, seafood lovers have headed to Sellwood’s main strip for this Italian restaurant’s signature agnolotti dish. Tender chunks of butter-poached Maine lobster are nestled among golden parcels of corn and mascarpone raviolini. Pair the decadent dish with wine from Piedmont, Tuscany, or Veneto.

Tagliatelle at Pastificio d’Oro

Chef Chase Dopson hand makes his pasta the old-school way, using a mattarello, a three-foot-long Italian rolling pin, to smooth out dough. The small-batch nature of the restaurant means only two pastas are available nightly, making it doable for small groups to order the entire menu. Start with Maggie’s Salad, and order the tagliatelle — delicate ribbons of pasta entangled with a rich wild boar ragu or white wine-sauced mushrooms — if it’s on offer.

Cavatelli at Campana

The cavatelli with pork ragu is a constant on Campana’s menu, built with an aromatic base of flavors typical to Tuscany, such as sofrito and rosemary. Owner George Kaden has refined the recipe over a decade, first workshopping the dish when he worked at New York City’s acclaimed Hearth. Kaden makes the cavatelli in-house with Pacific Northwestern flour while grinding pork shoulder and adding salumi trimmings to the ragu; the dish is finished with whipped ricotta and Parmigiano-Reggiano.

Squid ink spaghettini at Gumba

Food cart-turned-restaurant Gumba prepares some of the most inventive pasta dishes in town, taking inspiration from Italian cuisine and adding Pacific Northwest ingredients. The restaurant’s squid ink spaghettini is a must-order — the dish has a citrusy heat and brims with scallops, Manila clams, and mussels, with a crumbly cheese frico topping it off. Daily specials are posted to the restaurant’s social media accounts in the afternoon.

Radiatori at Tartuca

Couples and small parties hover over antipasti and pastas at this intimate scratch Italian restaurant, where giant slabs of focaccia sit at the end of the chef’s counter, waiting to be sliced to order. Menus here are dictated by what’s in season, but the radiatori is one of its fixtures. The pasta’s squiggly folds are perfectly suited to trap Bolognese, which is complemented with fresh torn basil and a dusting of Parmesan. Gluten-free pasta is available.

Pappardelle al cinghiale at Piazza Italia

Diners at this laidback Pearl District trattoria sit under a ceiling festooned with football scarves to scarf down plates of thinly sliced prosciutto with arugula and fresh mozzarella and classic red sauce dishes like bucatini all’Amatriciana. Piazza Italia has a robust menu of pastas, but only its pappardelle is made in-house. Order the pappardelle al cinghiale, a pasta with wild boar meat sauce typical of Tuscany, or substitute fresh pappardelle in any other pasta dish for $3.

Spaghetti with garlic, chile, and clams at Luce

Part-market, part-Italian restaurant, meals at this cozy Burnside spot are highly customizable by ordering dishes from each of the menu’s sections, starting with $2 antipasti and moving on to salads, pastas, protein specials, and sides. All pasta dishes are available by the half order, making it easy for solo diners and groups alike to try corzetti with walnut ricotta pesto, fettuccine with wild mushrooms, and cavatelli with arugula and pine nuts. Luce’s garlic chile spaghetti is a perennial favorite, available with sweet clams in the shell.

Pork belly mac and cheese at Grassa

Pastas come and go from the menu at Rick Gencarelli’s fast-casual pasta chainlet, but the restaurant’s pork belly mac and cheese is a mainstay. Made with handcrafted lumache noodles, pieces of smoky pork belly kick the dish up to another level. The mac and cheese carries on its barbecue vibe with a touch of heat from jalapeños, red onion, and cornbread crumbs.

Tortelli al funghi at Mucca Osteria

Downtown Italian restaurant Mucca Osteria has been serving house-made pasta since 2011. Menus, and therefore pasta offerings change on occasion, but the customer favorite tortelli al funghi is a mainstay. Chef Simone Savaiano smothers mushroom and ricotta-filled tortelli and Brussels sprouts in a white wine shallot cream sauce, and garnishes the dish with sliced almonds. Mucca also offers a customizable four-course prix fixe menu, with pastas available for the primi course.

Gnocchi at Nostrana

On Thursdays, chef Cathy Whims observes the Roman tradition of gnocchi Thursday, swapping out Nostrana’s regular pasta dishes for hand-formed gnocchi specials. The soft, pillowy dumplings are comfort food at its finest, with variations including leek and pancetta, ragu di prosciutto, and saffron cream. Meatball fans should make a point to dine here on Mondays, when pork and chicken meatballs are served atop a bed of pasta or on wood-fired pizza.

Lobster agnolotti at a Cena Ristorante

Since the late aughts, seafood lovers have headed to Sellwood’s main strip for this Italian restaurant’s signature agnolotti dish. Tender chunks of butter-poached Maine lobster are nestled among golden parcels of corn and mascarpone raviolini. Pair the decadent dish with wine from Piedmont, Tuscany, or Veneto.

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