Sausage and Zucchini Skillet

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Servings 4–6 people

Browned sausage, golden zucchini, and burst cherry tomatoes turn this skillet dinner into the kind of meal that disappears fast. The pan sauce picks up all the good browned bits from the sausage, then the tomatoes soften just enough to coat everything without turning watery. It tastes like more work than it is, which is exactly why it ends up on repeat.

The trick here is giving each ingredient its own moment in the pan. The sausage needs to brown hard so the edges get crisp and the drippings flavor the vegetables. The zucchini goes in after the onion, not before, so it can caramelize instead of steaming into softness. A quick burst of garlic, Italian seasoning, and red pepper flakes at the end keeps the whole skillet bright and savory.

You’ll find a few small details below that matter: how to keep zucchini from going limp, what to swap if you only have chicken sausage, and how to reheat the leftovers without losing the texture that makes this dish work.

The sausage got that deep browned crust and the zucchini stayed tender with just a little bite. I loved that the tomatoes burst into the garlic sauce instead of making everything watery.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save this sausage and zucchini skillet for a fast one-pan dinner with browned sausage, golden zucchini, and burst tomatoes.

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The Reason the Zucchini Stays Golden Instead of Going Soft

Most skillet dinners go wrong when the vegetables get crowded too early. Zucchini gives off a lot of moisture, and if the pan isn’t hot enough, it steams before it browns. Here the sausage comes out first, which leaves behind seasoned fat and enough heat to start the onion and zucchini on contact.

The other mistake is cutting the zucchini too thin. Half-inch rounds hold their shape, pick up color on the cut sides, and still finish tender in the center. If your skillet looks crowded, cook the zucchini in two batches. A packed pan gives you pale slices and watery tomatoes.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Sausage and Zucchini Skillet browned savory one-pan
  • Italian sausage — This is the backbone of the skillet. Hot sausage adds heat, mild sausage keeps it gentler, and either one should be browned in full contact with the pan so the edges caramelize. If you use chicken sausage, pick a fully cooked link and still brown it well for texture.
  • Zucchini — Fresh, firm zucchini matters here because old zucchini turns watery fast. Slice it into half-inch rounds so it can brown before it collapses. Yellow squash works in the same amount if that’s what you have.
  • Cherry tomatoes — These bring the sauce without needing extra liquid. Halving them lets the cut side blister and collapse into the pan quickly. Bigger tomatoes can work, but they need more time and usually release more juice than you want.
  • Parmesan — This is the salty finish that ties everything together. Grated parmesan melts lightly over the hot skillet and adds a savory edge. The pre-grated kind is fine here if that’s what’s in the fridge, though freshly grated gives a cleaner finish.
  • Fresh basil — Add it at the end so it stays fragrant instead of turning dark and dull. If you skip it, the dish still works, but the basil lifts the whole pan and keeps the sausage from tasting heavy.

How to Build the Skillet Without Losing the Texture

Brown the Sausage First

Heat the oil in a large cast iron skillet until it shimmers, then add the sausage rounds in a single layer. Let them sit long enough to form a deep brown crust before turning them, about 3 to 4 minutes per side. If they stick at first, they’re not ready to release yet. Pull them out once they’re browned; they’ll finish later in the pan and keep their texture better than if they stay in the skillet the whole time.

Give the Zucchini Space to Color

Cook the onion until it softens, then add the zucchini and leave it alone long enough for the cut sides to take on color. The goal is golden patches, not mush. If the pan looks wet, the heat is too low or the skillet is overcrowded, and the zucchini will soften before it browns. Keep the slices moving only after they’ve picked up some color.

Finish with Tomatoes, Garlic, and Herbs

Garlic goes in late because it burns fast. Stir it with the Italian seasoning and red pepper flakes just until fragrant, then add the tomatoes so they can burst and loosen the browned bits on the bottom of the pan. Return the sausage once the tomatoes start to collapse, toss everything together, and finish with parmesan and basil while the skillet is still hot. That’s what gives you a glossy, savory finish instead of a dry pile of vegetables and sausage.

Three Ways to Adjust This Skillet for What You Have

Make It Dairy-Free

Leave off the parmesan or use a dairy-free alternative at the end. The skillet still has enough salt and richness from the sausage drippings and tomatoes to taste complete. Without the cheese, the finish is a little cleaner and the vegetables stand out more.

Use Chicken or Turkey Sausage

Chicken or turkey sausage works well if you want a lighter skillet, but it usually gives less fat and less pan flavor. Add a touch more oil if the pan looks dry, and brown the slices well so they don’t taste flat. Smoked chicken sausage will taste different from Italian pork sausage, but it still makes a solid one-pan dinner.

Add More Vegetables Without Making It Watery

Bell peppers, mushrooms, or spinach fit in well, but add them with the right timing. Mushrooms need the most time to brown, peppers can go in with the onion, and spinach should be stirred in at the very end so it just wilts. The more vegetables you add, the more important it is not to crowd the pan.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The zucchini softens a bit as it sits, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: This isn’t a great freezer meal because zucchini turns mushy after thawing. If you need to freeze it, expect a softer texture and use it in a cooked dish rather than serving it as-is.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium heat until warmed through. The microwave works in a pinch, but it pushes the zucchini past the point where it stays pleasant.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use pre-cooked sausage? +

Yes, and it works well. Brown the slices just enough to get color on the edges, then pull them out and proceed with the vegetables. Pre-cooked sausage won’t give you as much drippings, so add a little extra olive oil if the skillet looks dry.

How do I keep the zucchini from getting mushy? +

Use firm zucchini and cut it into thick rounds. Cook it over medium-high heat so it browns before it softens, and don’t crowd the pan. If your zucchini is especially large or seedy, scoop out the center a little before slicing.

Can I make this sausage and zucchini skillet ahead of time? +

You can cook it a few hours ahead and reheat it later, but the zucchini will soften a little as it sits. For the best texture, reheat it in a skillet instead of the microwave so the sausage and vegetables warm evenly. If you want to prep ahead, slice the vegetables and sausage first, then cook everything close to serving.

How do I stop the garlic from burning in the skillet? +

Add the garlic after the onion and zucchini have already had time to soften, and keep it in the pan for only about 30 seconds. Garlic burns fast in a hot skillet, especially after sausage browning, so it needs to go in late. If the pan is smoking, lower the heat for a moment before adding it.

Can I use yellow squash instead of zucchini? +

Yes. Yellow squash behaves almost the same way, so you can swap it in one-for-one. It softens a little faster than some zucchini, so keep an eye on the pan and pull it off the heat once the slices are tender with browned edges.

Sausage and Zucchini Skillet

Sausage and zucchini skillet is an easy one-pan weeknight dinner with deeply browned Italian sausage and golden zucchini coins in a garlic herb pan sauce. You’ll get burst cherry tomatoes and a finishing layer of parmesan and basil served straight from the cast iron.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

Italian sausage
  • 1 lb Italian sausage (hot or mild) Sliced into 1/2-inch rounds.
Vegetables and aromatics
  • 3 zucchini Sliced into 1/2-inch rounds.
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes Halved.
  • 1 onion Diced.
  • 4 garlic Minced.
Seasonings
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning
  • 0.25 tsp red pepper flakes
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 0.25 salt and black pepper To taste (use as needed during cooking).
Topping
  • 0.25 cup parmesan cheese Grated.
  • 1 fresh basil For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Brown the sausage
  1. Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large cast iron skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering.
  2. Add Italian sausage rounds and cook 3–4 minutes per side until deeply browned; remove and set aside.
Cook the vegetables
  1. In the same skillet, cook diced onion for 2–3 minutes until softened.
  2. Add zucchini rounds and cook 4–5 minutes until golden on the cut sides.
Build the garlic herb sauce
  1. Add minced garlic, Italian seasoning, and red pepper flakes and cook 30 seconds, stirring, until fragrant.
  2. Stir in halved cherry tomatoes and cook 2 minutes until they begin to burst.
Finish and serve
  1. Return the browned sausage to the pan, toss everything together, and season with salt and black pepper to taste.
  2. Top with grated parmesan and fresh basil, then serve directly from the skillet.

Notes

Pro tip: get a true deep-brown sear on the sausage before removing it—those browned bits in the cast iron drive the flavor of the garlic herb sauce. Store leftovers in the fridge up to 3 days; reheat in the skillet over medium heat until hot. Freezing isn’t recommended because zucchini can soften too much. For a lighter option, use mild turkey sausage instead of Italian sausage and keep the same cooking steps.

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