Garlic Steak Tortellini

Category: Dinner Recipes

Garlic steak tortellini hits that sweet spot between weeknight fast and dinner-that-feels-special. You get tender seared steak, cheese-filled pasta, and a glossy garlic butter sauce that clings to every bite instead of pooling sadly in the bottom of the bowl. The whole dish comes together in one skillet after the tortellini is cooked, which keeps the sauce rich and the steak from turning tough.

The key is cooking the steak hot and fast, then getting the garlic into the pan only after the heat comes down. That keeps the butter from scorching and gives the sauce a clean, savory garlic flavor instead of a bitter one. A little beef broth loosens the pan and pulls up the browned bits from the steak, while cream and parmesan give the sauce enough body to coat the tortellini without turning heavy.

Below you’ll find the timing that keeps the steak juicy, the ingredient choices that matter most, and a few smart swaps if you want to adjust the dish without losing what makes it work.

The sauce coated the tortellini beautifully, and the steak stayed tender because I pulled it out while it was still pink inside. My husband kept going back for “just one more bowl.”

★★★★★— Laura P.

Save this garlic steak tortellini for the nights when you want seared steak, cheesy pasta, and a garlicky butter sauce in one skillet.

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The Trickiest Part Is Keeping the Steak Tender

Steak goes from juicy to chewy fast if it sits too long in a hot pan. For this recipe, the steak only needs a short sear to build color and flavor. Once it’s browned, it comes out of the skillet while you build the sauce, then goes back in at the very end just long enough to warm through.

Cutting the steak thin against the grain matters more than almost anything else here. Shorter muscle fibers mean each bite stays tender even after it gets tossed with the tortellini. If you slice with the grain, the sauce can be perfect and the steak will still eat tough.

  • Sear quickly: High heat gives you browning before the inside overcooks.
  • Rest briefly: A short pause off the heat keeps the juices in the steak instead of spilling into the pan.
  • Add it back last: The final toss is for coating and warming, not cooking the steak through a second time.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Garlic Steak Tortellini, cheesy, garlicky, rich
  • Sirloin steak: Sirloin gives you a good balance of tenderness and flavor without the cost of a more premium cut. Slice it thin against the grain so it stays soft after the final toss. If you swap in flank steak, keep the sear fast and the slices very thin.
  • Refrigerated cheese tortellini: Fresh or refrigerated tortellini cooks quickly and keeps a light, tender bite that works well with the sauce. Shelf-stable tortellini will work, but it usually needs a little more time and can taste heavier.
  • Butter: Butter carries the garlic and gives the sauce its silky finish. Splitting it between the steak and the sauce helps you get a proper sear first, then a rich pan sauce after.
  • Beef broth and cream: The broth lifts the browned bits from the pan and keeps the sauce from feeling one-note, while the cream gives it body. If you skip the cream, the sauce will taste thinner and won’t cling the same way.
  • Parmesan: Grated parmesan thickens the sauce slightly and brings the salty finish that ties everything together. Use finely grated cheese for the smoothest melt.

The 20 Minutes That Matter Most

Boiling the Tortellini First

Cook the tortellini in well-salted water until it floats and tastes tender but still has a little bite. Drain it promptly so it doesn’t sit and over-soften while you finish the skillet. If it goes a little soft, it will still work, but it won’t hold the sauce as neatly.

Getting a Real Sear on the Steak

Heat the skillet until it’s hot enough that the butter foams right away. Add the steak in a single layer and leave it alone long enough to brown before turning. If the pan is crowded, the steak will steam instead of sear, and you’ll lose the deep savory flavor that makes the dish taste finished.

Building the Garlic Butter Sauce

Once the steak is out, lower the heat before adding the garlic. One minute is plenty; you want it fragrant and barely golden, not brown. Pour in the broth to stop the garlic from cooking too far, then add the cream and simmer until the sauce lightly coats the back of a spoon.

Finishing Everything Together

Return the steak and tortellini to the skillet, then add the parmesan and Italian seasoning. Toss just until everything is coated and hot. If the sauce looks tight, a splash of broth loosens it; if it looks thin, let it bubble for another minute before serving.

How to Adapt This for a Smaller Stove, a Lighter Plate, or a Dairy-Free Table

Dairy-Free Version

Use a plant-based butter and swap the cream for full-fat coconut milk or an unsweetened oat cooking cream. The sauce will still coat the pasta, but it won’t taste as sharp and savory as the original because parmesan is carrying part of the finish. Add a little extra salt and a touch more broth if the sauce tastes flat.

Gluten-Free Swap

Use gluten-free cheese tortellini if you can find it, and check that your broth is certified gluten-free. The rest of the recipe already fits naturally. Keep an eye on the pasta in the pot, since gluten-free versions often go from firm to soft faster than regular tortellini.

Flank Steak Instead of Sirloin

Flank steak works if that’s what you have, but it needs to be sliced extra thin across the grain and cooked fast. It has more chew than sirloin, so the margin for error is smaller. Pull it from the pan as soon as it’s browned, or it will turn firm before the sauce even goes in.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The tortellini will absorb some sauce as it sits, so the dish gets a little thicker in the fridge.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this one. Cream sauces can separate, and the tortellini texture gets soft after thawing.
  • Reheating: Warm it gently in a skillet over low heat with a splash of broth or cream. High heat will tighten the steak and break the sauce, so keep the reheating slow and stir often.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen tortellini?+

Yes, frozen tortellini works well. Cook it straight from frozen according to the package directions, then drain it well so the extra water doesn’t thin the sauce. If it carries a lot of moisture, give it a quick shake in the colander before adding it to the skillet.

How do I keep the steak from getting tough?+

Slice it thin against the grain and sear it quickly over high heat. Pull it from the skillet while it still has a little pink left in the center, because it will finish warming when you toss everything together. If it cooks all the way through in the first step, it will turn chewy by the time the sauce is done.

How do I thicken the sauce if it looks thin?+

Let it simmer for another minute or two before adding the tortellini back in. The parmesan also helps thicken it as it melts, so stir long enough for the cheese to disappear into the sauce. If you rush this part, the sauce can taste loose even though the flavor is already there.

Can I make garlic steak tortellini ahead of time?+

You can cook the steak and tortellini ahead, but I’d keep them separate from the sauce until serving. That keeps the pasta from soaking up too much liquid and the steak from overcooking when it’s reheated. Assemble everything in the skillet at the last minute for the best texture.

What can I use instead of heavy cream?+

Half-and-half works in a pinch, but the sauce will be a little lighter and less rich. You can also use whole milk, though it won’t thicken as much and may need an extra minute of simmering. If that happens, lean on the parmesan to give the sauce more body.

Garlic Steak Tortellini

Garlic steak tortellini made as a one-pan pasta dinner with browned steak strips tossed through cheesy tortellini in a garlic butter sauce. Refrigerated cheese tortellini gets coated in a parmesan-rich cream sauce, then finished with fresh parsley for a bright top note.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Italian-American
Calories: 780

Ingredients
  

sirloin steak
  • 1 lb sirloin steak, sliced thin against the grain
cheese tortellini
  • 20 oz refrigerated cheese tortellini
butter
  • 5 tbsp butter, divided
garlic
  • 5 garlic cloves, minced
beef broth
  • 0.5 cup beef broth
heavy cream
  • 0.25 cup heavy cream
parmesan cheese
  • 0.5 cup parmesan cheese, grated
italian seasoning
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning
salt
  • 1 Salt and cracked black pepper to taste
fresh parsley
  • 1 fresh parsley for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Cook tortellini
  1. Bring salted water to a rolling boil and cook refrigerated cheese tortellini according to package directions until tender. Visual cue: tortellini floats when finished; then drain and set aside.
Sear steak
  1. Season the steak strips generously with salt and cracked black pepper. Visual cue: steak surface looks evenly speckled with seasoning.
  2. Heat 2 tablespoons butter in a large skillet over high heat until melted and sizzling. Sear steak strips for 2–3 minutes until browned, then set aside.
Make garlic butter sauce and combine
  1. In the same skillet, melt the remaining butter over medium heat until foamy. Add minced garlic and cook for 1 minute until fragrant.
  2. Add beef broth and heavy cream to the skillet, stirring to combine. Simmer for 2–3 minutes until slightly thickened.
  3. Return steak and tortellini to the skillet and toss to coat in the sauce. Add Italian seasoning and parmesan, then toss again until evenly coated and serve topped with fresh parsley.

Notes

For the richest coating, toss the tortellini in the sauce over the heat for 30–60 seconds so the cheese and butter cling instead of sliding off. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days; reheat in a skillet with a splash of beef broth or water to loosen. Freezing is not recommended because tortellini and cream sauce can become grainy after thawing. For a lighter option, use half-and-half instead of heavy cream while simmering.

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