
Crockpot Lasagna
Lasagna without turning on the oven, without boiling noodles, and without standing at the stove for 90 minutes. Crockpot lasagna is the version that goes in at lunchtime and comes out at dinner — layered noodles, meat sauce, a creamy cottage cheese mixture, and melted mozzarella, all cooked together for 4 hours on low while you do anything else.
Why I Make Lasagna in the Crockpot Now
I used to skip lasagna on weeknights because of the work. Boil the noodles, brown the meat, mix the filling, layer everything, bake for 45 minutes.
By the time dinner was on the table I’d been cooking for nearly two hours. That’s not a Tuesday recipe.
Crockpot lasagna fixed that. I make this every couple of weeks now — start it at noon, dinner’s ready at 6.
The kids don’t notice the difference between this and the oven version. My husband (who’s particular about lasagna) actually prefers this one because the noodles end up softer than oven baked.
The cottage cheese vs ricotta thing is a debate every Italian-American family argues about. We grew up with cottage cheese and that’s what I make.
If you grew up with ricotta, swap it in. The lasagna is good either way.
The trick is using regular dried lasagna noodles (not no-boil, not par-cooked) and snapping them in half so they fit. The noodles soak up the sauce and broth as the lasagna cooks, softening to perfect al dente without ever touching boiling water.
The whole thing comes out as a single layered casserole you can scoop into bowls.
This is the lasagna for nights when you want comfort food but don’t want the work. Brown the meat in the morning (or while you’re making coffee), mix the cheese filling, layer everything in the crockpot, set to low, walk away.
Four hours later, dinner is done.
Serving Suggestions
Garlic bread is the classic side. Toast a baguette with butter, minced garlic, and Italian seasoning under the broiler for 3 to 4 minutes.
The crusty bread is perfect for soaking up the extra sauce that ends up on your plate.
A simple Caesar or green salad on the side rounds out the meal. The brightness of a salad cuts through the richness of the lasagna.
Roasted broccoli or asparagus also work as a vegetable side.
Top each serving with extra grated Parmesan, fresh basil leaves, and a few cracks of black pepper. Red pepper flakes for those who want heat.
Fresh herbs lift the heaviness of the lasagna.
For a Sunday-dinner-style meal, serve with breadsticks (Pillsbury or homemade), a green salad, and a glass of red wine. The lasagna carries the meal — you don’t need anything fancy on the side.
Storage and Make-Ahead Tips
Store leftovers covered in the fridge for up to 4 days. The lasagna holds up beautifully and tastes even better on day 2 once the flavors have had time to meld.
To reheat, microwave individual portions for 90 seconds, or warm a whole pan covered with foil at 325 degrees F for 20 minutes.
To make ahead, brown the meat and mix the cottage cheese filling the night before. Refrigerate both.
The morning you’re cooking, layer everything in the crockpot and start the slow cook. Saves about 15 minutes of active prep on the day of dinner.
This lasagna freezes well. Either freeze leftover squares in individual portions, or freeze the whole leftover crockpot worth in a 9×13 dish covered with foil.
Freezes for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
For meal prep, this is one of the better candidates because portions reheat well and pack neatly into containers. Cook on Sunday, divide into containers, lunch is handled for the week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use no-boil lasagna noodles?
Don’t. No-boil noodles are formulated to soak up sauce in a hot oven over 45 minutes — not in a slow cooker over 4 hours.
The moisture absorption is completely different and they go mushy. Regular dried noodles, broken in half, are what makes this work.
Can I use ricotta instead of cottage cheese?
Absolutely. Use 20 ounces of ricotta in place of the cottage cheese.
The texture is creamier and less curdy — more traditional Italian-style, which some people strongly prefer. I grew up with cottage cheese so that’s what I make, but ricotta is not a compromise here, it’s just a different (also good) result.
Can I make this on high?
Don’t. High heat pushes too much moisture out of the sauce too fast, which means the noodles on the bottom overcook and get mushy while the ones on top are still firm.
Low and slow is what makes all the layers cook evenly. Four hours on low is the move.
What size crockpot do I need?
A 6-quart crockpot is the right size — large enough to hold all the layers, with enough depth for the lasagna to cook evenly. A 4-quart is genuinely too small; you won’t fit all the layers without them overflowing.
An 8-quart works but the lasagna spreads thinner and may cook a little faster, so start checking at 3.5 hours.
Can I make this vegetarian?
Yes. Skip the meat.
Use a hearty marinara like Rao’s (thin sauces don’t hold up as well without the meat to thicken them) plus 2 cups of sauteed mushrooms and 1 cup of chopped spinach squeezed very dry. The vegetables provide enough substance but the spinach must be wrung out thoroughly or the lasagna turns watery.
Why is my lasagna watery?
Usually one of two things: the sauce was too thin (avoid “light” or “chunky” varieties — you need something thick), or the cottage cheese had a lot of liquid on top that went in unmixed. Use full-fat cottage cheese, and if there’s liquid pooled on top when you open the container, pour it off before mixing.
Thick sauce plus well-drained cheese filling = clean layers.
Can I add vegetables?
Yes. Sauteed mushrooms, spinach (well drained), zucchini, or bell peppers all work.
Stir them into the meat sauce before layering. Just make sure anything with water content (zucchini, spinach) is cooked and drained first or it’ll water the whole thing down.
Variations and Substitutions
All-beef version. Skip the Italian sausage.
Use 1 pound of ground beef plus 1 teaspoon fennel seed and 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning to compensate for the missing sausage flavor.
Vegetarian. Skip the meat entirely.
Add 2 cups of sauteed mushrooms and 1 cup of chopped spinach (squeezed dry) to the sauce. Use a hearty marinara for more flavor.
Extra cheesy. Add 1 cup of mozzarella to the cottage cheese mixture for an even cheesier lasagna.
Use a 2-cup mozzarella topping instead of 1 cup.
Spicy version. Use hot Italian sausage instead of sweet.
Add 1 teaspoon of red pepper flakes to the meat sauce.
White lasagna. Replace the spaghetti sauce with 45 ounces of jarred Alfredo sauce.
Use cooked chicken instead of beef and sausage. Add 1 cup of chopped spinach.
Different recipe entirely but same crockpot method.
Three-cheese version. Add 1/2 cup of grated Pecorino Romano to the cottage cheese mixture along with the Parmesan.
Sharper, more complex flavor.
Leftover Ideas
Leftover lasagna is one of the best leftovers there is. Here’s how I work through it:
Lasagna grilled cheese. Slice a square of leftover lasagna in half horizontally and put it on toasted Italian bread with extra mozzarella.
Grill in a buttered skillet until the cheese melts. Surprisingly excellent.
Stuffed bell peppers. Halve and seed bell peppers, fill with chunks of leftover lasagna, top with extra cheese, bake at 375 degrees F for 25 minutes.
Crispy edges fry-up. Cut leftover squares in half, sear in a hot skillet with olive oil for 2 minutes per side.
The crispy edges make day-two lasagna feel different from day-one.
Lasagna soup. Cube leftover lasagna and stir into a pot of warm marinara sauce thinned with chicken broth.
Top with extra mozzarella and Parmesan. Pretends to be a different dinner.

A Few Things That Improve This Recipe
A 6-quart crockpot is the right size for this recipe. Smaller and you can’t fit all the layers; larger and the lasagna spreads thin.
A 6-quart programmable slow cooker with a timer that switches to “warm” automatically means you can set it before you leave the house and come home to dinner ready, not over-cooked.
Slow cooker liners turn cleanup from a chore into a 30-second job. After 4 hours of layered lasagna, the bottom of the crockpot can be hard to scrub clean.
Reynolds slow cooker liners drop in before cooking, and when dinner’s over you lift them out and toss the whole thing.
Lighter Version
Lasagna is hearty, but a few swaps lighten it without losing its character.
Use ground turkey or ground chicken instead of beef and sausage. Add 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning and 1 teaspoon fennel seed to compensate for the sausage flavor.
Use whole wheat lasagna noodles for added fiber. They behave the same way in the crockpot.
Use low-fat cottage cheese (2%) and reduced-fat mozzarella. The lasagna is slightly less rich but still satisfying.
Add vegetables to the meat sauce — chopped spinach, mushrooms, zucchini, or bell peppers all work. Vegetables stretch the meat further so each square has fewer calories.
More Recipes You’ll Love
Slow Cooker Crack Chicken Pasta — creamy ranch chicken with bacon and cheese tossed with pasta. Family favorite.
Philly Cheese Steak Crock Pot Recipe — sliced beef cooked with peppers, onions, and provolone. Pile onto hoagie rolls.
Crock Pot French Dip Sandwiches — chuck roast with French onion soup and beef consomme. Shredded beef on rolls with provolone.
Spaghetti Casserole — layered baked pasta that slices into squares. Same comfort food vibe as this lasagna.

Crockpot Lasagna
Equipment
- 6-quart slow cooker
- Skillet
Ingredients
Ingredients
- 1/2 pound Italian sausage
- 1/2 pound ground beef
- 45 ounces spaghetti sauce
- 20 ounces small-curd cottage cheese
- 1 large egg beaten
- 1/2 cup shredded Parmesan cheese
- 1 tablespoon Italian seasoning
- 2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese divided
- 9 regular lasagna noodles broken in half
Instructions
Instructions
- Brown Italian sausage and ground beef in a skillet over medium-high heat until no pink remains. Drain well.
- Stir spaghetti sauce into the browned meat and warm through.
- In a bowl, combine cottage cheese, egg, Parmesan, and Italian seasoning until uniform.
- Spray a 6-quart slow cooker. Layer one-third meat sauce, 3 broken noodles, half the cottage cheese mixture, and 1 cup mozzarella.
- Repeat with one-third meat sauce, 3 noodles, remaining cottage cheese mixture, remaining 3 noodles, and final one-third meat sauce.
- Cover and cook on low for 4 hours, until noodles are tender.
- Sprinkle remaining 1 cup mozzarella on top during the last 30 minutes.
- Turn off slow cooker and let lasagna rest 10 to 15 minutes before serving.
