Avoid Watery Zucchini Noodles - Inspiralized (2024)

Avoid Watery Zucchini Noodles - Inspiralized (1)

The question I hear most from new spiralizer users is, “How do I avoid soggy zucchini noodles?”

While zucchinis are over 90% water by weight, you can expect your cooked zucchini noodles to be a bit watery. However, there are a few simple steps you can take to avoid watery, limp or soggy cooked zoodles! Follow the tips and tricks below and you will always have crisp and fresh-tasting zucchini noodles for all of your favorite recipes.

Tips to Avoid Soggy Zucchini Noodles

After you spiralize a zucchini with a spiralizer, there are three best ways to cook the zucchini noodles so they are crisp, not soggy:

  1. Serve them raw
  2. Sauté them in a skillet
  3. Simmer them in soup.

For more information on how to cook zucchini noodles, read this post.

Raw Zucchini Noodles

First, if you’re serving raw zoodles (such as this tropical Coconut-Mango Zucchini Noodle dish), you won’t have to worry about sogginess. Cooking is what really makes zucchini release moisture. However, sometimes even uncooked zucchini can get a little limp after it’s cut. In this case, to reduce excess moisture, simply pat the spiralized noodles dry with paper towels or a thin kitchen rag.

Zoodles in Soup

If you’re cooking zucchini noodles in a soup such as this Chicken Zucchini Noodle Soup, you really don’t have to worry about excess water. Because of osmosis, the noodles will keep their moisture and stay mostly firm.

However, because the zucchini will release its water content into whatever soup you’re making, it may dilute the flavor. For example, if you’re making salty ramen, the ramen will have less umami flavor the longer the noodles sit in the broth. It’s easy to fix this by adding more seasonings if you store the soup. If you’re digging in right after cooking the ramen, this won’t be an issue.

Sautéd Zucchini Noodles

Finally, if you’re cooking zucchini noodles in a skillet, you will notice immediately that the noodles release moisture in the pan. One spiralized zucchini releases barely a tablespoon of liquid. However, if you’re cooking multiple zucchinis, you can quickly end up with a lot of water in the skillet.

Here are our tips on how to avoid watery and soggy zucchini noodles.

Sautéing Zucchini Noodles with Less Water

Tip 1: Noodles first, sauce second

If you’re serving the noodles with a hot sauce, such as my Creamy Chicken Vodka Sauce, don’t cook the noodles in the sauce. Instead, cook the noodles first, then add the sauce.

This way, the zucchini water can evaporate before you add more liquid with the sauce.

Tip 2: Drain cooked zucchini noodles in a colander

The next tip to avoid soggy zucchini noodles is to drain them.

After you cook the noodles and before you add sauce, drain the zoodles in a colander. Shake off any excess moisture. Bonus points for patting dry with a paper towel or dish towel!

Tip 3: Add foods that absorb moisture

It’s hard to avoid extra moisture when there is nothing added to absorb the water. Why do we love dipping bread in our leftover pasta sauce? To sop up the flavor!

So, either serve your noodles with some good crusty bread and dab as you go, or cook with an ingredient that absorbs moisture, like:

Tip 4: Reduce or thicken your sauce

If your dish includes a hot sauce, remove liquid the old-fashioned way: by reduction or thickening.

Reducing your sauce simply means to simmer it until enough liquid has evaporated. Be sure to stir the sauce often while it simmers to prevent burning. You can reduce your sauce even more than normal to account for the added liquid from the zucchini when you add everything together.

Thickening sauce means to add a starchy thickener. This can be a simple slurry made my mixing equal parts (1 tablespoon each to start) cornstarch and water. Stir this into your sauce and watch it thicken up in minutes. You can also thicken sauces with puréed potato or cauliflower for extra veggies.

Tip 5: Don’t over-cook your noodles

Just like a piece of meat will rest on a cutting board and continue cooking for a few minutes after you remove it from heat, so will zucchini noodles.

If you cook noodles too long in the skillet and they’re already looking limp and soggy, they’re going to be even soggier topped with sauce on your plate. To avoid soggy and limp noodles, I recommend cooking for only 3-5 minutes (5 if you’re cooking more than 1-2 spiralized zucchinis) and tossing frequently. You want a slightly al dente noodle.

Tip 6: Eat right away

Regardless of what you do to reduce the moisture in zucchini noodles, once the noodles sit in a hot sauce, water is going to drain out. So, plate your your meal just before you’re ready to eat it! Don’t let the noodles and sauce sit together for more than a minute before serving, because every second is precious!

We hope these tips help you have a more enjoyable zucchini noodle dinner with minimal sogginess!

Watch our video to learn how to spiralize a zucchini using the Inspiralizer and subscribe to our YouTube channel to watch more videos:

Hungry? Now that you know how to avoid soggy zucchini noodles, put these tips to use with these popular zoodle recipes:

  • Shrimp Fra Diavolo with Zucchini Noodles
  • Shrimp Zucchini Noodle Pad Thai
  • Caprese Zucchini and Quinoa Skillet with Chicken

Avoid Watery Zucchini Noodles - Inspiralized (2)

Avoid Watery Zucchini Noodles - Inspiralized (2024)

FAQs

How to make zucchini noodles not watery? ›

Cooking is what really makes zucchini release moisture. However, sometimes even uncooked zucchini can get a little limp after it's cut. In this case, to reduce excess moisture, simply pat the spiralized noodles dry with paper towels or a thin kitchen rag.

How to keep zucchini from being watery? ›

Pat zucchini dry

What is this? Once sliced, zucchini slowly releases water, or "sweats", as it sits. Using a tea towel or paper towels, gently pat both sides of your zucchini dry before continuing with the recipe.

How to get rid of water in zucchini? ›

Sprinkle the grated zucchini with salt, only to season them, not more. Put them to drain in a colander with a dish underneath. Leave for 1 hour, then, using your hands, squeeze out the excess liquid.

Should you salt zucchini noodles before cooking? ›

Don't pre-salt your zucchini noodles.

Whatever you do, do not let your cut zucchini noodles sit in salt before cooking.

How to draw water out of zoodles? ›

How to get the water out of zucchini noodles - Quora. Use a salad spinner. Alternately, you can press them between layers of paper towels on a plate (first use a pinch of salt and let them sit for a bit). Salting is the method for this.

How do you stop noodles from absorbing liquid? ›

To answer the first question, unfortunately there is no way I know of to prevent noodles from continuing to absorb liquid as they rest. The best course of action would be to set aside any soup that you think you are going to have leftover before adding the noodles.

Why is my zucchini always soggy? ›

Unless you have time to salt and drain the zucchini, wait to salt it until after they're cooked so the salt doesn't draw out the moisture in the oven—this can lead to sogginess. You can add other seasonings, such as dried herbs and spices, before cooking.

Does salt draw water out of zucchini? ›

Salt causes zucchini rounds to release excess water. This important extra step helps the zucchini to sauté rather than stew in its own juices. I found quarter-inch slices the perfect thickness. Thinner slices fall apart during cooking; thicker slices require a longer salting time.

Why is my zucchini lasagna watery? ›

You may recall from my zucchini noodles post that zucchini is 95% water. That means when you cook it, it will naturally become watery. But if you're looking to have a little less juice in your lasagna, I do have a few tips: Slice your zucchini into thinner slices: Thinner slices mean fewer zucchini, thus less water.

What are 3 advantages of having zucchini noodles over regular pasta? ›

Zucchini is low in fat, sugar, and calories, and high in vitamin C and fiber, making it a great substitute for traditional pasta noodles. Fiber helps to regulate bowels and maintain good digestive health, and vitamin C acts as an antioxidant to protect cells.

Should you drain zucchini noodles? ›

Stovetop Cooking Method:

Let them drain for 20-30 minutes. Squeeze the zoodles gently over the sink to release more water. No need to get out every last drop, but just the majority. Rinse off any excess salt and pat dry.

How do you reduce water in noodles? ›

How do you drain excess water from cooked spaghetti noodles without using a colander? Put the whole pot of water and spaghetti into a vacuum chamber, apply vacuum. The water will boil off (even though it doesn't get hot).

How do you fix soggy noodles? ›

All you need to rescue your noodles is a bit of another Italian staple: olive oil. The method is as simple as it gets. Heat the olive oil in a skillet and add your overcooked pasta. Gently sauté over medium heat for a few minutes until the pasta's texture has firmed up.

How do you fix watery spaghetti squash? ›

Place the rings on a wire rack set inside a sheet pan and salt the cut side on both sides of each ring. Let sit for about 20 minutes. Once 20 minutes have passed, remove the excess moisture from the squash with a paper towel.

Why is my zucchini wet? ›

Think of them like a waterlogged sponge — entities with tons of tiny, moisture-filled pores. When you cook zucchini or eggplant, the “sponge” contracts, squeezing the water out. The result is a half-steamed, watery pile of veggies.

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