There are nights when the usual pasta routine feels a little too predictable — when red sauce and meatballs, as reliable and comforting as they are, just do not quite cut it. Those are the nights made for cowboy spaghetti. Bold, hearty, slightly spicy, and loaded with the kind of flavors that make everyone at the table sit up and pay attention, this is the recipe that turns an ordinary weeknight dinner into something genuinely worth looking forward to. It is spaghetti night reimagined with the spirit of a proper chili, and the result is absolutely irresistible.
Think of cowboy spaghetti as the happy collision of two beloved comfort food traditions. On one side, you have the familiar warmth and satisfaction of a pasta dinner. On the other, you have the smoky, spiced, deeply savory character of a good chili. Bring them together with crispy bacon, fire-roasted tomatoes, taco seasoning, fresh jalapeños, and a generous blanket of sharp cheddar cheese, and you have a meal that is equal parts comforting and exciting. It is reminiscent in spirit of Cincinnati chili — saucy, seasoned meat served over spaghetti and topped with shredded cheese — but with its own distinct personality and considerably more attitude.
Best of all, it comes together in under an hour using pantry staples that most households already have on hand, making it the ideal solution for those evenings when the fridge looks bare and inspiration is running low.
Starting with Bacon
Every great cowboy dish deserves a strong foundation, and here that foundation is bacon. Thick-cut bacon, chopped and rendered in a Dutch oven until deeply browned and crispy, does two important things for this recipe. First, it creates the starring garnish — those crunchy, smoky bacon pieces that get scattered over each bowl at the end and contribute an incredible textural contrast to the saucy pasta. Second, and perhaps more importantly, it leaves behind a tablespoon of rich, smoky drippings in the pot that becomes the cooking fat for everything that follows.
Cooking the onion and jalapeños in bacon drippings rather than plain oil infuses the entire sauce with a subtle smokiness from the very beginning, creating a depth of flavor that you simply cannot achieve any other way. It is one of those small steps that makes a disproportionately large difference in the finished dish.
Building the Sauce
Once the aromatics are tender, the ground beef goes in and is cooked until browned and crumbly. A full packet of taco seasoning is stirred in at this point, coating every piece of meat and vegetable in a blend of warm spices — cumin, chili powder, garlic, and oregano among them — that gives the sauce its distinctive cowboy character. The combination of crushed tomatoes and fire-roasted diced tomatoes goes in next, creating a sauce that is rich, thick, and layered with both sweetness and smokiness. A fifteen-minute simmer allows everything to meld together and the sauce to thicken to the right consistency.
The jalapeños deserve a mention here because their heat level can vary significantly depending on the source. Homegrown jalapeños, in particular, can be considerably spicier than their grocery store counterparts, so it is worth tasting a small piece before adding them to gauge how much heat you are working with. If you prefer a milder result, swapping the jalapeños for chopped green bell pepper or a fresh poblano is an easy and effective adjustment. A small can of diced green chiles is another gentle alternative that still adds flavor and a hint of heat without the full jalapeño punch.
The Pasta Matters Too
While the sauce simmers, the spaghetti cooks in well-salted boiling water to just al dente — firm enough to hold its shape when folded into the sauce. Reserving a cup and a half of the starchy pasta cooking water before draining is an important step that should not be skipped. Added to the sauce a quarter cup at a time after the pasta is incorporated, this starchy water helps the sauce cling to every strand of spaghetti rather than pooling at the bottom of the bowl. You may not need all of it — add just enough until the sauce coats the pasta beautifully and moves with it rather than sitting separately.
The Finishing Touches
Cowboy spaghetti without its toppings would be like a pizza without cheese — technically complete but missing something essential. Each bowl gets a generous handful of freshly grated sharp cheddar, a scatter of the reserved crispy bacon, and a sprinkle of thinly sliced green onion. The cheddar melts slightly into the hot pasta, the bacon adds crunch and smokiness, and the green onion brings a fresh, sharp contrast that cuts through the richness of everything else. Together, these toppings are what elevate the dish from a simple pasta dinner to something genuinely special.

Ingredients
6 slices thick-cut bacon chopped, 1 small yellow onion chopped, 2 jalapeño peppers stemmed seeded if desired and chopped, 1 pound 93% lean ground beef, 1 package (1 ounce) taco seasoning mix, 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt plus more for the pasta cooking water, 1 can (28 ounces) crushed tomatoes, 1 can (15 ounces) fire-roasted or regular diced tomatoes, 1 pound spaghetti, 1 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese (4 ounces), and 1 green onion thinly sliced for garnish.
Instructions
Add the chopped bacon to a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat and cook, stirring often, until browned and crispy, about seven to nine minutes. Transfer the bacon to a paper towel-lined plate using a slotted spoon and keep one tablespoon of the drippings in the pot, discarding or saving the rest. Reduce the heat to medium and add the onion and jalapeños, cooking until tender, about five minutes. Add the ground beef and cook, stirring frequently, until browned and crumbly, about five minutes. Stir in the taco seasoning and salt, then add both cans of tomatoes. Raise the heat to medium-high to bring the sauce to a simmer, then reduce to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, until slightly thickened, about fifteen minutes.
While the sauce simmers, bring a large pot of well-salted water to a boil and cook the spaghetti to al dente according to package instructions. Reserve one and a half cups of pasta water before draining. Remove the sauce from the heat, add the drained spaghetti, and stir to combine. Add the reserved pasta water a quarter cup at a time, stirring after each addition, until the sauce clings nicely to the pasta. Divide between bowls and top each serving with grated cheddar, reserved crispy bacon, and sliced green onion. Serve immediately.
Leftovers keep well in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to four days. The sauce can also be made up to two days ahead and refrigerated separately, with the pasta cooked fresh just before serving.




