
Costco Lobster Ravioli is my fast dinner that still feels a little special. Two trays of Rana lobster ravioli, olive oil, fresh rosemary, and Parmesan are enough to make a plate that tastes intentional without building a heavy sauce.
I keep the sauce light because lobster ravioli already has a rich filling. Rosemary-infused olive oil gives aroma, and Parmesan adds salt at the end. If I bury the ravioli under cream, I lose the reason I bought the lobster version in the first place.
The timing is short: 3-4 minutes in salted boiling water, then 1-2 minutes for the rosemary in oil. I set the table before I start because ravioli waits for no one; once it is cooked, I want it plated.
Before I start Costco Lobster Ravioli, I take a minute to think about what the recipe is really asking for. Some of these Costco-style recipes are more about careful heating, chilling, or assembly than complicated cooking.
Why I keep coming back to this
- It cooks in about 10 minutes once the water is boiling.
- The rosemary oil tastes fresh without turning into a heavy sauce.
- Parmesan finishes the dish with salt and texture.
- The recipe scales well because the ravioli comes in trays.
- It is easy enough for a weeknight but nice enough for guests.
- I can add vegetables on the side without changing the ravioli method.
What I use and why it matters
- 4 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese.Parmesan adds salt and a nutty finish, so I sprinkle it on right before serving.
- 2 tablespoons fresh rosemary, minced.Rosemary perfumes the oil quickly; I mince it small so it does not feel twiggy.
- 2 trays Rana Lobster Ravioli from Costco.The ravioli is the shortcut, and I handle it gently so the pasta pillows stay intact.
- 4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil.Olive oil carries the rosemary and coats the ravioli without hiding the filling.
I do not treat the ingredient list as a place to casually rewrite the recipe. The quantities are here for a reason, even when the original source was a little awkwardly parsed. When I want a different result, I change the handling first: I cut pieces smaller, drain something better, warm a sauce more gently, or give the food a few extra minutes to settle before I change the amount of an ingredient.
How I make it
Step 1 — Boil the ravioli
I bring a large pot of salted water to a gentle boil and add the Costco lobster ravioli. I cook it for 3-4 minutes, just until al dente. I do not let the water thrash around because rough boiling can split filled pasta.
Step 2 — Drain gently
I drain the ravioli and set it aside for a moment. I do not rinse it. A little starchy water clinging to the pasta helps the rosemary oil coat it.
Step 3 — Warm rosemary in oil
In a wide pan, I warm the extra virgin olive oil over medium heat and add the minced rosemary. It only needs 1-2 minutes. I want it fragrant, not fried to bitterness.
Step 4 — Toss and plate
I add the cooked ravioli to the rosemary oil and turn it gently with a wide spoon. Once the pasta is coated, I plate it and finish with grated Parmesan.
Timing and texture cues I watch
The times in this Costco Lobster Ravioli method are the frame, but I still pay attention while I cook. I look for the cue that matches the food: fruit should look glossy but not bruised, sauce should thicken enough to coat a spoon, chicken should reach its safe temperature, pasta should stay al dente, and baked desserts should set before I slice them. That habit keeps me from overcorrecting a simple recipe.
I also set up the serving pieces before the final step whenever I can. A hot skillet dish loses its best texture if it waits around, while a chilled salad or pie needs enough cold time to taste settled. Having the plates, bowl, knife, sauce, or side dish ready makes the last few minutes calmer, and the food gets to the table the way I intended.
Tips from my kitchen
- Use a gentle boil.Filled pasta can split if the water is too aggressive.
- Salt the water.The pasta is in the pot briefly, so seasoned water matters.
- Do not overcook rosemary.One or two minutes is enough for fragrance.
- Toss with a spoon, not tongs.Tongs can tear soft ravioli.
Mistakes I avoid
- Changing the quantities too soon.I make the recipe once close to the listed amounts before deciding what needs adjusting.
- Crowding the pan or bowl.When food needs browning, folding, or chilling, extra space usually gives me a better texture.
- Skipping the final check.I taste sauces, check the center of hot dishes, and look for set edges on desserts before I call anything done.
- Serving without a pause.A short rest, chill, or gentle toss often fixes texture in a way more seasoning cannot.
The other mistake I try to avoid is making the dish harder than it needs to be. If the recipe is a shortcut, I let it be a shortcut and focus on the details that matter most: even pieces, clean heat, enough salt, a dry surface when browning is the goal, and a serving plan that keeps the texture from fading before anyone eats. I would rather do a simple thing carefully than add noise that does not improve the plate.
Variations I have actually tried
- Lemon finish:I add a little lemon zest with the Parmesan for brightness.
- Butter version:I replace half the olive oil with butter for a richer plate.
- Spinach addition:I wilt a handful of spinach in the rosemary oil before adding the ravioli.
- Parsley version:I use parsley instead of rosemary when I want a milder herb.
- Tomato side:I serve blistered cherry tomatoes alongside instead of mixing in a sauce.
When I make a variation, I keep the main method steady. I swap one flavor at a time, then pay attention to whether the texture changes. That keeps the recipe dependable, and it also tells me which change actually helped instead of turning dinner into a guessing game.
Storing and make-ahead notes
I think ravioli is best right away, but leftovers can be refrigerated in a covered container. I reheat gently in a skillet with a spoonful of water or oil. The microwave works in short bursts, but I stop before the pasta edges toughen.
What I serve with it
I serve this with a green salad, roasted asparagus, garlic bread, or simple sauteed spinach. The ravioli is rich, so I like a crisp or lemony side.
Frequently asked questions
How do I know the ravioli is cooked?
I follow the 3-4 minute window and check that the pasta is tender but still holds its shape. If one piece floats early, I still taste for texture rather than trusting floating alone.
Can I use a cream sauce?
Yes, but I keep it light. The lobster filling is rich, and a heavy sauce can make the dish feel flat.
Can I make it vegetarian?
Not with lobster ravioli, but the same rosemary oil method works with cheese, mushroom, or spinach ravioli.
What if my ravioli breaks?
The water may have boiled too hard or the pasta was stirred roughly. I lower the heat and use a wide spoon next time.
Can I add vegetables?
Yes. I add cooked vegetables after the rosemary oil is ready so they do not water down the pasta.
If you add a side that makes this feel like a restaurant plate, I want to hear about it.

Costco Lobster Ravioli
Description
A quick Costco lobster ravioli dinner with Rana lobster ravioli, rosemary-infused olive oil, and grated Parmesan. I boil the ravioli for 3-4 minutes, toss it gently, and serve it right away.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Boil the Costco lobster ravioli in salted boiling water for 3-4 minutes, until al dente.
- Drain the cooked ravioli gently and set it aside.
- Warm the olive oil in a pan and saute the minced rosemary for 1-2 minutes over medium heat.
- Add the cooked ravioli to the rosemary oil and turn gently until evenly coated.
- Plate the ravioli and garnish with grated Parmesan cheese before serving.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 8
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 18kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 1g2%
- Saturated Fat 1g5%
- Trans Fat 0.0g
- Cholesterol 3mg1%
- Sodium 50mg3%
- Potassium 28mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Protein 1g2%
- Calcium 48 mg
- Iron 0.3 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Use a gentle boil so the ravioli does not split.
Rosemary only needs 1-2 minutes in the oil.
Finish with Parmesan right before serving.
A little lemon zest is good if the plate feels too rich.
Frequently Asked Questions
I follow the 3-4 minute window and check that the pasta is tender but still holds its shape. If one piece floats early, I still taste for texture rather than trusting floating alone.
Yes, but I keep it light. The lobster filling is rich, and a heavy sauce can make the dish feel flat.
Not with lobster ravioli, but the same rosemary oil method works with cheese, mushroom, or spinach ravioli.
The water may have boiled too hard or the pasta was stirred roughly. I lower the heat and use a wide spoon next time.
Yes. I add cooked vegetables after the rosemary oil is ready so they do not water down the pasta.