
Trader Joe’s Italian shelf got a real refresh this spring, and a summer-weather lineup of pasta, cheese, and gelato deserves an updated ranking. We re-checked every product, dropped the ones that left the shelf, and added the new arrivals worth a trip.
Below are 20 picks ranked best to worst, with current June 2026 prices and notes on what is actually worth your shopping list this season.
1. Italian Tomato & Burrata Ravioloni — $3.99 / 8.8 oz

These plump pasta pillows are stuffed with a sweet tomato filling and creamy burrata, and they cook up tender in about four minutes. Toss them with a quick brown-butter sauce and you have a date-night plate for under five dollars.
- Cooks in 4 minutes from frozen.
- Burrata center stays creamy after a boil.
- Stretches dinner for two.
Taste notes: Pasta tastes fresh-made, with bright tomato pulling against rich cheese.
2. Burrata — $4.99 / 8 oz

Trader Joe’s now stocks a tub of two fresh burrata balls at a price that no Italian deli can touch. Tear one open over a sliced tomato, drizzle good olive oil, and Saturday lunch is done.
- Two whole burrata balls per tub.
- Holds for about a week unopened.
- Cheapest fresh burrata in any major grocery.
Taste notes: Outside is mild milky mozzarella, inside is the soft cream that signals real burrata.
3. Italian Pistachio Gelato — $3.99 / 16 fl oz

This pint is made in Italy and tastes like the gelato bars in Florence — dense, slow-melting, and unmistakably pistachio. A summer freezer staple that costs a quarter of the imported jars at specialty stores.
- Imported from Italy.
- Pint size, easy to share.
- Real pistachio paste, not flavoring.
Taste notes: Nutty and slightly salty, with the smooth chew that separates gelato from ice cream.
4. Italian Truffle Cheese — $14.99 / 1 lb

A semi-soft cow’s milk cheese veined with real black summer truffle. Shave a few thin slices onto warm pasta and the smell alone makes the meal feel expensive.
- Real black truffle visible in the rind.
- Melts cleanly over hot pasta.
- Anchor wedge for any cheese board.
Taste notes: Mellow, buttery cheese carries the earthy truffle without overpowering it.
5. Cacio e Pepe Ravioli — $3.99 / 8.8 oz

The classic Roman pasta in stuffed form — pecorino and cracked black pepper sealed inside soft squares. Browned butter is the only sauce these need.
- Three ingredients done right.
- Cooks in under five minutes.
- Reheats well next day.
Taste notes: Sharp pecorino and warming pepper, balanced by silky pasta.
6. Ricotta & Lemon Zest Ravioli — $3.99 / 8.8 oz

Creamy ricotta lifted by real lemon zest — a Sicilian-leaning pasta that feels like spring on a plate. Pair with a butter-and-sage sauce or the Lemon Pesto below.
- Real lemon zest in the filling.
- Light enough for summer suppers.
- Pairs with white wine.
Taste notes: Soft, milky cheese with a citrus edge that wakes up the whole bite.
7. Bolognese Style Tomato & Beef Pasta Sauce — $4.49 / 24 oz

The single best jarred Bolognese on a major grocery shelf. Heavy on beef, light on sugar, and rich enough to taste like it has been simmering all morning.
- Real ground beef listed first.
- No added sugar.
- Coats a full pound of pasta.
Taste notes: Deep tomato base with savory meat and a quiet hit of nutmeg.
8. Italian-Style Wedding Soup — $4.99 / 22 oz

Tiny meatballs, acini di pepe pasta, and tender greens in a clean chicken broth. A weeknight bowl that tastes like it took an afternoon.
- Single jar feeds two as a meal.
- Heats in 5 minutes, stovetop or microwave.
- Freezes well.
Taste notes: Light, savory broth carries the meatballs without going salty.
9. Vegan Kale, Cashew & Basil Pesto — $3.99 / 8 oz

A dairy-free pesto that does not taste like a compromise — kale and cashew round out the basil, and it lasts longer in the fridge than the classic version.
- No cheese, no nuts of the tree-pine variety.
- Long fridge life after opening.
- Works on pasta, toast, or eggs.
Taste notes: Herby, savory, and creamy without dairy.
10. Lemon Pesto Sauce — $3.49 / 6.7 oz

Bright lemon cuts through cheese and nuts for an Amalfi-coast pesto that pairs beautifully with the Ricotta & Lemon Ravioli above. A summer-only swing many shoppers stock up on.
- Real lemon zest and juice.
- Imported from Italy.
- Seasonal — buy two.
Taste notes: Lighter than green pesto, with a sunny citrus snap.
11. Italian Bomba Hot Pepper Sauce — $3.79 / 6.7 oz

Fermented Calabrian chilies in oil — the small jar that quietly improves every red sauce, sandwich, and scrambled egg you make all summer.
- A little goes a long way.
- Heat with real chili flavor, not just burn.
- Cult-favorite repeat buy.
Taste notes: Sweet-hot and smoky, with the round depth that only fermented chilies bring.
12. Bruschetta Sauce — $3.49 / 14.5 oz

Chunky tomato, garlic, basil, and good olive oil already mixed — spoon it over toasted bread or stir it into pasta. Price dropped fifty cents since last fall.
- Price cut to $3.49 in 2026.
- No prep — just open and serve.
- Works as a pasta starter.
Taste notes: Bright tomato, fresh basil, and just enough garlic.
13. Focaccia Bread with Roasted Tomato & Parmesan — $4.99 / 14 oz

A par-baked focaccia topped with roasted tomato and aged parmesan — finish in a hot oven for ten minutes and the kitchen smells like a Genoa bakery.
- Reheats to bakery-quality crust.
- Pairs with any of the soups or sauces above.
- Easy host gift.
Taste notes: Crispy edges, soft middle, salty cheese, jammy tomato.
14. Panzerotti Pizza Bites — $3.99 / 11.29 oz

Mini calzone-style dough pockets stuffed with mozzarella and tomato sauce. Air-fry for eight minutes and you have a porch snack that disappears fast.
- Bake or air-fry from frozen.
- About 5-6 bites per serving.
- Crowd-pleaser for parties.
Taste notes: Crisp dough outside, gooey cheese pull inside.
15. Toscano Cheese with Black Pepper — $11.99 / 1 lb

A semi-firm Tuscan sheep’s milk cheese rolled in cracked black pepper. Slice it thin for a cheese board or grate it over pasta for a stronger bite than parmigiano.
- Real Tuscan sheep’s milk.
- Black pepper crust adds a kick.
- Pairs with cured meats.
Taste notes: Sharp and nutty, with the warm bite of fresh-cracked pepper.
16. Hot Italian Sausage made with Pork — $6.49 / 1 lb

Juicy, well-seasoned links with real heat and no fillers. Grill them whole, slice them onto pizza, or crumble into the Bolognese sauce.
- No artificial fillers.
- Real Calabrian-style heat.
- Four generous links per pound.
Taste notes: Savory pork with fennel, garlic, and a chili kick.
17. Everything Ciabatta Rolls — $2.49 / 14.1 oz

Crusty ciabatta crossed with everything-bagel seasoning. Split, toast, and stuff with the prosciutto and burrata for the easiest summer sandwich on the list.
- Four rolls per bag.
- Toasts to bakery crispness.
- Sandwich-ready size.
Taste notes: Chewy interior, crackling crust, and a salty seed crunch.
18. Organic Italian Cascatelli Pasta — $2.99 / 16 oz

Dan Pashman’s inventor-of-a-pasta shape, made organic and imported from Italy. The ruffled ridges hold heavy sauces in a way penne never will.
- Organic durum wheat.
- Shape engineered for sauce coverage.
- Cooks al dente in 10-11 minutes.
Taste notes: Satisfying chew with twice the sauce per bite.
19. Aglio Olio Seasoning Blend — $2.49 / 1.7 oz

Garlic, parsley, and chili flakes in one jar — a shortcut to the simplest Italian pasta dish ever invented. Stir a spoonful into hot olive oil, add cooked pasta, done.
- Three-ingredient dinner saver.
- Long pantry shelf life.
- Good on roasted vegetables too.
Taste notes: Garlicky, herby, and lightly spicy.
20. Pizza Sauce — $1.99 / 14 oz

A balanced, smooth tomato sauce built for pizza but useful for dipping mozzarella sticks, building lasagna, or finishing meatballs. Two dollars and it lasts.
- Shelf-stable until opened.
- Resealable jar.
- Doubles as marinara in a pinch.
Taste notes: Mild, sweet tomato with quiet basil and oregano.
Trader Joe’s Italian assortment keeps getting better — fresh burrata at under five dollars and Italy-imported gelato for under four would have been unthinkable five years ago. Stock up on the summer-only items now, since the lemon pesto and pistachio gelato tend to disappear by September.