Comfort-bake perfection: crunchy-topped Tuna mornay recipe served warm in a ceramic bowlan Aussie family favourite for australian recipes.
Open the pantry in just about any Australian home and you’ll find the makings of a comforting classic: a couple of tins of tuna, pasta, milk and cheese. Turn those humble staples into something everyone actually cheers for and you’ve got this tuna mornay recipe creamy, golden and full of cosy weeknight energy.
I’ve cooked many versions over the years, from café-style bakes to lightning-fast stovetop tosses, and this is the one I rely on. It’s the Australian tuna mornay recipe you can make after a big day, with simple steps and ingredients that already live in your cupboard.
If you’re hunting Aussie dinner ideas that feel nostalgic but still fresh, if you want to know how to make simple tuna mornay without mystery shortcuts, and if you’ve ever asked “What sauce do you use for tuna mornay?” you’re in the right kitchen.
By the time you reach the end of this page you’ll have a dependable, flexible, seriously tasty tuna mornay recipe that fits the way Australians actually cook: fast, affordable, and full of flavour.
Mornay is the French name for a cheese-enriched béchamel—silky white sauce whisked from butter, flour and milk, finished with cheese. Australians took that base and gave it the weeknight treatment: fold it through pasta, tuna and peas, top with breadcrumbs and “tasty” cheddar, and bake until bubbling and bronzed. The result is peak comfort—a casserole that feeds a crowd, reheats beautifully and feels like a hug.
An Australian recipe for tuna mornay typically includes macaroni or spirals, tuna in springwater or brine (drained well), a can of corn or a handful of frozen peas, and a topping of breadcrumbs mixed with butter and cheese. My version leans creamy but balanced, with a little lemon and Dijon to keep it bright and a crisp topping that actually crackles when you scoop in.
This is the tuna mornay recipe I teach to uni students and tired parents because it’s forgiving and the technique is reusable across many Aussie bakes.
Short answer: Mornay sauce, a cheese-enriched béchamel.
How to build it perfectly:
Cheese choices: Aussie “tasty” cheddar is classic. I like to use a blend: 1 cup cheddar for body + ¼ cup parmesan for savoury kick. If you enjoy extra richness, swap ¼ cup of the milk for cream or use evaporated milk (a very Aussie pantry move).
Use good-quality Australian or sustainably sourced tuna in springwater or brine. Oil-packed tuna is fine too just drain well. Flake gently with a fork so you keep generous pieces in the bake.
Short shapes that hold sauce work best: spirals, penne, shells or macaroni. Cook them very al dente they’ll soften further in the oven.
Frozen peas and corn are weeknight legends. Diced carrot, broccoli florets, baby spinach or sautéed mushrooms are excellent, too. Aim for 2 cups of veg total.
A small onion and a clove or two of garlic build a savoury base. I sauté them in butter before starting the roux to keep the dish flavour-forward.
These aren’t traditional everywhere, but they’re my Aussie way for tuna mornay recipe success: both cut through richness and wake up the sauce.
Buttered breadcrumbs + cheese = golden crunch. Panko gives extra texture; crushed Ritz or water crackers are a nostalgic alternative.
That’s the whole rhythm. Once you’ve done it once, you’ll have this tuna mornay recipe memorised.
When my daughter was a newborn, friends kept dropping meals at the door. The tin-foil tray that made me cry happy tears contained tuna mornay—creamy, lemony, topped with ridiculous amounts of crunchy crumbs. I ate it one-handed on the couch while the baby slept on my chest, and I can still remember the relief of that first warm bite. Since then I keep a tray of this in my freezer for new parents and rough weeks. It’s humble, but it tastes like someone is looking after you—and that’s why I wanted to share this exact Australian recipe with you.
8
servings17
minutes25
minutes520
kcal45
minutesA classic tuna mornay recipe the Aussie way: pasta, tuna and peas folded through a bright, silky cheese sauce and finished with a crunchy cheddar breadcrumb topping. Pantry-friendly, weeknight-easy and perfect for make-ahead and freezing.
300 g dried short pasta (spirals, shells or macaroni)
2 × 425 g cans tuna in springwater or brine, drained and flaked
1 cup frozen peas (or ½ cup peas + ½ cup corn), thawed and drained
1 tbsp lemon juice + 1 tsp zest
Fresh parsley, chopped (optional, to finish)
60 g unsalted butter
1 small brown onion, finely diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
⅓ cup (45 g) plain flour
3 cups (750 ml) milk, warmed
1 tsp Dijon mustard
1 cup (100 g) grated cheddar (“tasty”)
¼ cup (25 g) finely grated parmesan
½ tsp sea salt (plus more to taste) and black pepper
Pinch of nutmeg (optional)
1 cup panko or fresh breadcrumbs
1 tbsp melted butter or olive oil
½ cup grated cheddar
These are easy wins that turn a tray of tuna mornay into a complete Australian dinner without much extra work.
This tuna mornay recipe is a balanced plate: protein from tuna, energy from pasta and dairy, and fibre from peas and corn. If you’re watching calories, serve with a big salad and go lighter on the topping. For tight budgets, use a single 425 g tin of tuna and add an extra cup of vegetables; nobody notices.
Boil short pasta until al dente. Make a quick mornay sauce by whisking milk into a butter–flour roux, then melt in cheese with Dijon and lemon. Fold in drained tuna and peas, tip into a dish, top with buttered breadcrumbs and bake until bubbly and golden. That’s the simple tuna mornay method in one paragraph.
Mornay sauce a classic béchamel enriched with cheese. I use cheddar for body and parmesan for savoury depth, plus Dijon and lemon to brighten.
Yes. Stir the cooked pasta, tuna and veg directly into the finished sauce and simmer gently for 1 minute to heat through. Top bowls with toasted breadcrumbs and cheese for crunch.
Spirals, shells or macaroni hold sauce in their curves, but any short shape works. Cook 1–2 minutes less than the packet says so it doesn’t go mushy in the oven.
You can, but canned tuna is traditional and convenient. Cooked, flaked salmon or smoked fish also make a lovely variation—reduce added salt and add extra lemon.
Last winter our local footy club needed to feed thirty hungry teens after training. We made four trays of this tuna mornay recipe with the budget we had: supermarket pasta, house-brand tuna, frozen peas, milk and a block of tasty. The kids went quiet while eating (the highest compliment), coaches requested the recipe, and the leftovers reheated perfectly for lunch the next day. It’s proof that a simple Australian recipe, cooked well, still wins hearts—and fills bellies—better than fancy food.
There’s a reason this dish endures in Australian kitchens: it’s warm, generous and bigger than the sum of its pantry parts. With this tuna mornay recipe you get a silky cheese sauce, tender pasta, sweet pops of vegetables and that all-important crunchy top.
It’s the kind of Australian recipe that turns a Tuesday into comfort, travels well to neighbours in need and slips into any list of Aussie dinner ideas without hesitation. Print it, bookmark it, and make it yours the Aussie way.
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