Roman Food Recipes: Pasta alla Carbonara & Cacio e Pepe (2024)

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Roman cuisine is often referred to as being “way too delicious to be easy to make.” Well, if you’ve always wanted to cook Roman food but never had the courage to try, you’re in luck! Roman cuisine carries a faraway echo of the diverse populations that made their way across its territory. It is diverse within itself, but one main similarity ties each Italian dish together. Roman food originates from the simple basics of “la cucina povera” (literally, the poor cuisine). The ingredients used in these traditional dishes were kept, hunted or grown by the very consumers of the meals, and no parts ever went to waste. Over the centuries Roman cuisine has been enriched with different flavors, but like all food in Italy, it has never lost its touch of “simplicity.”

One of the theories about pasta alla carbonara claims it was brought to Rome by the carbonari (mine workers of the Italian Apennines). The main ingredients of this pasta dish (eggs and cheese) were very easily conserved and transported and it is, in fact, thought that the dish could be prepared in advance and eaten cold by the workers. Others believe that Italians began eating the dish around the time when the American troops arrived in Italy during the Second World War, bringing with them eggs and bacon in powered form. Carbonara is the evolution of a dish once called ‘cacio e uova’ (cheese and eggs), more commonly known in the south of Italy.

Another very similar traditional Roman dish, cacio e pepe (cheese and pepper), was born from the lack of eggs to make Carbonara. The key ingredient of both dishes is the powdered black pepper, which resembles coal dust from the mines. When I recommend it to visitors it always sounds so boring, “It’s a pasta with cheese and pepper!” – but on the contrary, it is so tasty and creamy. Definitely one of my all time favourites of the Roman food classics.

Rigatoni Carbonara

When it comes to making carbonara, we are confronted with the quintessential questions: pancetta or guanciale? Whole eggs or yolks? Spaghetti or rigatoni? Well, clearly there are a number of ways to make the fabulous Carbonara, but here’s how we make it!

Ingredients

  • 400g (14 ounces) guanciale – Italian-style bacon made from pig’s jowl
  • 500g (17 ounces) rigatoni pasta
  • 4 eggs
  • 200g (7 ounces) Pecorino Romano cheese
  • Pinch of freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 cup sparkling water
  • a splash of white wine

Method

  • Dice your guanciale and fry it in a pan with a splash of wine, until crispy. There’s no need to add extra olive oil as the guanciale releases a fair amount of fat as it cooks.
  • Bring a pot of water to the boil, add a couple handfuls of salt, and cook your pasta al dente (usually a few minutes less than what the package says)
  • In a separate bowl, mix the eggs, pepper and pecorino, and add the sparkling water to make the mixture light and airy.
  • Add the guanciale to the egg mixture
  • When the pasta is cooked, drain well and add to the egg and bacon mixture. Turn on the flame to medium heat.
  • Mix the ingredients in the pan by rapidly moving the pan in circles above the flame with both hands on the handles. Pay close attention to the consistency of the egg on the outer edges of the pan as you rotate. When the eggs begin to streak along the edges, quickly remove the pan from the heat. Over cooking will result in scrambled eggs! The whole “mixing” process should last a max of 10 seconds.
  • Serve pasta with an extra sprinkle of pecorino and freshly ground pepper.

Pasta Cacio e Pepe

Ingredients

  • 500g tonnarelli or spaghetti
  • 300g Pecorino Romano cheese
  • ½ cup pasta water
  • 1 Tbsp fresh pepper
  • 3 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil

Method

  • Bring a pot of salted water to the boil, and cook pasta al dente (just a few minutes less than what the package says).
  • In a separate bowl, mix the grated pecorino cheese with a few spoonfuls of cooking water to make the mixture creamy (you want it to be liquid enough for the pasta to soak it up nicely without ending up dry).
  • Add oil and freshly ground pepper.
  • Drain the pasta and add to the mixture. Mix until fully incorporated and perfectly creamy.

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Roman Food Recipes: Pasta alla Carbonara & Cacio e Pepe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between carbonara and cacio e pepe? ›

Carbonara is the evolution of a dish once called 'cacio e uova' (cheese and eggs), more commonly known in the south of Italy. Carbonara – more Roman than the Colloseum! Another very similar traditional Roman dish, cacio e pepe (cheese and pepper), was born from the lack of eggs to make Carbonara.

What is Rome's signature pasta dish? ›

There are four classic Roman pasta dishes: cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, and alla gricia. Each one is a variation on the other — alla gricia is cacio e pepe plus guanciale, carbonara is gricia plus egg, and so on. These four dishes are famous in all of Italian cooking, not just in Rome.

What is cacio e pepe Rome dish? ›

Cacio e pepe is a popular Roman pasta dish. The word 'cacio' is Roman dialect for cheese. In this case, the cheese is Pecorino Romano, a salty, aged sheep's milk cheese that dates to the Roman Empire. The finely grated cheese is mixed with freshly ground black pepper—lots of it—and starchy pasta cooking water.

Did the Romans eat carbonara? ›

Everyone loves Carbonara. Always considered one of the traditional dishes of Roman cuisine, its origins, however, are Neapolitan.

What is the trinity of Roman pastas? ›

Amatriciana, Carbonara, and Cacio e Pepe are all Italian recipes that originated in Rome.

What does cacio e pepe mean in English? ›

Cacio e pepe means 'cheese and pepper' in several central Italian dialects. In keeping with its name, the dish contains grated pecorino romano and black pepper, together with tonnarelli or spaghetti.

What are the top 4 pasta dishes in Rome? ›

The iconic quartet of carbonara, cacio e pepe, amatriciana and gricia make up the four most famous and beloved Roman pasta dishes. Find out more about them with our handy guide.

What are the 4 Roman pastas combined? ›

This secret pasta from Rome combines their 4 most famous pastas, Cacio e Pepe, Carbonara, Alla Gricia and Amatriciana, to form what may be one of the most delicious pastas I've ever had.

What's the difference between carbonara and Italian carbonara? ›

The Italian version doesn't use cream or ham. It is made with pancetta (pork belly meat that is salt cured, also referred to as Italian bacon), Parmigiano Reggiano or pecorino romano cheese, eggs, and black pepper—called the basics. The pork is fried in fat, usually olive oil.

What Italian pasta is similar to carbonara? ›

Cacio e uova is essentially Naples' meatless version of carbonara. Its silky sauce is made of eggs—two whole eggs plus an extra yolk keeps everything creamy—and a mixture of grated Parmigiano-Reggiano and Pecorino Romano.

How is cacio e pepe different from alfredo? ›

Cacio e pepe is made by emulsifying pasta water with grated cheese and black pepper. It clumps so easily. Alfredo has an image problem. Americans think of it as pasta draped in a cream sauce made of heavy cream and cheese, but the original version is thinner and creamy from an emulsion of butter and grated cheese.

What is the difference between cacio e pepe and gricia? ›

Gricia is simple and focused on the luscious guanciale fat with a dusting of pecorino, while cacio e pepe loses the meat and adds more cheese and pepper for rich sauce, add an egg and keep the meat and you have indulgent carbonara, skip the egg and add tomatoes for hearty amaratriciana.

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