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If there is one pasta dish every home cook must master, it is authentic spaghetti carbonara. No cream, no garlic, no shortcuts. Just eggs, Pecorino Romano, guanciale, and pasta — transformed with technique into a sauce so silky and rich it seems impossible.

Why You Will Love This Carbonara

  • Only 4 real ingredients — no cream, no shortcuts
  • Ready in 20 minutes — faster than any pasta that tastes this luxurious
  • Budget friendly — feeds four people for very little
  • Impressive — guests will not believe it is homemade

Ingredients You Will Need

  • Spaghetti or rigatoni — either works; use bronze-die pasta for best sauce adhesion
  • Guanciale — cured pork cheek, richer than pancetta; pancetta is a good substitute
  • Egg yolks + 1 whole egg — yolks make the sauce rich and golden
  • Pecorino Romano — sharp and salty; the authentic choice over Parmesan
  • Black pepper — not just seasoning — it is a core flavor, be very generous

How to Make Authentic Carbonara

  1. Cook pasta in very salty water; reserve 1 cup pasta water before draining.
  2. Render guanciale in a cold pan until fat melts and edges crisp.
  3. Whisk egg yolks, whole egg, Pecorino, and lots of black pepper into a thick paste.
  4. Toss hot pasta with guanciale off the heat, pour egg mixture over, toss vigorously adding pasta water until silky and creamy.
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Authentic Spaghetti Carbonara

  • Prep Time: 5
  • Cook Time: 15
  • Total Time: 20
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x
  • Category: Pasta
  • Method: Stovetop
  • Cuisine: Italian

Description

Classic Roman spaghetti carbonara with crispy guanciale, silky egg yolk sauce, and Pecorino Romano — no cream, no garlic, just pure Italian perfection in 20 minutes.

Ingredients

  • 400g (14 oz) spaghetti or rigatoni
  • 200g (7 oz) guanciale or pancetta, cubed
  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 1 whole large egg
  • 100g (1 cup) Pecorino Romano, finely grated
  • Freshly cracked black pepper, very generous amount
  • Salt for pasta water

Instructions

  1. Cook the pasta: Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Salt generously — it should taste like the sea. Cook spaghetti until al dente (1 minute less than package directions). Before draining, reserve 1 full cup of starchy pasta water.
  2. Cook guanciale: While pasta cooks, place guanciale in a cold large skillet. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until fat renders and edges are crispy, about 8–10 minutes. Remove pan from heat.
  3. Make the egg mixture: In a bowl, whisk egg yolks and whole egg together. Add Pecorino and a very generous amount of black pepper. Whisk until smooth and thick.
  4. Combine off heat: Add hot drained pasta directly to the pan with the guanciale (heat OFF). Toss well. Pour the egg mixture over the pasta, tossing rapidly. Add pasta water a splash at a time — about ¼ cup to start — tossing continuously. The heat from the pasta cooks the eggs into a silky sauce. Keep tossing and adding water until the sauce is creamy and coats every strand.
  5. Serve immediately with extra Pecorino and a very generous crack of black pepper.

Notes

  • No cream ever. Authentic carbonara is creaminess achieved through the emulsification of eggs, cheese, and starchy pasta water — not cream.
  • Work fast and off-heat. The key to avoiding scrambled eggs is to toss quickly away from direct heat.
  • Guanciale vs pancetta: Guanciale (cured pork cheek) is the authentic choice. Pancetta is a good substitute. Bacon works but changes the flavor profile significantly.
  • Storage: Best eaten immediately. Leftovers can be refrigerated and reheated with a splash of water in a pan.

Nutrition

    Array

Tips, Tricks, and Recipe Notes

  • Never add cream — the silkiness comes from emulsified eggs and starchy pasta water only
  • Off-heat is essential — direct heat turns the eggs scrambled; residual heat is all you need
  • Add pasta water gradually — it helps the egg sauce emulsify into creaminess rather than clumping
  • Serve immediately — carbonara does not wait; have bowls warmed and guests seated

What to Serve with Carbonara

  • Simple arugula salad with lemon — cuts through the richness perfectly
  • Crusty Italian bread — essential for mopping up every last bit of sauce
  • Dry white wine — Pinot Grigio or Vermentino, classic Roman pairing