This is a real spaghetti carbonara recipe made the traditional Italian way, without a single drop of cream. It relies solely on egg and cheese to make a luscious, creamy carbonara sauce. Food fit for a king (or queen!) that proves simple can be magnificent.
Economical note – Use bacon instead of guanciale and parmesan instead of parmigiano reggiano for a very respectable version of carbonara that will still make Italians proud. But don’t add cream! 😊
Spaghetti carbonara
Carbonara is a beautiful, classic Italian pasta that’s so creamy, you’d swear there’s a good amount of cream in it. And indeed, there’s plenty of recipes that cheat by adding in cream.
But today, we’re making spaghetti carbonara properly, the authentic, traditional way. No cream. Just egg, cheese and a splash of starchy pasta cooking water.
15 minutes later, THIS is the sight that will be in front of you. And you’ll make 60 million Italians beam with pride!
You can imagine eating that mouthful of chewy spaghetti bathed in the creamy sauce, right? Don’t dream about it. Make it a reality!! It’s so quick and easy it will blow your mind!
What happens if I add cream?
Outside of Italy, lots of recipes “cheat” by adding cream into carbonara sauce, for various reasons. Not a bad thing, per se, it’s just that it’s no longer a real carbonara.
But more importantly for me (in addition to, of course, the fact that I’m sharing a recipe with the intention of respecting the origins), cream alters the mouthfeel and flavour. You see, real carbonara is rich and creamy to eat. But you don’t get that slick of dairy fat coating your mouth like you do when eating cream.
Put another way – carbonara is how you get your creamy pasta fix without feeling weighed down like you do when you indulge in pastas doused with heavy cream. Win!
Ingredients in carbonara sauce
Carbonara calls for raw eggs which are stirred vigorously off the stove with hot cooked pasta, guanciale (a cured pork like bacon), parmesan and a splash of pasta cooking water. Watch the magic unfold before your eyes as 4 simple ingredients transforms into a luxurious creamy sauce! NO CREAM allowed! 🙂
Economical note: Substitute guanciale with bacon and use parmesan instead of parmigiana reggiano. You’ll still capture the essence of real carbonara that will make Italians proud!
Guanciale – This is a key ingredient in carbonara, and is a cured fatty pork that is similar to bacon and pancetta. It adds adds flavour into the dish and the fat makes the sauce creamy when mixed with the egg and starchy pasta cooking water.
Find it at Italian delis, Harris Farms (Syd, QLD), and speciality produce stores. It’s a bit of a speciality product but can be substituted with pancetta or streaky bacon in a pinch! Best to get block form so you can cut it into thick batons. If pre-sliced is all you can get, try to get thick cut.
More information on guanciale below.
Parmigiano reggiano – This is basically a premium parmesan that’s been aged so it has more complex flavours. It adds salt into the sauce as well as thickening it. Pecorino romano, which is made from sheep milk, is also commonly used, or a combination of the two. Substitute with parmesan cheese.
Must grate your own! Whatever you use, don’t use store bought pre-grated as it won’t melt properly in the sauce.
Egg yolks and whole eggs – The egg combined with the guanciale fat is what makes the stunning creamy carbonara sauce that the world is obsessed with. There’s no need for cream for a creamy sauce! See section above for why.
We use a combination of whole eggs, plus egg yolks for richness. If only yolks are used, the richness is a little too off-the-charts!
Raw egg concerns? These days in developed countries, food safety standards are such that you should not have to be concerned about eating raw eggs sourced from reputable stores. In fact, raw eggs are used more commonly than you probably realise, such as in tiramisu and mayonnaise. So if you’ve ever had any of these at restaurants, you’ve had raw eggs!
However, if you are pregnant or immunity compromised, I would recommend avoiding raw eggs as a precaution. Make fettucine alfredo instead!
Spaghetti – While you can use any long pasta, the most common type used is spaghetti.
Pepper – For seasoning. Freshly ground black pepper recommended here.
No salt in sauce – The pasta cooking water is salted so it flavours the spaghetti as it cooks. And the carbonara sauce gets salt from the guanciale and cheese.
Garlic, optional – While not strictly traditional, garlic is a popular addition and it does add extra flavour into it. 🙂
Guanciale for (real) carbonara
Worth hunting down? Yes, if it’s accessible, within your budget and you are keen to experience an authentic carbonara. But bacon or pancetta makes a very respectable substitute!
Guanciale is a cured Italian pork that is made from pig jowls or cheek that looks like a block of bacon. It has more intense flavour than everyday bacon because of the pork cut used and it’s aged 3+ months.
It has a high proportion of fat, and that’s exactly as it should be and is needed for carbonara. The fat that melts out of the guanciale when sautéed until golden is a key flavouring for the creamy carbonara sauce.
Equally important is that the fat that melts out of the guanciale is required to thicken the carbonara sauce to make it creamy. Basically, what happens is that when the fat from the guanciale and in the egg yolks is mixed with starchy pasta cooking water, it thickens. This is what makes the sauce creamy and cling to the pasta strands rather than a watery pool in the base of your bowl. You’ll see in the recipe video below!
If you don’t have enough fat (for example, if you try to make this with lean bacon), your sauce will never thicken.
Substitute guanciale with pancetta or bacon, preferably in block form so you can cut it into batons. Biting into the golden brown chunks of guanciale is a highlight of this dish!! Whichever you use, it’s essential to ensure there’s plenty of streaks of fat.
Pre-sliced bacon? It will work but because the slices are thinner than the ideal baton size, you will end up with a lot more bacon bits throughout your dish than pictured in this post. Perhaps not considered a negative, by some! 🙂
How to make (real) carbonara
Sauté guanciale until golden. Mix hot cooked pasta vigorously with the guanciale, egg, cheese and a splash of pasta cooking water and watch as it transforms into a luxurious, creamy sauce.
HOT TIP: Use the handle of a wooden spoon to mix. Fast and effective!
Batons – Cut the guanciale into thick batons. Biting through the golden brown crust into meaty bits of salty guanciale is part of the awesomeness that is carbonara!
Finely grate the parmigiana reggiano or pecorino. I use a microplane – one of can’t-live-without kitchenware items!
Sauce – Whisk together the egg, cheese and pepper in a large bowl. It needs to be a large bowl because the pasta will be stirred into the sauce in the bowl, off the stove, to avoid scrambling the eggs.
Cook pasta – Bring 4 litres (4 quarts) of water to the boil with 1 tablespoon of salt. Cook the pasta per packet directions. It should be firm, not soft, but fully cooked through.
Reserve pasta cooking water – Just before draining, scoop out one cup of pasta cooking water. Then drain the pasta in a colander.
Cook guanciale until golden while the pasta is cooking. You don’t need any oil, the guanciale will fry in its own fat.
Toss pasta in guanciale – Tumble the hot pasta into the pan with the guanciale then toss so the pasta gets coated in the guanciale fat.
Transfer into sauce bowl – Tip the hot pasta into the bowl with the egg and use a rubber spatula to scrape out every drop of the guanciale fat into the bowl. That stuff is gold! 🙂
Add 1/2 cup pasta cooking water into the bowl.
Mix vigorously with the handle of a wooden spoon, spinning the pasta around, for around 30 seconds to 1 minute. Watch as the watery pale yellow liquid magically transforms into a creamy sauce.
You know it’s ready when the sauce is no longer watery and pooled in the bottom of the bowl. Instead, it will be thickened, creamy, and clinging to the pasta!
Serve immediately in warm bowls. Pasta waits for no one!
Warm bowls? Yes. I don’t usually warm bowls for serving food, but for pasta, I almost always do. This is because pasta is at its best when it’s freshly made with the sauce is slick and the pasta is juicy. As it cools, the sauce thickens and the pasta gets stodgy. A warm bowl prolongs the life of pasta. I just warm bowls by placing a stack in the microwave for 1 minute. Else, run it under hot water or put in a low oven.
And there you have it. One of the most luxurious pasta dishes in the world. Did you know it was this quick and easy to make? Such is the beauty of Italian food. The simplicity, letting produce take centre stage with a few little tricks to make magnificent good with so few ingredients.
5 ingredients.
15 minutes.
It’s an absolutely stunner. I really hope you try this one day. – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Carbonara (real)
Ingredients
- 175g/6 oz guanciale (pancetta or block bacon), weight after skin removed (Note 1)
- 2 large eggs (Note 2)
- 2 egg yolks (Note 2)
- 100g/3.5 oz parmigiano reggiano , finely shredded (or pecorino romano, sub parmesan, Note 3)
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 400g/14 oz spaghetti
- 1 tbsp cooking/kosher salt (for cooking pasta)
- 1/2 cup pasta cooking water
- 1 garlic clove , finely minced (optional, Note 4)
Garnish (optional):
- Parsley , finely chopped
- Parmigiano reggiano
Instructions
- Guanciale – Cut into 0.5cm / 1/5" thick slices then into batons.
- Carbonara sauce – Place eggs and yolks in a large bowl. Whisk to combine. Then stir in the parmesan and pepper.
- Cook pasta – Bring 4 litres (4 quarts) of water to the boil with the salt. Add pasta and cook per the packet directions.
- Reserve pasta water – Just before draining, scoop out 1 cup of pasta cooking water, then drain the pasta.
- Cook guanciale – While the pasta is cooking, place guanciale in a non stick pan over medium high heat. Cook for 4 to 5 minutes until golden. No oil needed – as the guanciale heats up, the fat will melt so it fries in its own fat. If using garlic, add it in the last minute.
- Pasta in pan – Tip the hot pasta into the pan and toss to coat in guanciale fat.
- Mix pasta in sauce – Transfer the pasta and any residual fat in the pan into the bowl with the egg. Add 1/2 cup (125 ml) pasta cooking water. Stir vigorously using the handle of a wooden spoon for 1 minute and watch as the sauce transforms from watery to creamy and clings to the pasta strands!
- Serve – Transfer into warm bowls. Serve immediately, garnished with a little extra parmigiana reggiano if desired, and a pinch of black pepper and finely chopped parsley.
Recipe Notes:
Life of Dozer
Recently discovered iPhone photo Memories on my phone. Here’s the one that came up today!
Will Antoniacci says
Hi Nagi,
Your recipe is almost there. Authentic spaghetti alla carbonara should only be use pecorino romano cheese. It’s like cream for us. It would not be carbonara with out pecorino. 😊
Jan says
What did I do wrong? I used the pecorino romano cheese which left the dish tasting a little bitter? Have only ever used this cheese to sprinkle over the top of certain recipes.
Katie says
I’d waited so long for this recipe!! It’s wonderful and so creamy. It works even with bacon subbed, and cheddar or tasty cheese still works in a pinch, just add extra salt! 🙂
Jeffery Gainer says
Nagi, thank you for so eloquently explaining the techniques of creating this marvelous dish. Of all the wonderful things that can be made with pasta, this has always been my favorite. To reiterate your advice for your readers: don’t skimp on quality ingredients. Buy the best you can find, particularly the pasta. Use a few extra eggs yolks, and don’t buy substandard cheese. Streaky bacon will work fine, but use the rendered fat. Get those bowls nice and warm in the oven and serve immediately!
Karin Bringezu says
This was fabulous tonight! I was a little wary of carbonara – nightmares of scrambled egg pasta in my mind! – but this was so easy even I couldn’t muck it up! Only had basic bacon but it rendered its fat just fine which flavoured the whole dish beautifully.
Abi says
Made this for the first time last night – yummo! Just have to remember to time everything right so that the bacon grease is still hot when you combine everything. Definitely going to make this again.
Laurie Teas says
Fantastic, quick dinner! Great flavor and comes together so fast. Love the recipe Nagi 😍
julie handsley says
Made this last night, quick and delicious and the family loved it too. Used streaky bacon, worked perfectly.
Anna McGlew says
Love this carbonara and the family does too. Great weeknight dinner with a green salad. Nailed it again Nagi!
Vivian says
Love this recipe but aren’t we essentially eating raw egg?🤔🤔
Emma says
The heat of the pasta cooks the egg.
Alex says
Hi! Love the website, love the recipe.
Important question: Can you sub with gluten free pasta? Any recommendations?
Also wondering what you would serve this with that would work together for a hearty dinner?
Susannah Fox says
The perfect method and ratios at last!
I live in Italy and have been struggling to get my Carbonara just right.
I may even try this for visitors now.
Leanne says
Love this photo of Dozer jumping into the pool
Am going to try and recreate it with my fluufy fur baby
Fingers crossed
Lee says
Sorry to sound stupid but is it 4 eggs or 2 eggs + 2 eggs yolks?
Ash says
You don’t sound stupid at all darling, just inexperienced but that’s okay, we all were once!
Its 2 whole eggs plus 2 yolks on there own 😁😙
Marida Bijkersma says
It is two whole eggs and two egg yolks.
Janell says
Would this still work ok to use 14 oz penne rather than spaghetti? (picky kids!)
Jeffery Gainer says
Never tried it, but penne should work well. Just get good quality pasta and undercook it just a little bit.
Janell says
Thanks for the reply! I’ll give it a go. I’ve used spaghetti several times now and it’s sooo good! I’ll try penne next time!
Nichole says
OMG! How easy and so so tasty! Well done Nagi! I will be cooking this one again for my friends
Mark Muirhead says
Super easy to make and will certainly cook it again.
We had a hit and miss response though; enjoyed it but it ended up too strong and salty.
I used thick cut bacon and crumbled pancetta as a supplement (local four letter aussie supermarket is pathetic) but may have over-egged it with the pancetta, way too salty.
The Reggiano was then too dominant on the back of the pancetta and pasta water.
We used fresh pasta straight out of the machine so probably should have halved the salt.
Frankie says
This is the absolute best and easiest carbonara recipe ever! I’ve made it twice already because my family loved it so much! I used bacon and parmesan because, you know, inflation these days! But it was still as good as some I’ve had in restaurants.
Sabrina says
Hi Nagi, I love your recipes and used many of them! (I made 3 strawberry cakes last night …lol). Thank you for your time of curating these amazing dishes for us 🙂
This looks amazing. Is there any meatless sub that might work, like maybe more egg and smoked gouda? Thanks!
Orii Staples says
You could always add lots of Mushrooms? And a mix of parmigiana reggiano and pecorino together? Just sharing my ideas 😊
Sabrina J says
Thanks Orii! Mushrooms are always amazing!
I was concerned about the fat ratio since it seems that’s crucial to the proper consistency for this dish. So I hope the extra cheese would do the trick 🙂
Sarah says
Maybe also add some butter?
K says
Made this last night. Super good. I’ve been wanting to make this for a very long time, but never found a recipe/method that I liked overmuch. Thanks for sharing yours! Definitely a keeper.
Cheryll Miller says
AMAZING!! The video makes it all so easy. A very delicious dish … thanks Nagi and Dozer. xx