Carbonara for exquisite pasta

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Carbonara is likely a Roman dish of egg, cheese and some sort of pork. The word itself comes from the Latin word for “coal.” So, theoretically, a carbonara has to do with any piece of meat cooked over charcoal.

Over time, the dish became pretty firmly entrenched in its use of pancetta or guanciale and usually with a spaghetti or fettuccine.

As for the cheese, well that’s traditionally Pecorino-Romano or Parmigiano-Reggiano — or a luscious combination of the two.

With so few ingredients, the dish is actually tricky to make successfully and takes some trial and error to get just right.

Carbonara: a supremely luscious dish (Andrew Coppolino).

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