Spaghetti Alla Carbonara
12 ingredients
21 steps
Ingredients
- 1/2 pound pancetta or bacon
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 4 each garlic cloves peeled, and lightly crushed
- 1/4 cup white wine dry
- 1 x salt
- 1 pound spaghetti thin
- 3 large eggs
- 1/4 cup romano cheese
- 1/2 cup parmesan, parmigiano-reggiano cheese, grated
- 1 x black pepper
- 2 tablespoons parsley leaves chopped fine
Directions
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1Cut the pancetta or bacon into thin strips.
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2Put the oil, butter and crushed garlic into a saucepan or small saute pan and turn on the heat to medium-high.
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3When the garlic becomes colored a deep gold, remove and discard it.
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4Put the pancetta or bacon into the pan and saute until it begins to be crisp at the edges.
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5Add the wine and let it boil away for a minute or two; then turn off the heat.
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6In a large pot, bring about 4 to 5 quarts water to a boil.
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7Add about 2 to 3 teaspoons salt, and when the water returns to a boil, put in the spaghetti.
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8Take the bowl from which you'll be serving the spaghetti later, and into it break the three eggs.
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9Beat them lightly, then mix into them both grated cheeses, a liberal grinding of pepper, and the parsley.
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10When the spaghetti is tender but firm to the bite, drain it and put it into the serving bowl with the egg-and-cheese mixture.
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11toss rapidly and thoroughly until it is well-coated.
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12Reheat the pancetta or bacon quickly over high heat, then pour the entire contents of the pan over the spaghetti.
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13Toss again thoroughly and serve immediately.
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14Note:
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15Spaghetti with raw eggs and Italian bacon -- While there are innumerable minor variations in the way people make this celebrated Roman dish, there are really only two substantially different schools of thought.
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16One maintains that pancetta, a mild, cured, unsmoked Italian bacon, is the only correct bacon to use.
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17The other school insists on the smoked American variety.
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18Both are good, and both are popular in Italy, but the version I prefer is the one with pancetta.
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19The flavor of smoke is not usually associated with Italian food; certainly hardly ever outside of Alto Adige, a German- speaking region in the North that was once part of Austria.
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20In this dish, I find that smoked bacon adds a sharpness that wearies the palate after the first bite-fulls.
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21Try it both ways and decide for yourself.
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