Pasta Carbonara With Pancetta: Simple Ingredients, Big Flavor

There’s no debating pasta carbonara’s standing in the pantheon of Italian pasta recipes. A Roman classic, its glossy sauce is built from eggs, hard cheese, cured pork, and black pepper—no cream required. This version of the pasta carbonara recipe from Epicurious relies on egg yolks, finely grated Parmesan cheese, rendered pancetta fat, and starchy pasta water—nothing more. As the pancetta cooks, its savory, aromatic drippings become the backbone of the dish, while a generous amount of freshly ground black pepper keeps the richness in check. The key is timing. The eggs and cheese are whisked together off heat, then gently tossed with hot pasta until silky and emulsified, never scrambled. Traditionalists can swap pancetta for guanciale or Parmesan for Pecorino Romano, but the result remains the same: a spare but luxurious, deeply satisfying pasta carbonara that’s ready in about 25 minutes.

Ingredients:

  • ● 12 oz. mezze rigatoni 
  • ● smashed 4 oz. pancetta (Italian bacon) cut into ½” pieces 
  • ● 3 oz. Parmesan, finely grated (about 2 cups) 
  • ● 6 large egg yolks 
  • ● 1 large egg 
  • ● 2 garlic cloves
  • Kosher salt 
  • ● 2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

Directions:

1. Cook 2 garlic cloves, smashed, and 4 oz. pancetta (Italian bacon), cut into ½” pieces, in a dry large skillet over medium heat, stirring often, until garlic is fragrant and browned in spots and pancetta is beginning to crisp, about 4 minutes. (It’s okay that the garlic will be cooking in a dry skillet before the fat renders from the pancetta.) Set a fine-mesh sieve over a small bowl and scrape pancetta mixture into sieve to drain. Pluck out and discard garlic. Transfer pancetta to a small bowl and let cool. Set fat from pancetta aside. 

2. Whisk together 6 large egg yolks and 1 large egg in a medium bowl. Add 3 oz. Parmesan, finely grated (about 2 cups), and whisk to combine.  Meanwhile, cook 12 oz. mezze rigatoni in a large pot of boiling salted water, stirring occasionally, until very al dente, about 1 minute less than package directions. Drain, reserving 1 cup pasta cooking liquid. Reserve pot. 

4. Stir 1 Tbsp. reserved pancetta fat and ¼ cup warm pasta cooking liquid into egg mixture. Combine egg mixture, pancetta, pasta, and another ¼ cup pasta cooking liquid in reserved pot and place over low heat. Cook, stirring constantly and adding more pasta cooking liquid as needed (up to remaining ½ cup), until sauce thickens and coats pasta in a glossy sheen, about 3 minutes. Remove pasta from heat, add 2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper, and season with kosher salt. Divide pasta among shallow bowls to serve.

Notes:

Pasta carbonara was traditionally served on its own, but it paired well with simple accompaniments. A crisp green salad dressed with lemon and olive oil provided contrast to the richness of the pasta. Roasted vegetables, such as broccolini or asparagus, also worked well alongside the dish without overwhelming it.

For those looking to explore variations, pancetta could be replaced with guanciale for a more traditional Roman profile, while Pecorino Romano could stand in for Parmesan for a sharper, saltier finish. Mezze rigatoni worked especially well because its ridges held onto the sauce, but spaghetti or bucatini were equally suitable.

This pasta carbonara with pancetta demonstrated how restraint often led to the most memorable results. By focusing on technique and timing rather than extra ingredients, the dish delivered depth, richness, and balance in every bite. Ready in about 25 minutes, it was an ideal example of how classic Italian cooking turned simplicity into something luxurious. When prepared with care, carbonara remained one of the most satisfying pasta dishes ever created.

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Roasted Chicken, A Classically Simple and Easy Recipe

Some nights call for dinner to be extravagant with several complicated side dishes and main entrees, but nothing can ever beat the simplicity of an excellently prepared roasted chicken, luckily this recipe from Epicurious does the trick, as it allows you to show off your cooking expertise with minimal excess. This particular recipe from Epicurious, comes by way of Chef Thomas Keller, who is known in the culinary world for his dining finesse, and that expertise is made even more obvious in this simple, roasted chicken recipe that doesn’t require an exuberant amount of preparation or extra ingredients. What results from finely-tuned, technical cooking is a roasted whole chicken with flavorful and crispy skin that’s absolutely delicious to the last bite.

Ingredients for Roasted Chicken:

Directions for Roasted Chicken

  1. In order to properly start this recipe, you’ll want to preheat your oven to a heat of 450 °F. While you’re awaiting your oven to heat, you’ll remove the packaging from your 2-3-pound farm-raised chicken and rinse it. Dry your chicken extremely well with paper towels both on the inside and out. The point is to have it as dry as possible because the less the chicken steams during the cooking process, the better the final product will be because of the dry heat in the oven.
  2. Next, salt and pepper the chicken cavity thoroughly before you truss the bird. Trussing is a cooking practice that ensures succulent, evenly-cooked poultry that looks as good as it tastes. Begin your trussing by placing the chicken breast-side up, and running the center of a piece of butcher’s twine under the neck in the front of the bird. Then, bring the string up towards the wings and legs and use your thumbs to tuck the wings in as you bring the string around towards the legs. Keeping the string tight in order to force the wings firmly against the body. The string should roughly follow the contours of the chicken breast. Essentially, you’re ensuring that the chicken will cook evenly by keeping the wings and legs close to the body and placing the ends of the drumsticks over the top in order to cover the top of the chicken breast and to keep it from drying out.
  3. After your chicken is trussed, salt your chicken with a uniform coating so that the end result will be a crisp, salty, flavorful skin. Season the rest of the chicken with pepper, to taste. Afterwards, place your chicken into either asauté pan or a roast pan with the breast side of the chicken facing upwards.
  4. Once your oven is up to 450 °F, place the pan of chicken into the oven. If you’d like, you can baste the chicken thoroughly with butter and the roasting juices throughout the cooking processes, but this recipe’s author suggests leaving the chicken alone during the roasting process because they are of the belief that basting throughout the roasting will create steam.
  5. Roast the chicken until it’s done, which ought to take 50 to 60 minutes or until it’s reached a safe internal temperature of 165 ºF on a thermal meat thermometer that’s inserted into the densest part of the bird. Once it’s cooked, remove it from the heat, add your minced thyme to the pan, baste the chicken with the pan juices and thyme, and then let it rest for 15 minutes on a cutting board.
  6. Remove the twine that is trussing the roasted chicken, and then separate the middle wing joint. Remove the legs and thighs. Next, cut the breast down the middle and serve it on the bone with one wing joint still attached to each. Cover the meat with fresh butter afterwards, and serve with mustard on the side, and also a simple green salad, if you wish.
  7. Enjoy your roasted chicken.

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