. . : Spaghetti Alla Carbonara Recipe - Quick Recipes, Easy Meal Ideas, Food online : : .
. : : Menu : : .


> Categories:
Appetizers   Baked Goods   Barbeque   Basics   Beans and Grains   Beef   Beverages   Breads   Breakfasts   Cake   Candies   Canning and Preserving   Casseroles   Cheese   Chicken   Chocolate   Condiments   Cookies   Crock Pot and Slow Cooker   Desserts   Duck   Eggs   Fruits   Grains   Herbs and Spices   Holiday   Hot and Spicy   Jellies and Jams   Kids   Lamb   Liquor   Main Dish   Mexican   Nuts   Pasta   Pets   Quick and Easy   Recipes for Pets   Regional Cuisine   Rice   Salad   Sauces   Sausages   Seafood   Side Dish   Snacks   Soups   Stews   Stuffings   Sweets and Desserts   Vegetables   Vegetarian   Wild Game  

Spaghetti Alla Carbonara
Category Pasta
Total Hits 611
Rating Rating:0 | Voted:0 | voted : 0 times
1 Point 2 Point 3 Point 4 Point 5 Point 6 Point 7 Point 8 Point 9 Point 10 Point
The Recipe

1/2 lb Pancetta or bacon

2 T Olive oil

1 T Butter

4 Garlic cloves, peeled

-and lightly crushed 1/4 c White wine, dry

Salt 1 lb Thin spaghetti

3 Eggs

1/4 c Peccorino romano cheese,

-freshly grated 1/2 c Parmesan cheese,

-freshly grated Black pepper, -freshly ground 2 T Parsley, chopped fine

Cut the pancetta or bacon into thin strips. Put the oil, butter and crushed garlic into a saucepan or small saute pan and turn on the heat to medium-high. When the garlic becomes colored a deep gold, remove and discard it. Put the pancetta or bacon into the pan and saute until it begins to be crisp at the edges. Add the wine and let it boil away for a minute or two; then turn off the heat. In a large pot, bring about 4-5 quarts water to a boil. Add about 2-3 T salt, and when the water returns to a boil, put in the spaghetti. Take the bowl from which you'll be serving the spaghetti later, and into it break the three eggs. Beat them lightly, then mix into them both grated cheeses, a liberal grinding of pepper, and the parsley. When the spaghetti is tender but firm to the bite, drain it and put it into the serving bowl with the egg-and-cheese mixture. toss rapidly and thoroughly until it is well-coated. Reheat the pancetta or bacon quickly over high heat, then pour the entire contents of the pan over the spaghetti. Toss again thoroughly and serve immediately. NOTES: * Spaghetti 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. One maintains that pancetta, a mild, cured, unsmoked Italian bacon, is the only correct bacon to use. The other school insists on the smoked American variety. Both are good, and both are popular in Italy, but the version I prefer is the one with pancetta. The 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. In this dish, I find that smoked bacon adds a sharpness that wearies the palate after the first bite-fulls. Try it both ways and decide for yourself. : Difficulty: moderate. : Time: 20 minutes. : Precision: Approximate measurement OK. : Katherine Rives Albitz : Hewlett-Packard, Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA : hplabs!hpfcla!hpcnof!k_albitz : Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust

Render: 0.002 Sec ¦ By AhmBay