{"title":"How to Make a Traditional Carbonara (No Cream, Just Eggs)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/cooking/how-to-make-carbonara","category":{"slug":"cooking","name":"Cooking"},"creator":{"name":"Chef Jean-Pierre","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLGNeElk4sNgzUrZr0c9krA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RErU22weYyM"},"tldr":"Make a real Italian carbonara at home in 30 minutes. No cream - just eggs, Pecorino, guanciale, and black pepper. Foolproof Chef Jean-Pierre method.","totalDurationSeconds":712,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Get Your Big Pot of Salted Water Going","text":"Fill your biggest pot with water and set it on high heat. Once it hits a rolling boil, salt it generously - more salt than you think feels right. Chef Jean-Pierre is very clear: salt is the only thing that goes in the pasta water. Never oil. The salt seasons the pasta from the inside, and the starchy salted water becomes the secret weapon for the sauce later.Drop in 1 lb of dried spaghetti. Do not break the strands - just slide them in whole and let them soften and bend into the water on their own. The thicker spaghettoni shape is ideal if you can find it, but regular spaghetti works fine."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Cut and Render the Guanciale Slowly","text":"Guanciale is cured pork jowl - fattier and far more flavorful than pancetta or bacon. If you can find it at an Italian market, peel off the tough outer skin and cut the meat into matchsticks or short batons about a quarter-inch thick. Pancetta is the next best swap and needs no skin trimming. Plain bacon works too, but it is smoked, which shifts the flavor.Drop the pork into a dry, cold non-stick pan with nothing else added. No oil. No butter. Set the heat to medium-low and let the fat melt out slowly. The goal is golden crispy edges with clear, melted fat pooled around them - not scorched lean meat in dried-out fat."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Whisk the Eggs, Cheese, and Pepper Off the Heat","text":"Crack 4 egg yolks and 1 whole egg into a bowl. Beat them with a fork like you are starting an omelet. Add 1 cup of freshly grated Pecorino Romano. Chef Jean-Pierre also adds a small handful of Parmigiano Reggiano for a milder, rounder finish - that part is optional.Crack in plenty of fresh black pepper. Do NOT add salt. Pecorino Romano is already very salty cheese, and the pasta water is salty too. Mix everything into a thick, paste-like cream. This is the famous carbonara cream - no dairy cream in sight, just eggs, cheese, and pepper. It will turn silky when warmed by the residual heat of the just-drained pasta."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Drain the Pasta and Save the Cooking Water","text":"Spaghetti needs about 10 to 12 minutes depending on the brand. Taste a strand around the time the box suggests. Al dente means firm to the bite - the noodle should give resistance but not feel raw or chalky in the center. Pull the pasta a hair before you think it is done; it will finish cooking in the sauce pan.Before you drain, scoop out at least half a cup of the starchy salted pasta water and reserve it - this is the glue that pulls the sauce together. Chef Jean-Pierre also adds a little of that water directly to the guanciale pan at this stage to start building the base."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Move the Pasta Straight Into the Guanciale Pan","text":"Lower the heat under the guanciale pan to its lowest setting (or pull the pan off the burner entirely for a moment to cool it down). Using tongs or a pasta spider, lift the cooked spaghetti right out of the boiling water and into the pan with the rendered fat. Do not bother fully draining it - the little bit of pasta water clinging to the noodles is exactly what you want.Toss the pasta in the fat for a few seconds so every strand picks up the porky flavor and gets glossy. You are not cooking the pasta further here - you are coating it."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Add the Egg-Cheese Cream and Toss Fast","text":"This is the crucial moment. With the heat very low (or completely off), pour the egg-cheese mixture over the hot pasta and start tossing immediately. Do not stop. The residual heat from the pasta and pan will gently cook the eggs into a silky, glossy sauce.Move fast or you will end up with scrambled eggs sticking to the bottom of the pan. If the sauce looks too thick or pasty, splash in a little of the reserved pasta water to loosen it. Keep tossing until every strand is coated in a creamy, pale-yellow sauce. That glossy coating is the carbonara cream Chef Jean-Pierre is after - no dairy, just emulsified egg, cheese, fat, and starchy water."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Plate and Finish With Pecorino, Pepper, and Crispy Guanciale","text":"Twist the pasta into a tall nest on a warmed plate or wide shallow bowl. Spoon any sauce left in the pan over the top so nothing goes to waste. Scatter a generous extra handful of freshly grated Pecorino Romano across the pasta and crack more black pepper over the cheese.Place a few of the crispy guanciale pieces on top as a hero garnish. Drizzle a tiny bit of the reserved rendered pork fat over the top for the final shine if you saved any. Serve immediately while everything is still warm and silky - carbonara waits for no one. Cold carbonara goes from glossy to gluey in about three minutes."}],"recipe":{"servings":"Serves 4","prepMinutes":10,"cookMinutes":20,"cuisine":"Italian","ingredients":[{"name":"spaghetti or rigatoni","notes":"thicker spaghettoni is ideal","amount":"1 lb"},{"name":"guanciale","notes":"cut into matchsticks; pancetta or bacon as substitute","amount":"6 oz"},{"name":"egg yolks","amount":"4 large"},{"name":"whole egg","amount":"1 large"},{"name":"Pecorino Romano cheese","notes":"freshly grated, not pre-shredded","amount":"1 cup grated"},{"name":"Parmigiano Reggiano cheese","notes":"optional, for a milder finish","amount":"1/4 cup grated"},{"name":"black pepper","notes":"coarsely cracked, freshly ground","amount":"1 tbsp"},{"name":"kosher salt","notes":"generous - the water should taste like the sea","amount":"for pasta water"},{"name":"reserved pasta water","notes":"scoop out before draining","amount":"1/2 cup"}]},"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T16:43:37.574Z","published":"2026-05-24T16:40:12.807Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. 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