Well, I am back after a lengthy break due to lack of planning meals with enough time to write a recipe and take pictures before scarfing it down. I've never made this Pasta Carbonara before but lately I've been craving eggs so I gave this a shot. I added peas and chile flakes because, well...it sounded good. Turns out it was. I served this with an arugula and cherry tomato salad with a lemon vinagrette. Perfect summer meal.
Ingredients:
1 pound dry spaghetti (I used thick spaghetti but you could also use fettucine)
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
4 ounces pancetta or slab bacon, cubed or sliced into small strips
4 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1 cup frozen peas, thawed
1/2 to 1 tsp chile flakes
3 large eggs
1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus more for serving
Freshly ground black pepper (lots and lots)
1 handful fresh flat-leaf parsley, chopped
1-3 ladles reserved pasta water
Directions:
Prepare the sauce while the pasta is cooking to ensure that the spaghetti will be hot and ready when the sauce is finished; it is very important that the pasta is hot when adding the egg mixture, so that the heat of the pasta cooks the raw eggs in the sauce.
Bring a large pot of salted water (and I do mean salted...to taste like the ocean) to a boil, add the pasta and cook for 8 to10 minutes almost tender but still firm (as they say in Italian "al dente.") Drain the pasta well, reserving 1 cup of the starchy cooking water to use in the sauce if you wish.
Meanwhile, heat the olive oil in a deep skillet over medium flame. Add the pancetta and saute for about 3-5 minutes, until the bacon is crisp and the fat is rendered. Toss the garlic and chile flakes into the fat and saute for 1 minute to soften. Add the peas and cook for another 2-3 minutes. Add lots of pepper.
Add the hot, drained spaghetti to the pan and toss for 2 minutes to coat the strands in the bacon fat. Beat the eggs and Parmesan together in a mixing bowl, stirring well to prevent lumps. Remove the pan from the heat and pour the egg/cheese mixture into the pasta, whisking quickly until the eggs thicken, but do not scramble (this is done off the heat to ensure this does not happen.) Thin out the sauce with a bit of the reserved pasta water, until it reaches desired consistency. Season the carbonara with several more turns of freshly ground black pepper and taste for salt. Mound the spaghetti carbonara into warm serving bowls and garnish with chopped parsley. Pass more cheese around the table.
Friday, June 11, 2010
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