• 26Sep

    Carbonara 1Tuesday: I left my house at 7 am, had classes all day, a granola bar for lunch, raced off campus at 2:45 to make it to my daughter’s gymnastics class and blew in the door at 5:30 with my two hungry kids. I did not plan ahead for dinner; there was nothing happily simmering away in a crock pot on my counter.

    My answer, as it so often is, was pasta. But not just any pasta… My dad’s pasta carbonara (with a few of my small tweaks). I grew up eating it, it’s not fancy, it’s not quite traditional Italian–although pretty darn close. (Please excuse me for not stopping at Wegmans to buy cured pig cheeks.)

    Anyhow, in the time it takes to boil the pasta, I can  assemble the rest of the ingredients. It all gets tossed together and served. It really is that simple. This dish proves that comfort food doesn’t have to take all day, and that busy people don’t have to resort to take out, frozen food, or sauce from a jar. My son refers to it as “that creamy bacon pasta thing” and my daughter just likes anything involving noodles and/or bacon. It is a less than 30 minute meal that satisfies deeply and I can almost guarantee most people have the few ingredients it requires in their kitchens right now. And who doesn’t love the smell of bacon at the end of a long, crazy day?

    Cook’s note: Before getting started I recommend pouring yourself a cold glass of Italian Pinot Grigio. It helps make the experience more authentic… That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 lb of any long slurping noodle such as spaghetti or linguine fini
    • 8 ounces bacon (thicker cut the better) cut into small strips
    • 1/2 yellow onion very finely diced
    • 1 or 2 garlic cloves smashed
    • 4 egg yolks (place in a medium sized mixing bowl)
    • 1 1/2 cups parmigiano and/or finely grated Romano
    • 1 cup of reserved pasta cooking water
    • Freshly ground black pepper
    • handful of chopped parsley (optional)

    Instructions:Carbonara 1

    Bring a large pot of water to a boil

    Once boiling salt generously and cook your pasta according to the package directions.

    While waiting for the water to boil, begin crisping the bacon in a large skillet over medium heat stirring occasionally.

    When bacon is crisp, remove to paper towel lined plate to drain and pour off excess bacon drippings, leaving about 2 tablespoons in the pan along with any brown bits.

    Return pan to heat and add onions and garlic, cook until softened, but not brown-about 5 minutes.

    turn heat off and leave onion/garlic mixture to cool slightly.

    Meanwhile:

    When your pasta is almost cooked, scoop out a cup of the water, and very, very, VERY slowly drizzle the hot water into the egg yolks while whisking constantly. If you pour the hot water in too quickly, or without whisking, you will have scrambled eggs.

    When your pasta is cooked, drain it in a colander or scoop directly from pot to pan with tongs, and add it to the skillet containing the onions and garlic, and grind in as much black pepper as you can stand; I like about 20 grinds from my pepper mill. (They don’t call it coal miner’s pasta for nothing; the black flecks are said to resemble flecks of coal.) Quickly add the egg mixture, cheeses, bacon, and parsley if using and toss immediately with tongs until the mixture clings to the noodles and becomes silky. At this point the hot pasta will cook the eggs, but not curdle them, so it is very important to add the egg mixture to the noodles as soon as they come out of the water. Let this sit briefly, one or two minutes, and stir once again before serving.

    -ALH (Ani)

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