Cacio e pepe recipe: A simple pasta dish that packs a punch
This deceptively simple dish - done well - will seduce you with its sharp and salty creaminess. Here’s the key
Every time I explain cacio e pepe to visitors dining with me in Rome, I find myself trying to convince them it isn’t boring. Pasta with cacio (Roman dialect for ‘cheese’ – in this case, Pecorino Romano) and pepe (pepper) doesn’t sound all that inviting, but a cacio e pepe done well will seduce you with its sharp and salty creaminess.
Chef Alba Esteve Ruiz shared this recipe with me when she was at the helm of Rome’s popular Marzapane restaurant. This young, award-winning chef moved to Rome from Alicante in Spain, having kickstarted her career at none other than Girona’s El Celler de Can Roca – the three Michelin star restaurant which has also held the mantle for the world’s best restaurant.
After many years in Rome, Alba has returned to her homeland to open her own restaurant in Alicante, Alba Restaurante.
The key to making this dish work is to keep the cheese at room temperature, and to mix it well with the right amount of water that you boiled your pasta in; some chefs encourage you to add pasta water to the cheese and pepper mix to make a paste of sorts. Ultimately, it is a dish that requires a bit of practice.
Alba adds Parmigiano Reggiano to her dish, but if you prefer, sticking with the traditional Pecorino Romano is totally fine, and while tonnarelli are customary in Rome, serving it with spaghetti or spaghettoni would do just as well at home.
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RECIPE:
Ingredients
- 360g tonnarelli, spaghetti or spaghettoni
- 320g Pecorino Romano, grated, plus extra to serve
- 120g Parmigiano Reggiano, grated
- 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
Method
- Bring a large saucepan of salted water to the boil. Add the pasta and cook for the time indicated on the packet.
- Meanwhile, in a large bowl, mix together the pecorino, parmigiano and black pepper. Once the pasta is al dente, drain and add to the cheese mixture, reserving the cooking water.
- Mix well, then gradually stir through 4-5 tablespoons of the reserved cooking water, a spoonful at a time, until the cheese melts and the sauce coats the pasta. If the sauce is too dry, add a little more water and continue to stir until smooth.
- Serve with an extra grind of black pepper and an extra sprinkling of pecorino.
Serves 6
This is an edited extract from The Eternal City by Maria Pasquale (Smith Street Books, distributed by Thames & Hudson Australia, $55).