Carbonara Explained

Carbonara
Alternate Name:Italian: Pasta alla carbonara
Country:Italy
Region:Lazio
Course:Italian: [[Italian meal structure#Formal meal structure|Primo]] (Italian pasta course)
Main Ingredient:Pasta, guanciale (or pancetta), hard cheese (usually Italian: [[pecorino romano]], occasionally Parmesan or Grana Padano, or a mixture), eggs, salt, black pepper

Carbonara (pronounced as /it/) is a pasta dish made with fatty cured pork, hard cheese, eggs, salt, and black pepper.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] It is typical of the Lazio region of Italy. The dish took its modern form and name in the middle of the 20th century.[6]

The cheese is usually Italian: [[pecorino romano]]. Some variations use Parmesan, Grana Padano, or a combination of cheeses.[7] Spaghetti is the most common pasta, but rigatoni or bucatini are also used. While guanciale, a cured pork jowl, is traditional, some variations use pancetta,[5] and lardons of smoked bacon are a common substitute outside Italy.

There are different hypotheses on the origin of the recipe and, as is often the case in this field, there are no certainties, although the latest historical research has led to the thesis that it dates back to the period immediately after the end of the Nazi occupation of Rome, due to the combination of the military rations brought by the military allied armies, which included eggs and bacon, with Italian pasta.

Origin and history

As with many recipes, the origins of the dish and its name are obscure;[8] most sources trace its origin to the region of Lazio.[9]

The dish forms part of a family of dishes consisting of pasta with cured pork, cheese, and pepper, one of which is Italian: [[pasta alla gricia]]. It is very similar to Italian: pasta cacio e uova, a dish dressed with melted lard and a mixture of eggs and cheese, but not meat or pepper. Italian: Cacio e uova is documented as far back as 1839 and, according to researchers, anecdotal evidence indicates that some Italians born before World War II associate that name with the dish now known as "carbonara".

There are many theories for the origin of the name Italian: carbonara, which is probably more recent than the dish itself. There is no good evidence for any of them:

The names Italian: pasta alla carbonara and Italian: spaghetti alla carbonara are unrecorded before the Second World War; notably, it is absent from Ada Boni's 1930 Italian: La cucina romana . The 1931 edition of the Guide of Italy of the TCI describes a pasta (Italian: strascinati) dish from Cascia and Monteleone di Spoleto, in Umbria, whose sauce contains whipped eggs, sausage, and pork fat and lean, which could be considered as a precursor of carbonara, although it does not contain any cheese.[13]

The name Italian: carbonara first appears in print in 1950, when the Italian newspaper Italian: [[La Stampa]] described it as a Roman dish sought out by American officers after the Allied liberation of Rome in 1944.[14]

According to one hypothesis, a young Italian Army cook named Renato Gualandi created the dish in 1944, with other Italian cooks, as part of a dinner for the U.S. Army, because the Americans "had fabulous bacon, very good cream, some cheese and powdered egg yolks".[15]

Food writer Alan Davidson and food blogger and historian Luca Cesari have both stated that carbonara was born in Rome around 1944, just after the liberation of the city, probably because of the bacon that flowed in quantity with the U.S. Army.[16] [17] Cesari adds that the dish is mentioned in an Italian movie from 1951, while the first attested recipe is in an illustrated cookbook[18] published in Chicago in 1952 by Patricia Bronté.[19] [20] According to Cesari, it is probable that the recipe was brought to the United States by an American serviceman who had passed through Rome during the Italian campaign or by an Italian American who had met it in Rome;[19] this makes carbonara a dish that closely links Italy and the United States, according to Cesari.[19] The controversial Italian academic and professor Alberto Grandi also said that carbonara's first attested recipe is American, citing Cesari, a claim that has been criticized in Italy.[21] According to Grandi, the dish was created by Americans living in Italy after World War II. The American soldiers initially referred to it as "spaghetti breakfast". Eggs and bacon were their common snack, and they decided to incorporate pasta into it, thus creating the dish.[22]

In 1954, the first recipe for carbonara published in Italy appeared in Italian: [[La Cucina Italiana]] magazine, although the recipe featured pancetta, garlic, and Gruyère cheese.[23] The same year, carbonara was included in Elizabeth David's Italian Food, an English-language cookbook published in Great Britain.[24]

Carbonara's origins and recipe are hotly debated; many Italians consider adding cream "sacrilege", though it was once common and practiced by iconic Italian chef Gualtiero Marchesi in the 1980s.[25]

Preparation

The pasta is cooked in moderately salted boiling water, due to the saltiness of the cured meat and the hard cheese. The meat is briefly fried in a pan in its own fat.[26] A mixture of raw eggs (or yolks), grated cheese, and a liberal amount of ground black pepper is combined with the hot pasta either in the pasta pot or in a serving dish or bain-marie, but away from direct heat, to avoid curdling the egg.[5] The fried meat is then added and the mixture is tossed, creating a rich, creamy sauce with bits of meat spread throughout.[27] [28] Although various shapes of pasta can be used, it is almost always made with durum wheat dried pasta.[29]

Variations

Guanciale is the most commonly used meat for the dish in Italy, but pancetta and Italian: pancetta affumicata are also used[30] [31] and, in English-speaking countries, bacon is often used as a substitute. The usual cheese is Italian: pecorino romano; occasionally Parmesan, Grana Padano, or a combination of hard cheeses are used.[7] [32] [33] Recipes differ as to how eggs are used—some use the whole egg, some others only the yolk, and still others a mixture.[34] The amount of eggs used also vary, but the intended result is a creamy sauce from mild heating.

Some preparations have more sauce and therefore use tubular pasta, such as penne, which is better suited to holding sauce.[35] Cream is not used in most Italian recipes,[36] [37] with some notable exceptions from the 20th century.[31] [30] [25] However, it is often employed in other countries,[38] [39] as adding cream makes the dish more stable.[40] [41] Similarly, garlic is found in some recipes, but mostly outside Italy.[42] Outside Italy, variations on carbonara may include green peas, broccoli, tenderstem broccoli, leeks, onions,[43] other vegetables or mushrooms,[39] and may substitute a meat such as ham or Italian: [[Capocollo|coppa]] for the fattier guanciale or pancetta.

Halal or kosher versions

Since neither guanciale nor bacon are allowed for Muslims and Jews, these are replaced in carbonara in two ways: either by using a different type of meat (such as turkey bacon, or jerky or biltong that are not made from pork), or with non-meat alternatives (such as zucchini or mushrooms); thus the dish becomes halal or kosher.[44] [45]

Sauce

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Spaghetti alla Carbonara. Barilla. 18 June 2024.
  2. Web site: Classic Carbonara. La Cucina Italiana. 18 June 2024.
  3. Web site: Classic Carbonara Recipe. La Cucina Italiana. 18 June 2024.
  4. Web site: Carbonara: the original Italian recipe. La Cucina Italiana. 18 June 2024.
  5. Book: Carnacina. Luigi. Vincenzo. Buonassisi. 1975. Roma in Cucina. Milan. Giunti Martello. 91. it. 14086124.
  6. Book: Massimo. Alberini. Giorgio. Mistretta. Guida all'Italia gastronomica. it. Touring Club Italiano. 1984. 286. 14164964.
  7. News: La ricetta della Carbonara raccontata da chi l'ha trasformata in arte . 19 December 2023 . Agi . it . It is made with egg, pecorino romano, grana padano, guancale, strictly long pasta..
  8. Web site: Carbonara recipe and origins. The Foodellers.
  9. Web site: Carbonara: Origins and Anecdotes of the Beloved Italian Pasta Dish. La Cucina Italiana. 18 June 2024.
  10. Book: Mariani. John F.. Mariani. Galina. The Italian-American Cookbook: A Feast of Food From a Great American Cooking Tradition. Harvard Common. 2000. 140–41. registration. 978-1-55832-166-3.
  11. "Myths" in Gillian Riley, The Oxford Companion to Italian Food, 2007,, p. 342
  12. Web site: La Carbonara, una storia di famiglia. Andrea. Russo. La Carbonara. it. 2015-09-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20150926164658/http://www.ristorantelacarbonara.it/la-nostra-storia.html.
  13. Web site: Carbonara day: altro che americana, la ricetta è nata in Umbria. Luca Cesari. Jacopo Fontaneto. 6 April 2023. La Stampa. 6 April 2023. it.
  14. Web site: Il papa ha "passato ponte". La Stampa. 26 July 1950. 1 November 2020. archiviolastampa.it. it.
  15. Web site: Le origini della carbonara. L'invenzione di Gualandi avvenne a Roma: la scoperta di Igles Corelli. 2 October 2020. it.
  16. Web site: Luca Cesari. La storia della carbonara – Capitolo 1. I precedenti. it. 12 March 2018. 5 May 2023.
  17. Book: Davidson, Alan. Alan Davidson (food writer). Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford UP. 1999. Oxford. 740. 0-19-211579-0.
  18. Book: Vittles and Vice: An Extraordinary Guide to What's Cooking on Chicago's Near North Side. Patricia Bronté. H. Regnery Company. Chicago. 1952. 34.
  19. Web site: Luca Cesari. La storia della carbonara – Capitolo 2. Gli esordi 1951-1960 . it. 12 March 2018. 5 May 2023.
  20. Web site: L'origine della Carbonara. Il commissario Rebaudengo indaga. 3 December 2012. it. 5 May 2023. Dario Bressanini.
  21. News: Italian academic cooks up controversy with claim carbonara is US dish . Angela . Giuffrida . 27 March 2023 . The Guardian.
  22. Book: Grandi, Alberto . Denominazione di origine inventata . 2018-01-30 . Mondadori . 978-88-520-8494-2 . it.
  23. Carbonara: How We Made It in the 1950s . 14 May 2024 . La Cucina Italiana . Condé Nast . 5 April 2022.
  24. Book: David, Elizabeth. Italian Food. 1954. Macdonald. Great Britain.
  25. Web site: The iconic pasta causing an Italian-American dispute . 2024-05-01 . www.bbc.com.
  26. Book: Buccini, Antony F.. On Spaghetti alla Carbonara and related Dishes of Central and Southern Italy. Eggs in Cookery: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium of Food and Cookery 2006. Hosking. Richard. Oxford Symposium. 2007. 978-1-903018-54-5. 36–47. https://books.google.com/books?id=cfP6jHmSLnMC&pg=PT36.
  27. Book: Gosetti della Salda, Anna. Le Ricette Regionali Italiane. Solares. Milan. 1967. 696. it. 978-88-900219-0-9.
  28. Book: Ricettario Nazionale delle Cucine Regionali Italiane. Accademia Italiana della Cucina.
  29. Web site: Gustiblog . 2020-03-27 . On Serious Eats: a Pasta Rant . 2023-06-21 . Gustiamo.
  30. Book: Luigi. Carnacina. Luigi. Veronelli. La cucina Rustica Regionale. Vol. 2, Italia Centrale. Rizzoli. 1977. 797623404. republication of La Buona Vera Cucina Italiana, 1966.
  31. Book: Buonassisi, Vincenzo. Il Nuovo Codice della Pasta. Rizzoli. 1985.
  32. Book: Contaldo, Gennaro. Jamie's Food Tube: The Pasta Book. Penguin UK. 2015.
  33. Book: Antonio, Carluccio. 100 Pasta Recipes (My Kitchen Table). BBC Books. 2011.
  34. Web site: Spaghetti Carbonara Recipe. ItalianPastaRecipes.it. 2013-11-18. 2019-08-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20190811083340/http://www.italianpastarecipes.it/recipes/spaghetti-carbonara-recipe/.
  35. Book: The Food I Love: Beautiful, Simple Food to Cook at Home. Perry. Neil. Neil Perry. Earl. Carter. Sue. Fairlie-Cuninghame. Simon and Schuster. 2006. 114. 978-0-7432-9245-0.
  36. Web site: Spaghetti alla Carbonara (all'uso di Roma). 2016-08-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20160910215224/http://www.accademiaitalianacucina.it/en/content/spaghetti-alla-carbonara-alluso-di-roma. 2016-09-10.
  37. Book: Marchesi, Gualtiero. 2015. Gualtiero Marchesi. La cucina italiana. Il grande ricettario. De Agostini. 978-88-511-2733-6.
  38. Book: Herbst. Sharon Tyler. Sharon Tyler Herbst. Ron. Herbst. . Fourth . Barron's Educational Series.. 978-0-7641-3577-4 . alla Carbonara. 2007.
  39. Book: Labensky. Sarah R.. House. Alan M.. On Cooking, Third Edition: Techniques from expert chefs. Pearson Education, Inc.. 2003. 0-13-045241-6.
  40. Web site: Why You Shouldn't Be Adding Cream To Your Carbonara.
  41. Web site: Dear Dairy: Who Put Cream in Carbonara?. Louis Thomas.
  42. Web site: Oliver. Jamie. Jamie Oliver. Gennaro's classic spaghetti carbonara. 2016.
  43. Beltramme, Ilaria. Magna Roma - 110 ricette per cucinare a casa i piatti della tradizione romana, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milano, 2011, pag. 73. .
  44. Book: Benedetta Jasmine Guetta. Cooking alla Giudia: A Celebration of the Jewish Food of Italy. Artisan. 978-1-57965-980-6. 2022. 114.
  45. Web site: Baz . Molly . Mushroom Carbonara . Bon Appétit . Condé Nast . 19 December 2023 . 22 March 2019.
  46. Book: Sauces & Shapes: Pasta the Italian Way. Zanini De Vita. Oretta. Fant. Maureen B.. 75. 2013. W. W. Norton & Company. 978-0-393-08243-2. 24 August 2019.
  47. Web site: Cooking Sauce Carbonara, 15 oz. Jar (Directions For Me) . 2019-08-24 . 2019-12-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191225221041/http://www.directionsforme.org/item/10841099Prego%C2%AE .