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How to Make Classic Carbonara | Jamie Oliver

0h 04m video Published Aug 6, 2017 Transcribed Jul 1, 2026 J Jamie Oliver
Beginner 3 min read For: Home cooks and beginner chefs who want to learn an authentic Italian pasta recipe.
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AI Summary

Jamie Oliver demonstrates how to make an authentic spaghetti carbonara using only five core ingredients: guanciale, pecorino romano, eggs, pasta, and black pepper. He emphasizes technique—rendering fat, emulsifying water and oil, and carefully adding eggs off heat—to achieve a creamy sauce without cream.

[[00:00]]
Introduction to dish

Jamie introduces spaghetti carbonara as a classic Italian dish made from pasta, cheese, bacon (guanciale), and cream (from emulsification).

[[00:14]]
Five essential ingredients

The authentic recipe requires guanciale (cured pork cheek), pecorino romano cheese, free-range eggs, pasta, and black pepper. Optional: garlic.

[[01:26]]
Preparing guanciale

Remove skin, slice into 1 cm, then chop into half‑centimeter chunks. Cook in a cold pan over medium‑high heat to render fat.

[[02:06]]
Freshly cracked pepper

Crack peppercorns in a mortar and pestle. The inside of the peppercorn is hotter and better for a spicy carbonara.

[[02:19]]
Egg mixture

Whisk eggs with about 20 g of pecorino. Eggs must be handled carefully to avoid scrambling.

[[02:55]]
Emulsifying the sauce

Remove garlic, turn off heat. Add pasta and some pasta water to the pan. The fat and water emulsify to form a creamy sauce—no cream added.

[[03:25]]
Final plating

Toss pasta with egg mixture off heat, adding more pasta water as needed. Finish with extra pecorino and black pepper. Serve immediately.

The video delivers a step‑by‑step guide to restaurant‑quality carbonara at home, highlighting that authentic creaminess comes from emulsification, not cream. Quality ingredients and precise technique are crucial.

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Tutorial Checklist

1 [00:44] Boil water, salt lightly, twist pasta in to prevent sticking. Cook for 8 minutes.
2 [01:14] Remove skin from guanciale, slice 1 cm, then chop into 0.5 cm chunks.
3 [01:38] Place guanciale in a cold pan, turn heat to medium‑high to render fat. Add cracked garlic.
4 [02:06] Crack black pepper in a mortar and pestle; add to pan.
5 [02:19] Whisk eggs and 20 g pecorino in a bowl.
6 [02:55] Remove garlic. Turn heat off. Drag pasta and some pasta water into the pan.
7 [03:08] Add egg mixture off heat, toss continuously. Add pasta water as needed to create creamy sauce.
8 [03:39] Plate, finish with extra pecorino and black pepper. Serve immediately.

Study Flashcards (5)

What are the five essential ingredients for authentic spaghetti carbonara?

easy Click to reveal answer

Guanciale, pecorino romano, free‑range eggs, pasta, black pepper.

[00:14]

Why should the pan be cold when starting to cook guanciale?

medium Click to reveal answer

To render the fat slowly without burning the meat.

[01:26]

What is the correct way to add pasta to boiling water to prevent sticking?

easy Click to reveal answer

Twist it into the water using two hands.

[00:59]

How much pecorino should be added to the egg mixture?

medium Click to reveal answer

About 20 grams.

[02:36]

How is creaminess achieved in authentic carbonara?

hard Click to reveal answer

Through emulsification of pasta cooking water and rendered fat, not by adding cream.

[03:08]

💡 Key Takeaways

📊

Authentic ingredient list

Clarifies that traditional carbonara uses guanciale and pecorino, not bacon and parmesan.

[00:14]
🔧

Importance of fresh black pepper

Cracking peppercorns yourself releases more aroma and heat—often overlooked.

[02:06]
🔧

Emulsification technique

Explains how pasta water and fat combine to create a creamy sauce without cream.

[03:08]

✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

5 Ingredients for Authentic Carbonara

44s

People love simple, authentic recipes and are often shocked by the lack of cream in carbonara.

▶ Play Clip

Why You Must Crack Pepper for Carbonara

60s

The step of cracking peppercorns is rarely shown, making it an educational and surprising tip that sparks curiosity.

▶ Play Clip

Stop Frying! The Egg Mistake Everyone Makes

60s

The drama of avoiding scrambled eggs in carbonara is highly engaging and a common mistake viewers want to avoid.

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The Secret to Creamy Carbonara (No Cream)

58s

Revealing that creaminess comes from emulsification of water and fat is controversial yet educational, perfect for debate in comments.

▶ Play Clip

[00:00] Pasta, cream, bacon, cream. Hi guys, we're going to make spaghetti carbonara, a classic Italian dish pasta, cheese, bacon.

[00:14] What's not to love, right? But it's really controversial. I want to give you what I think is the most authentic recipe. So first up guys, you only need five ingredients, guanciale. This is the cured cheek of pork. And as you can see, it's all about the fat. It's salted, it's got pepper,

[00:32] it's dried and it's aged. Of course it's similar to smoked bacon and you can get some pretty good results actually, but you can see this is quite lean. So try and get them to not cut off the fat

[00:44] because you need it. Or there's panchetta. Then most people use parmesan. But actually the more classic is pecorino, romano, sheep's cheese, it's crumbly, it's salty, free-range organic egg,

[00:59] pasta, black pepper. And then optional garlic. So first up guys, grab the pasta by two hands, twist it into the water. By twisting it, it won't stick together. Put a tiny amount of salt

[01:14] in this water because the cheese and the guanciale is salty. This beautiful pasta takes eight minutes to cook. So I've got my guanciale. I'm going to remove the skin and I'm going to take a nice

[01:26] centimeter slice of the guanciale. Roughly chop this to about half centimeter chunks. Now the pan is cold. Turn it on to a medium high heat. The reason I want it cold is because I want to render

[01:38] the fat out. The guanciale goes in to the pan and this pan is getting hot. Give the garlic a crack and then put it in the pan. As this starts to sizzle, the fat will just pull out some of that

[01:51] perfume from the garlic. Then there's the black pepper. Get your peppercorns in a pestle and water, crack it, get a little stiff. This is one of the most important little bits and no one really does

[02:06] it. Okay, honestly, this is the outer skin, this is much milder. What we have here is the inside part, the peppercorn, which is hotter, perfect for a good hot carbonara. The guanciale is getting golden.

[02:19] Now let's get onto the eggs. Eggs are really, really delicate and if you don't treat these right, you end up with stir fried noodles and we don't want that. I'm going to take a bowl and I'm going to crack the egg straight into there and I'm just going to add a little pecorino to that.

[02:36] So like 20 grams. Now we're a time sensitive so we're going to have a little whisk up. We've got dark guanciale. We've got the fat that's come out of it and that's what you want. You want attitude and colour. Now I'm going to remove that garlic. Turn the heat off and we're going to drag the pasta

[02:55] and the water into the pan. Use the water to stop the frying. Bit of water, bit of water. That water and the fat, that is what's going to emulsify to become a creamy sauce.

[03:08] We're not frying anymore. Can you hear that? Quiet. No frying at all. Only then can we think about adding our egg. As we toss, we add some more liquid. That's the cream. You get the cream through the

[03:25] emulsification of the cooking water and the fat and technique and timing. So as simple as this is, it's technical. Get your friends, your family. Get them around the table, glass of wine. Look at that,

[03:39] guys. Look at that. Carbohonara. And you finish with more pepper. Wow. I'm so excited. Spaghetti, Carbohonara with a beautiful little finishing of pecorino. That is as classic as I can give you guys

[03:58] from chefs, from nonners. It's about quality ingredients, the guanciale, the pecorino romana, quality eggs, the pepper, the technique of the pepper, good pasta and then the sensitivity of cooking it

[04:11] right. Come on. There's a little plat for two people and of course the most important thing when you eat pasta is don't watch it, eat it. That my friends is a thing of joy.

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