Literally meaning “cheese and pepper” in several dialects, cacio e pepe is a classic Italian dish specifically associated with Rome. A pillar of modern Roman cuisine, the dish’s excellence lies within its relative simplicity, using just a few ingredients and taking minimal time to prepare and cook. The dish predominantly features cracked black pepper, Pecorino Romano cheese, and pasta such as traditional tonnarelli or spaghetti, yet the result is far greater than the sum of its basic parts, with the creamy sauce accounting for much of the its popularity.
Thought to have been created hundreds of years ago, cacio e pepe originates from the basics of ‘la cucina povera’ (the poor cuisine), along with plenty of additional Roman recipes. For these dishes, ingredients were kept, hunted, or grown by the consumers with no parts ever wasted. Born from a lack of eggs to make carbonara (another Roman classic), cacio e pepe was particularly popular amongst Roman shepherds without fixed abode, thanks to all of the ingredients keeping well for a long time.
While some recipes call for butter, cream, or other embellishments such as bacon or seafood, they’re not traditionally used. Instead, a typical cacio e pepe recipe will exemplify the complexity of pan sauce precision, featuring just dried pasta, finely grated Pecorino Romano, freshly cracked black pepper, and a good splash of the pasta’s cooking water to melt the cheese and the starches, ultimately producing a creamy sauce.
Although the dish is fairly simple to make at home, the following tips will prevent the sauce from being clumpy, and will generally help to upgrade your cacio e pepe.
Cooking tips
Using toasted pepper brings even more flavour to cacio e pepe.
It’s advisable to grate the cheese as finely as possible to help it incorporate more smoothly, ultimately helping to prevent the cheese from clumping.
Importantly, make sure the pan isn’t too hot when adding the cheese, otherwise the cheese proteins will clump and form a film on the bottom of the pan.
Pecorino Romano is traditional, but Parmigiano Reggiano can be used at a push, if absolutely necessary. Made with sheep’s milk, Pecorino Romano is far sharper, saltier, and more pungent than parmesan.
Cook the pasta in as little water as possible – this will make it particularly starchy, which is necessary for producing a perfectly creamy sauce.
With the ingredients lasting for a long time, it’s worth buying more Pecorino Romano than you’ll need for this cacio e pepe recipe as the dish is a perfect store cupboard recipe: quick to cook, using just a few ingredients.
A Roman classic made with just three key ingredients
Course Appetizer, Main Course, Starter
Cuisine Italian
Keyword Cacio e Pepe, Cheese, Pasta, Spaghetti
Prep Time 5 minutesminutes
Cook Time 15 minutesminutes
Total Time 20 minutesminutes
Servings 2
Author Jon Hatchman
Ingredients
200gdried pastasuch as tonnarelli or spaghetti
2tspfreshly ground black pepper
150gPecorino Romano
Saltto taste
Instructions
Add the cracked pepper to a pan large enough for the cooked pasta and toast for a minute or two over low heat, until fragrant. Set aside and allow to cool while the pasta cooks.
In a separate pan, cook the pasta in a minimal amount of generously salted water for 2 minutes fewer than the packet instructions, then use tongs to drain the pasta into the pan with the toasted pepper. Reserve the pasta cooking water.
Cook over low heat and add most of the finely grated Pecorino Romano to the pan. Allow the cheese to melt for 30 seconds or so, without mixing, then stir vigorously. Add a ladleful of pasta cooking water to the pan and continue to stir until the cheese melts and becomes emulsified. Add more of the pasta cooking water if necessary to loosen the sauce.
Plate and finish with the rest of the Pecorino Romano and a crack of black pepper. Eat immediately.
Notes
Using toasted pepper brings even more flavour to cacio e pepe.
It’s advisable to grate the cheese as finely as possible to help it incorporate more smoothly, ultimately helping to prevent the cheese from clumping.
Importantly, make sure the pan isn’t too hot when adding the cheese, otherwise the cheese proteins will clump and form a film on the bottom of the pan.
Pecorino Romano is traditional, but Parmigiano Reggiano can be used at a push, if absolutely necessary. Made with sheep’s milk, Pecorino Romano is far sharper, saltier, and more pungent than parmesan.
Cook the pasta in as little water as possible – this will make it particularly starchy, which is necessary for producing a perfectly creamy sauce.
With the ingredients lasting for a long time, it’s worth buying more Pecorino Romano than you’ll need for this cacio e pepe recipe as the dish is a perfect store cupboard recipe: quick to cook, using just a few ingredients.
Jonathan is Food Editor for The London Economic. Jonathan has run and contributed towards a number of blogs, and has written features for publications such as Eater London, The Guardian, i News, The Independent, GQ, Time Out London and more.