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Cacio e Pepe

4.2

(957)

Cacio e pepe pasta on a white plate placed on a wooden surface
Photograph by Isa Zapata, Food Styling by Sean Dooley

Along with carbonara and amatriciana, cacio e pepe is one of Rome’s essential pasta dishes, served at restaurants all over the Italian capital. Like many of the Eternal City’s best dishes, a good cacio e pepe recipe is about simplicity. Classic versions call for just pasta, salted water, freshly ground pepper, and Pecorino Romano, a Roman sheep’s milk cheese. Ours tosses a bit of Grana Padano or Parmesan into the mix for a more rounded cheese flavor that melds warmth, nuttiness, and sharpness. When combined properly, all the elements come together like sorcery into a lusciously cheesy dish with a creamy sauce.

Ensuring this emulsified Italian pasta sauce is free of clumps when working the cheese into the starchy water can take practice. The quality of each ingredient is key: Use good butter and the best pasta you can afford and ensure your peppercorns are fresh. Classic cacio e pepe uses tonnarelli, a long pasta noodle that’s slightly thicker than spaghetti, but any long or short pasta works (think spaghetti, bucatini, rigatoni, or fettuccine). But the most important component is that cheese: Do not use pre-grated cheeses, which often include additives that prevent clumping in the bag but will cause clumping in your sauce. Use a box grater, not a fine Microplane, for coarsely grated cheese shreds that easily disperse and melt into the sauce without seizing up.  

Cacio e pepe is best served immediately, so be sure to set your table before you start cooking. The dish needs little accompaniment, but a bright green salad is a nice addition to balance out the richness. And we'd never say no to garlic bread.

Need a vegan version? Try this one.

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What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    20 minutes

  • Yield

    2 servings

Ingredients

Kosher salt

6

oz. pasta (such as egg tagliolini, bucatini, or spaghetti)

3

Tbsp. unsalted butter, cubed, divided

1

tsp. coarsely ground black pepper, plus more

¾

cup finely grated Grana Padano or Parmesan cheese

cup finely grated Pecorino Romano cheese

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Bring 3 quarts water to a boil in a 5-qt. pot over high heat. Season boiling water with kosher salt; add 6 oz. pasta (such as egg tagliolini, bucatini, or spaghetti) and cook, stirring occasionally, until about 2 minutes before tender. Drain, reserving ¾ cup pasta cooking water.

    Step 2

    Meanwhile, melt 2 Tbsp. unsalted butter, cubed, in a Dutch oven or other large pot or skillet over medium heat. Add 1 tsp. coarsely ground black pepper and cook, swirling pan, until toasted about 1 minute.

    Step 3

    Add ½ cup reserved pasta water to skillet and bring to a simmer. Add cooked pasta and remaining 1 Tbsp. unsalted butter, cubed. Reduce burner to low heat and add ¾ cup finely grated Grana Padano or Parmesan cheese, stirring and tossing with tongs until melted. Remove pan from heat; add ⅓ cup finely grated Pecorino Romano cheese, stirring and tossing until cheese melts, sauce coats the pasta, and pasta is al dente. (Add more pasta water if sauce seems dry.) Transfer pasta to warm bowls, garnish with more black pepper, and serve.

    Editor’s note: This cacio e pepe recipe was first printed in our May 2011 issue. Head this way for more of our very best pasta recipes

Nutrition Per Serving

Calories (kcal) 640.9 %Calories from Fat 41.5 Fat (g) 29.5 Saturated Fat (g) 17.0 Cholesterol (mg) 71.8 Carbohydrates (g) 64.9 Dietary Fiber (g) 4.0 Total Sugars (g) 1.3 Net Carbs (g) 60.9 Protein (g) 26.9 Sodium (mg) 560.6
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Reviews (957)

Back to TopTriangle
  • Not sure I understand why people are adding things to this... like pork (pancetta, guanciale, etc.) or veggies like peas or garlic. ITS NOT THE SAME DISH THEN! IF you want 'carbonara' make carbonara. If you want garlic and peas in your pasta make pasta primavera. This is a pure simple and classic dish. There is nothing like perfections and simplicity sometimes but.. when you want to deviate from it, which is fine, call it what it is... not what it isn't. One wouldn't add say tomatoes and basil with some EVOO to this and not change the name either would they... same ingredients and more makes it... different.

    • Tom S.

    • Davis, CA

    • 6/28/2024

  • So this is the famous Italian comedy team, Cacio and Pepe, that Jordan Schlansky was talking about

    • Anonymous

    • Brookline, Mass

    • 6/2/2024

  • Soooooo Good ,the only difference is I added crispy guanciale imported from Italy.For someone who eats low carb I'm having this once in a while!!!!!

    • Cheryl

    • N.Y.

    • 12/20/2023

  • Topped with shaved truffle. Sorry for the purists :) A new keeper in my kitchen.

    • ManySummits

    • San Francisco, US

    • 11/7/2023

  • Butter is just underage cheese.

    • Skoodog

    • Austin, TX

    • 8/13/2023

  • It's called cacio e pepe for a reason. No pasta, please. /s

    • Anonymous

    • 7/28/2023

  • No butter. Just supposed to have 3 Ingredients (water and salt would make it 5).

    • Eddy Jr.

    • Bloomington IN

    • 7/19/2023