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3 Chefs Cook Pasta Carbonara 3 Ways: Traditional, Modern, Experimental | Bon Appétit



We challenged three of our esteemed chefs – Carla Lalli Music, Chris Morocco and Sohla El-Waylly — to each make different versions of the same dish: pasta carbonara. While each variant has to be similar in some ways (porky, cheesy, salty, etc.), each chef was assigned a different interpretation to cook up: traditional, modern and experimental. Which one would you want to try? FYI you’re allowed to say all three.
Check out the traditional recipe here:
We took a deep dive into traditional carbonara, tracing it back to its roots as a peasant dish made with pantry ingredients, and re-considered every factor. The result? Less pasta, more crispy-chewy strips of guanciale, and more silky creamy egg to hold it all together.
Filmed on 1/17/20.

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Bon Appétit is a highly opinionated food brand that wants everyone to love cooking and eating as much as we do. We believe in seasonal produce, properly salted pasta water, and developing recipes that anyone can make at home.

3 Chefs Cook Pasta Carbonara 3 Ways: Traditional, Modern, Experimental | Bon Appétit

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44 Comments

  1. love the cooks, but really disliked this experimental order where every recipe was merged together by stages. i will not cook any of the recipes bc it‘s not easy to just follow along :/

  2. That traditional carbonara is so good, I can almost taste how good it must taste.. the other two, for me, are just not carbonara at all.. I mean, they are related, like chimps, limas and humans are related.. but they are no carbonara
    Ma, il tradizionale è fantastico!
    Brava!

  3. Carbonara was 'created' by poor coal miners who had nothing but eggs, salted/cured pork (guanciale), cheese and dried pasta. Northern Italy had nothing but cattles and chickens due to harsh summer weathers which made it almost impossible to grow things compared to Southern, hence the amazing cheese, eggs (and more dried egg pastas to outstand the creamy, cheesy sauces) and cured meat. Interesting how geography affects food even within the same country.

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