Jack brings you a (sort-of) authentic way to make classic Italian Carbonara, a rich and creamy pasta dish that’s all about simple ingredients and perfect technique. Using just eggs, Pecorino Romano, guanciale, and pasta, Jack guides you step-by-step through achieving that silky, restaurant-quality sauce without cream.
Discover the secrets behind this timeless recipe as Jack shows you how to balance creamy texture with the bold flavors of crispy guanciale and sharp Pecorino. With tips on everything from the ideal pasta temperature to creating the perfect sauce consistency, this guide will have you making flawless carbonara every time.

VIDEO CHAPTERS
00:00 – Intro
00:08 – Preparing Ingredients
02:14 – Cooking Pasta & Gaunciale
03:21 – Emulsifying the Sauce
06:42 – Tasting the Carbonara

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41 Comments

  1. Well, not authentic considering the garlic, however I make it exactley the same way and it's the best way to do it….keep up the good work lads. 👌

  2. Missed tidbit : You have to fully lean into the “Justa likea how mama used toa maekk” if you want any sort of reaction

  3. Yes Chef! Looked amazingly delicious, and I think the term "Authentic" is too over used! You could go a few miles from village to village, or even house to house, in any country in the world, and every dish of the same name, would be subtly different, but they would all claim it to be the most "Authentic". 🙂😋😎❤

  4. Not bad. Absolutely no need for garlic.
    Guanciale cut too finely. It should be cut into cubes & briefly fried at high temperature so it’s ‘croccante’.
    The pecorino should be very finely grated into crumbs- so it very readily emulsifies.
    6/10.

  5. Love your content. But can people please stop saying "Hey Siri, blah blah blah"? I now apparently have an alarm set in 7 hours time. 🤥

  6. Italians are often unnecessarily pedantic about their recipes, talk to an old italian who has been cooking their entire lives. they deviate all the time, the Italian cooking philosophy is cook with the best, in season ingredients you can find and let nature do the talking.

  7. Great video! I cook it like this too but without the garlic and it's delicious! I will definitely try it with garlic the next time. I also highly recommend mixing Pecorino Romano with Parmigiano-Reggiano~

  8. I often make a traditional carbonara at home; I don’t think that Italians will get too mad at this, literally the only thing that isn’t canon is the garlic flavour . .
    Your techniques for emulsifying and combining are spot on!

  9. I know it says it's not authentic, but from a logical point of view, why not take the Guanciale out of the pan? You've rendered the fat and made it crispy, but then added the pasta and pasta water, then it won't be crispy anymore.

  10. Authentic doesn't mean better. If it did there would be no seasoning, there would be no sauce, there would be nothing beyond raw sustenance. How far back do you go?

  11. The meat was smoking in the pan and obviously went bitter, when this happens I add a tsp of sugar

  12. Coronado Panama 3rd hr of rain, flooding, wet floors and biggest water event in last four years here.

  13. You gave the warning that this wasn't authentic, then proceeded to make carbonara almost exactly the way it's supposed to. You even managed to get guanciale. Adding garlic is the only rogue ingredient, but you removed it before serving which is also how Italians would do it.

  14. I like how he just brushed off the crushed garlic and no one here mention what happened to it 😀

  15. I'm italian and I've grown so sick of the weird gatekeeping of foods. if it tastes good and you like it just eat it who cares

  16. Very nice 👍952❤ and Great recipe ❤ I'm full watching look so very good tasty ❤ ✅🤝❤️✨✨ thank you so much for sharing dear friend 🥰🥰

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