Fry up 6 strips of bacon so that they are crispy. Drain well on paper towels.
Wut?!
Boil a lb of pasta (I used linguine, but spaghetti or fettucine will do -- probably, any pasta will do.)
Well, not really. Carbonara is usually made with spaghetti or rigatoni. Everything else just looks
funny. Don't ever use fettuccine.
Use the bacon grease to saute one and half tablespoons of diced onion (or shallot) - add 2 tablespoons butter .
Season the onion with garlic salt.
In a large bowl, beat together 2 eggs, 3 splashes of heavy cream, and a cup of grated parmesan
When the pasta has finished cooking and been drained, save a few tablespoons of the pasta water.
You do not put onion on the carbonara. Or garlic salt?? Never ever.
And the heavy cream? Blasphemy!
Here's how I learnt to do the carbonara.
Boil the pasta, I usually do it with rigatoni, the eggs will stick to it better. The lines on the sides are actually designed for this.
In the mean time cut the pancetta, or bacon (should be smoked) in cubes, can be longer(like small bricks?). Fry them. You should use lean bacon with little fat, just enough for the bacon to fry in it's own fat, but there's nothing to dry off.
Beat up the eggs with parmesan.
Just a couple of second before the pasta is over take off the pan with pancetta from the fire.
Drain the pasta and pour it over the bacon, then pour over the eggs. Stir everything in the pan until the egg-cream is solid
ish. Use just the heat of the bacon and the pasta. If you find it too soft then put back a couple of seconds over the fire.
Garnish with parmesan and
black pepper. To make it look like it's
carbonated.
Not to take anything away from your recipe, but you're not talking about the
italian carbonara. I ate a couple of time this thing you describe in restaurants outside of italy. If you happen to be in Italy, especially in Rome, saying that you use cream for carbonara can get you in trouble.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CarbonaraHowever, it's a very interesting coincidence because tonight I was just planning to prepare this for myself.
Om non nom.