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Easy Cacio e Pepe

One of the easiest and most satisfying super-fast meals on this site. Cacio e Pepe is the epitome of carby comfort food, and it’s the perfect thing to sit down to at the end of a long day, when you just don’t want to cook, but don’t want to surrender to fast food.

Cacio e Pepe

Forgive me while I whine for a few minutes before we get to the cacio e pepe.

Some folks get sniffly colds that pink up their noses and cheeks and bring on squeaky little sneezes. It’s almost cute — you just want to hug them, wrap a fuzzy scarf around their neck, and hand-feed them chicken noodle soup. Five days later, they’re back to their regular jogging schedule, laughing with bright eyes and talking in a normal voice.

Not me, people.

Once a year, I get a knock-down-drag-out cold that knocks me flat for a good long stretch. After a day of an open-faucet drippy nose, it heads straight for my lungs, and for the next month (yes, month), I sound like an emphysematous 90-year-old man. My head is stuffed shut, my ears are a hollow cave. My d’s sound like n’s. When I sneeze, I crackle like crunchy potato chips. And if I don’t remember to cough heartily at regular intervals, I wheeze.

It ain’t pretty.

So, the 2012 version of The Cold started last Thursday. By Saturday, I was a sad sack, huddled on the couch with Kleenex and dextromethorphan, re-watching the entire 2nd season of The Walking Dead, feeling (and looking, I’m sure) like the title characters, envying their spunky determination to stay vertical and keep moving against overwhelming odds (i.e., being mostly dead). I completely lacked their energy.

Saturday, dinner was a no brainer: when I’m sick, I need Mulligatawny soup [2]. Nothing else will do.

But Sunday, I was feverish and exhausted, craving starchy carbs and an eight-hour nap.

Cacio e Pepe

Spaghetti with Marcella Hazan’s famous tomato sauce (which I had in the freezer) sounded really good. But then I remembered cacio e pepe — which means spaghetti and black pepper in Italian — a super simple pasta dish with a peppery cheese sauce. Easy enough for even a groggy, stuffy-headed wheezer to pull together.

I’m not sure that cheese is advisable for someone with, shall we say, drippage issues [verdict after the fact: nothing nothing nothing could make this situation any worse], but once the dish entered my mind, I wanted pasta and aged cheese, over and out.

I even had all the ingredients on hand. Years back, no one was more surprised than I when Murray’s Cheese set up shop inside my Kroger. Surprised, but totally not complaining, as good cheese is now at my beck and call 24-7, including the blocks of Pecorino Romano (above left) and authentic Parmesano Reggiano (right) that I keep stocked in my fridge.

If only they sold grana padano, my cheese heaven would be complete.

Cacio e Pepe

There are many variations on this recipe, with loyalists arguing the benefits of one technique over another, but they all share the same challenge: clumping cheese. When you mix cheese with hot, starchy pasta water, oil and butter, you’re gonna get clumps. So, for this dish, I turn to Cooks Illustrated, despite my mixed feelings about that franchise.

(Yes, I admit it: mixed feelings. On the one hand, I admire CI’s commitment to the test kitchen and the home cook. On the other, they seem to be more frequently stretching the bounds of sensible recipes in favor of funky, whizbang ingredients (e.g., adding seltzer water to waffle batter: it’s a person more organized than I who always has still-fizzy seltzer on hand for an impromptu batch of morning waffles).)

Anyway.

Cacio e Pepe

Their technique of replacing butter with the same amount of cream in this recipe made sense. And it works — no clumping.

Even dragging myself around the kitchen like the living dead, I still managed to have dinner on the table in 20 minutes. Awesome.

Karen xo (from a safe, antiseptic distance)

P.S. the plated dish in my photos doesn’t look particularly saucy, but that’s because this tired zombie immediately piled a portion on the plate to snap the snaps. Let the pasta rest, per instructions, and it will be pleasingly cheesy.

Cacio e Pepe

Easy Cacio e Pepe

5 from 1 vote
One of the easiest and most satisfying super-fast meals on this site. Cacio e Pepe is the epitome of carby comfort food, and it's the perfect thing to sit down to at the end of a long day, when you just don't want to cook, but don't want to surrender to fast food.
Print Recipe [4] Pin Recipe [5]
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 20 minutes

Ingredients
 

  • 5 ounces finely grated cheese (I use a combo of Pecorino Romano and Parmesano Reggiano)
  • 14 ounces dried spaghetti
  • 2 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • salt

Instructions
  

  • Bring 6 cups of a water to boil in a large pot. Salt generously and add the spaghetti. Cook until al dente, per package directions (about 8-10 minutes).
  • Drain pasta, reserving 1 1/2 cups of the pasta water. Return the pasta to the pot.
  • In a medium bowl, slowly whisk 1 cup of the pasta water into the grated cheese. Add the cream, oil and pepper, whisking thoroughly. Slowly pour the cheese sauce over the pasta, tossing to coat.
  • Let rest for several minutes — the sauce will thicken and better coat the noodles. If too thick, add the remaining pasta water a bit at a time, until you achieve the desired consistency.

Notes

To save time, grate the cheese while the pasta cooks, rather than prepping ahead of time.
Not to sound all Ina Garten, but this dish screams for high-quality aged cheese — buy the best you reasonably afford.
For a slightly lighter dish, use half and half instead of heavy cream. Either way, do note that this is in no way health spaghetti.
Not all black pepper is the same. If your pepper runs on the hot side, use a bit less than 1 teaspoon. If more mild, or if you adore black pepper, add an extra half teaspoon.

Nutrition

Calories: 372kcal
Keyword cacio e pepe, spaghetti with pepper
Tried this recipe?Let us know [6] how it was!

Cacio e Pepe