This recipe employs 1/4 cup total for 230g of pasta, which I thought was the right amount for imparting richness and silky texture to the sauce. How much cheese you use is between you and your stomach. While I liked a 50-50 split between the two, a slight modification from Hazan's formula, it's easy to tweak the ratios to suit your tastes. Parmigiano-Reggiano is mellower and creamier, Hazan says. Pecorino is a sheep's milk cheese that is sharper and, you guessed it, from Rome. ![]() Parmigiano-Reggiano and pecorino Romano are the typical cheeses used in carbonara, Hazan says. The pasta will finish cooking as you assemble the dish. You've reached the right level of doneness when the ratio is roughly 90 per cent cooked to 10 per cent uncooked, Adler says. For shapes such as spaghetti or linguine, you'll see a small dot in the centre where the pasta's not yet fully cooked, since it cooks from the outside in. ![]() ![]() ![]() (Adler's mother taught him that if it sticks to your teeth, it's not ready.) Then take a look at the inside of the pasta. Take a bite - you'll feel a bit of resistance but not a lot. Chef Matt Adler of Caruso's Grocery in Washington says you can judge this by removing a piece of pasta from the water using tongs or a slotted spoon and running it under cold water (do this only for the test bite). Regardless of which shape you use, aim for cooking the pasta al dente, so that there's still a little bite left.
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