LOGIN
SIGN UP
Your free recipe manager,
shopping list, and meal planner!
Learn more!
Go to Community recipes!
Cacio e Pepe with Lemon Recipe
This classic Italian pasta dish is one of the most elemental and elegant recipes you can make, and it's also one of the simplest. It translates to cheese and pepper, and the dish can be just that—pasta with Pecorino Romano cheese and freshly cracked black pepper.

Yes, it sounds simple, but even the simplest recipes can go wrong. The sauce can be thin and greasy or the cheese can clump rather than melt. The key is to add the Pecorino Romano at the end to prevent it from clumping, and to make the most of its sharp flavor. Lemon adds acidity and freshness.

Because cacio e pepe is so simple, the technique is important. From intentionally undercooking the pasta to adding the two cheeses at different times, follow our step-by-step guide to get a creamy, emulsified sauce coating each strand of pasta. It's totally irresistible—and a dish you'll pull out to impress guests for years.

Servings: 2

Servings: 2
Ingredients
  • Coarse salt
  • 8 ounces thick spaghetti or bucatini
  • ½ stick unsalted butter, cut into 4 pieces, softened
  • 3 ounces Grana Padano cheese, grated (1 cup)
  • 2 teaspoons freshly cracked pepper (use a mortar and pestle or the coarsest setting on a grinder), plus more for garnish
  • ¾ ounce Pecorino Romano cheese, grated (¼ cup)
  • 1 small lemon (preferably Meyer)
  • High-quality extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling
Steps
  1. subheading: Cook pasta:
  2. Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil. Add pasta, and cook until very al dente, about 2 minutes less than called for in package instructions. Reserve 1 cup pasta water before draining.
  3. subheading: Add butter and pasta water:
  4. Transfer pasta to a 12-inch skillet (preferably nonstick). Add butter and ½ cup pasta water. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. The heat helps the starch in the water meld with the fat from the butter, which prevents the Grana Padano from becoming stringy in the finished dish.
  5. subheading: Add the Grana Padano cheese and pepper:
  6. Reduce heat to low, and mix in Grana Padano and cracked pepper. Grana Padano is softer than Pecorino Romano; it will melt into the buttery water, creating a sauce as the pasta finishes cooking.
  7. subheading: Toss pasta:
  8. Toss pasta with tongs to thoroughly coat it with sauce. Keep everything at a gentle simmer just until cheese melts and sauce thickens slightly, about 1 minute.
  9. subheading: Add Pecorino Romano and lemon zest:
  10. Remove from heat, then stir in Pecorino Romano. (Always add Pecorino off direct heat; it clumps when cooked.) Zest lemon over the pasta. Any type of lemon will do, but a Meyer is particularly nice in this dish: It's sweeter in flavor and aroma, with back notes of orange and lime.
  11. subheading: Serve:
  12. If pasta looks dry, toss it with a bit more pasta water until it has a glossy coating. Divide between 2 warm bowls. Drizzle each with oil and lemon juice, and garnish with more cracked pepper. Serve immediately.
 

Page footer