The Italian Original
Ask any Roman chef what Carbonara is, and the answer comes without hesitation: spaghetti, guanciale, pecorino romano, egg, and pepper. Nothing more, nothing less. No cream, no onions, no garlic – just a silky emulsion of egg and cheese coating the pasta. For Italians, Carbonara is sacred tradition, not open to interpretation.
The German Makeover
North of the Alps, however, things look different. In German kitchens, Carbonara often means pasta with cream, cooked ham instead of guanciale, Parmesan instead of pecorino, maybe even onions or peas thrown in for good measure. It’s rich, filling, and familiar – but to an Italian purist, it’s a culinary scandal. Where they see desecration, Germans see comfort food.
Between Outrage and Appetite
The truth? Both versions have their place. The Italian dish is about heritage and precision, the German one about adaptation and taste. Food, after all, is culture in motion. So perhaps instead of fighting over authenticity, we can raise our forks together – one side with pecorino, the other with cream – and agree that in the end, it’s all about joy at the table.