Cacio e pepe is proof that the best Italian cooking is the simplest — three ingredients treated with respect. Toast your pepper. Grate your Pecorino fresh. Save your pasta water. Finish off the heat. Do those four things and you''ve made a dish that tastes like Trastevere at 11pm on a Wednesday. Don''t add garlic, don''t add butter, don''t add olive oil. That''s not cacio e pepe anymore — that''s a different, lesser dish.
Cacio e pepe
Roman pasta with only three ingredients — pasta, Pecorino Romano, and black pepper — emulsified into a silky, peppery sauce that tastes like it came from a Trastevere trattoria.

- Prep
- 5 min
- Cook
- 12 min
- Total
- 15 min
- Serves
- 2
Cacio e pepe
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (5)
To finish
You'll need
- Large pot (for pasta)
- Large skillet (wide, for finishing)
- Small heavy skillet (for toasting pepper)
- Mortar and pestle OR coarse pepper mill OR spice grinder
- Microplane or fine-hole grater
- Pasta tongs
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 servingWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Pecorino Romano DOP — the sheep-milk cheese from Lazio; iconic, sharp, salty
- Tellicherry peppercorns — larger, more aromatic Indian black pepper
- Lampong peppercorns — spicier, more pungent Indonesian variety
- Freshly cracked (coarse) — never pre-ground; freshness is everything
- Tonnarelli pasta — Roman square-cut egg spaghetti; the traditional shape
- Bucatini — long pasta with a hole; catches the sauce beautifully
Ripeness
Pecorino Romano should be firm, crumbly, and smell pungently sheepy-salty. Older cheese is sharper. Avoid pre-grated or plastic-wrapped; ask for a wedge cut from a fresh wheel.
Imperfections are fine
Slight rind imperfections on cheese are fine; the interior is what matters. Slight variation in peppercorn size is okay but toast and crack fresh.
Good substitutions
- Spaghetti or bucatini (more available in US)
- Linguine in a pinch
- Swap half Pecorino for aged Manchego (Spanish sheep cheese)
- Parmesan + Pecorino (50/50) — less authentic, still good
- Use whole wheat or gluten-free pasta (adjust cooking time)
In season
This recipe is year-round — cheese, pasta, and black pepper are pantry staples. Not seasonal but always in-season. Best paired with a simple seasonal green salad (arugula, fennel, spring mixes).
How much to buy
8 oz (225 g) pasta + 5 oz (140 g) Pecorino Romano + 1 1/2 tsp peppercorns.
Build the table around it with CollectiveCrop
- In season Year-round (pantry staples)
- For this recipe 8 oz pasta + 5 oz Pecorino
- Freshness Picked within this month
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Pecorino Romano DOP · Whole black peppercorns · Quality dried pasta (De Cecco, Rustichella, or similar) · Fresh bread, arugula salad, dry white wine
At the market
8 oz (225 g) pasta + 5 oz (140 g) Pecorino Romano + 1 1/2 tsp peppercorns.
Best varieties
- Pecorino Romano DOP the sheep-milk cheese from Lazio; iconic, sharp, salty
- Tellicherry peppercorns larger, more aromatic Indian black pepper
- Lampong peppercorns spicier, more pungent Indonesian variety
Good to know
Tips
- Warm plates. Cold plates stiffen the sauce on contact. Run plates under hot water or heat in a 200°F oven for 2 minutes before plating.
- Practice is real. First attempts sometimes clump. Keep trying — the emulsion is a technique, not magic.
- If the sauce does clump, add warm pasta water and keep stirring — you can often save it.
- Crack the pepper freshly and coarsely. Powder pepper disperses but lacks character; coarse crack gives distinct peppery bites.
- Don't add olive oil or butter. Cacio e pepe is austere on purpose — additions ruin the purity.
- Serve with a glass of Frascati (Roman white wine) or Chianti — classic Roman pairings.
- Try the paste method: make a Pecorino "paste" in a bowl by whisking in warm pasta water before adding pasta — helps prevent clumping.
Storage
- Not ideal — cacio e pepe is a dish to eat immediately.
- Leftovers: 1 day refrigerated; reheat with a splash of water, but texture suffers dramatically.
- Freezer: not recommended.
Reheating
- Skillet: low heat with a splash of water, stirring constantly for 2 minutes. Result is okay but not original quality.
- Skip reheating if possible — make fresh.
Make ahead
- Not really a make-ahead dish.
- Grate the cheese up to 1 day ahead (store in a jar in the fridge).
- Crack and toast peppercorns up to 4 hours ahead.
- The actual cooking takes only 15 minutes — do it fresh.
Variations
- Pasta alla Gricia: classic cacio e pepe + crispy guanciale (Italian cured pork jowl). Brown 4 oz diced guanciale before adding pasta.
- Cacio e pepe risotto: the same flavors applied to rice, stirred with Pecorino and toasted pepper at the end.
- Brown butter cacio e pepe: brown 2 tablespoons butter first, whisk into sauce (non-traditional but delicious).
- Lemon cacio e pepe: add 1 teaspoon lemon zest at the end — surprisingly great with sharp Pecorino.
- Gnocchi cacio e pepe: swap pasta for potato gnocchi — same technique.
- Cacio e pepe with peas: fold in 1 cup peas in the last minute — spring version.
- Truffle cacio e pepe: finish with a drizzle of truffle oil or shaved fresh truffles.
- Cacio e pepe with asparagus: blanch 8 oz asparagus and toss in with the pasta.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use GF spaghetti; the sauce technique is the same.
- Whole grain: use whole wheat spaghetti — heartier flavor, works well with Pecorino.
- Less salty: use Parmesan instead of Pecorino (flavor will be milder).
- More vegetable: add asparagus, peas, or broccolini at the end.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my cacio e pepe turn into a clump?
What pasta is traditional?
Pecorino Romano or Parmesan?
Why use toasted peppercorns?
Can I make cacio e pepe for a crowd?
How much pasta water do I reserve?
Can I use pre-grated Pecorino?
How do I know the sauce is done?
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