Before you cook: 8 nonna rules
- Salt your water like the sea (at least 10–12 g salt per liter).
- Sauce and pasta finish together in the pan—never on a cold plate.
- Keep some pasta water; it’s liquid gold for emulsifying.
- Quality up front: good olive oil, real DOP cheeses, ripe tomatoes.
- Taste constantly; adjust with salt, acid, fat, and heat, not sugar.
- Al dente means a slight bite, not chalky.
- Less is more: a short ingredient list done right beats a crowded pan.
- Warm bowls keep sauces silky longer.
1) Spaghetti Aglio e Olio (Garlic & Oil)
Why nonna loves it: Four ingredients, ten minutes, pure elegance.
Ingredients (serves 4)
- 360 g spaghetti
- 80 ml extra-virgin olive oil
- 4–6 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
- 1 small dried peperoncino or ½ tsp red pepper flakes
- Salt, fresh parsley (optional), lemon zest (optional)
Steps
- Boil pasta in heavily salted water.
- Meanwhile, gently warm oil with garlic and peperoncino until garlic just turns pale gold—no darker. Remove from heat.
- Move pasta to the pan with ½ cup starchy water. Toss over medium heat until oil, water, and starch emulsify and coat the strands.
- Adjust with more water for gloss. Finish with chopped parsley or a whisper of lemon zest if you like. Serve immediately.
Nonna tip: Slice garlic evenly; burnt garlic = bitterness. If it browns too fast, start over.
2) Pasta al Pomodoro (Silky Tomato & Basil)
Why nonna loves it: A masterclass in balance—sweet tomato, savory onion, fragrant basil.
Ingredients
- 360 g spaghetti or penne
- 2 tbsp olive oil + 1 tbsp butter
- 1 small onion, halved (left whole)
- 700 g passata or crushed San Marzano tomatoes
- 1 small carrot (optional, halved for sweetness)
- 6–8 basil leaves, torn by hand
- Salt, pinch of sugar only if tomatoes are too sharp
- 40 g grated Parmigiano Reggiano (optional)
Steps
- Sauté onion halves in oil and butter until glossy but not colored.
- Add tomatoes (and carrot if using). Simmer gently 20–25 min; season. Remove onion and carrot.
- Finish pasta in the sauce with pasta water until it clings. Off heat, fold in basil and a knob of butter or splash of olive oil.
- Serve with or without Parmigiano, depending on regional taste.
Nonna tip: Don’t boil the basil—add off heat so it stays floral, not black.
3) Cacio e Pepe (Pecorino & Pepper)
Why nonna loves it: Two pantry staples, infinite technique.
Ingredients
- 360 g tonnarelli or spaghetti
- 140 g Pecorino Romano, very finely grated (almost powder)
- 2–3 tsp freshly cracked black pepper
- Pasta water, very hot but not boiling
Steps
- Toast pepper in a dry pan until fragrant. Splash in a ladle of pasta water to make a pepper “tea.”
- In a large bowl, whisk cheese with a little warm (not boiling) pasta water into a thick paste.
- Cook pasta very al dente, transfer to peppery pan, toss with more water to start an emulsion.
- Off the heat, stream in the cheese paste while tossing vigorously. Add water in spoonfuls until glossy, creamy, and smooth.
Nonna tip: Temperature control is everything—too hot and the cheese clumps; too cold and it won’t melt. Work off heat.
4) Spaghetti alla Carbonara (No Cream. Ever.)
Why nonna loves it: Silk from egg and cheese, savor from guanciale.
Ingredients
- 360 g spaghetti
- 150 g guanciale (or pancetta, but don’t tell nonna), cut into lardons
- 3 large eggs + 1 yolk, room temp
- 90 g Pecorino Romano, finely grated
- Black pepper
Steps
- Render guanciale slowly in a wide pan until crisp edges and translucent fat. Reserve pan off heat.
- Whisk eggs, yolk, cheese, and a generous amount of pepper in a warm bowl.
- Cook pasta; transfer to the guanciale pan with some fat. Toss off heat 20–30 seconds to cool slightly.
- Add egg mixture and toss vigorously, loosening with hot pasta water until it turns creamy and coats the pasta without scrambling. Serve immediately with extra Pecorino and pepper.
Nonna tip: If you see opaque curds, the pan was too hot. Pull off heat sooner next time.
5) Pesto Genovese (With Mortar…or a Gentle Blender)
Why nonna loves it: Raw, vibrant, and fast. Traditionally with trofie or trenette.
Ingredients
- 40 g basil leaves (small, tender if possible)
- 1 small garlic clove
- 20 g pine nuts (or half pine/half walnut)
- 60 g Parmigiano Reggiano + 20 g Pecorino Sardo, finely grated
- 120 ml extra-virgin olive oil (delicate, not too peppery)
- Salt
- 360 g pasta + 1 small waxy potato (peeled, diced) + handful green beans (optional Ligurian add-ins)
Steps
- Mortar method: Pound garlic and a pinch of salt; add nuts; add basil a handful at a time; then cheeses; stream in oil to a loose sauce.
Blender method: Freeze the jar/blades 10 min; pulse basil with oil and salt in short bursts; fold in hand-mixed cheeses at the end. - Boil pasta with potato and green beans; reserve water.
- Off heat, loosen pesto with pasta water to a creamy consistency, then toss gently with pasta and vegetables.
Nonna tip: Heat kills basil’s perfume. Keep everything cool and work fast.
6) Pasta alla Norma (Eggplant, Tomato, Ricotta Salata)
Why nonna loves it: A Sicilian icon—sweet tomato meets savory fried eggplant and salty cheese.
Ingredients
- 360 g rigatoni or penne
- 2 medium eggplants, cut into 2–3 cm cubes
- Olive oil for frying (or roast with plenty of oil)
- 700 g tomato passata or crushed tomatoes
- 2 garlic cloves, smashed
- 1 tsp dried oregano, basil leaves
- 80 g ricotta salata, grated or shaved
- Salt, black pepper
Steps
- Salt eggplant cubes 30 min, pat very dry. Fry in hot oil until deep golden, or roast at 220°C until caramelized.
- Simmer garlic in oil, add tomatoes and oregano. Cook 20 min; season.
- Finish pasta in the tomato sauce with pasta water until glossy. Fold in most eggplant cubes; keep some for topping.
- Plate with basil and plenty of ricotta salata.
Nonna tip: Dry eggplant thoroughly or it will steam and turn soggy.
7) Ragù alla Bolognese (for Tagliatelle)
Why nonna loves it: Patience pays—deep flavor, gentle texture, no shortcuts.
Ingredients
- 360–400 g fresh tagliatelle (or pappardelle)
- 300 g ground beef (80–85% lean)
- 150 g ground pork or Italian sausage (mild)
- 1 small carrot, 1 small celery stalk, 1 small onion, very finely minced
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 120 ml dry white wine
- 250 ml whole milk
- 400 ml low-sodium stock (as needed)
- Olive oil, butter, salt, pepper, nutmeg (pinch)
Steps
- Sweat soffritto in oil and a little butter over low heat until sweet and tender, 10–12 min.
- Add meats; brown gently, breaking into fine crumbs (not big chunks). Season lightly.
- Stir in tomato paste; cook until brick red. Deglaze with wine; reduce.
- Add milk; simmer until it looks creamy, then add a ladle of stock.
- Cook partially covered on the gentlest simmer 2–3 hours, adding stock as needed. Adjust seasoning and a pinch of nutmeg.
- Toss with al dente tagliatelle and a splash of pasta water for sheen. Serve with Parmigiano (sparingly—ragù is the star).
Nonna tip: Milk softens the meat fibers and rounds acidity. Low and slow is non-negotiable.
How to plate like a nonna (yes, presentation matters)
- Warm bowls; finish with a thread of olive oil (except carbonara/cacio e pepe).
- Cheese rules: Pecorino for Roman pastas; Parmigiano for ragù and pomodoro; never on seafood pasta.
- Portioning: ~90 g dried pasta per person for sauced pastas; 110–120 g if sauce is very light.
Smart substitutions (that won’t get you side-eyed)
- Guanciale → Pancetta: Acceptable in a pinch; avoid bacon’s smoke.
- Ricotta salata → Feta (very lightly): Close in texture, saltier in taste; use less.
- Pine nuts → Walnuts: Classic Ligurian backup.
- San Marzano → Good-quality passata: Add a knob of butter to mellow acidity.
Make-ahead & batch tips
- Ragù: Doubles beautifully; cool fast and freeze flat. Reheat gently with stock.
- Pesto: Oxidizes quickly. Cover with a thin oil layer in the fridge up to 2 days.
- Pomodoro base: Keeps 4–5 days; becomes better after day one.
- Aglio e olio / Cacio e pepe / Carbonara: Cook to order—these rely on fresh emulsion.
Grocery checklist
Olive oil (extra-virgin), spaghetti, rigatoni or penne, tagliatelle, garlic, onion, carrot, celery, basil, dried peperoncino, San Marzano tomatoes/passata, tomato paste, eggplant, pine nuts, Pecorino Romano, Parmigiano Reggiano, ricotta salata, guanciale/pancetta, eggs, milk, white wine, butter, salt, black pepper.
Troubleshooting quick hits
- Sauce too thin? Reduce briefly or add a sprinkle more cheese (off heat) while tossing.
- Sauce too thick/pasty? Add hot pasta water a spoonful at a time. Toss vigorously.
- Greasy carbonara? Too much rendered fat—pour some off before adding eggs.
- Clumpy cacio e pepe? Your bowl was too hot or the cheese too coarse; grate finer and temper with warm, not boiling, water.
