Cacio e pepe may seem straightforward: pasta, pecorino cheese, and black pepper.
But beneath this humble trio lies a persistent kitchen struggle – achieving a silky, lump-free sauce.
Traditionally, cooks rely on the pasta’s starchy water to bind the ingredients together.
Yet, many end up with a gritty, clumpy mess instead of the smooth, creamy texture they hoped for.
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Even skilled home chefs often fumble with the temperature or the balance of water and cheese, because cheese proteins behave unpredictably under heat.
When scientists step into the kitchen
That’s where science comes in. A group of physicists decided to tackle the dish in a lab-like setting.
Through detailed experiments, they tracked how cheese proteins behave when heated and how starch interacts with them.
They discovered a key technique: Instead of using pasta water, dissolve 5 grams of powdered starch in 50 grams of water. Heat this until it thickens and turns translucent.
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Then, cool the mixture down by adding 100 grams of water. After that, blend in 200 grams of grated cheese and some toasted black pepper.
Once the pasta – 300 grams of it – is cooked and slightly cooled, it’s mixed with the sauce. Keeping the pasta from being too hot is crucial, or the sauce will still break.
The controversial secret to perfection
So what’s the verdict? Pasta water, it turns out, simply doesn’t have enough starch to reliably create a smooth emulsion.
Instead, the researchers recommend a starch-to-cheese ratio between 2 % and 3 % by weight.
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That makes the sauce resistant to clumping, even without perfect temperature control.The method may horrify traditionalists, but it works.
And while one scientist admitted to dangerously high cholesterol levels from all the cheese consumed during the study, the sacrifice was deemed worth it.
This may not be the cacio e pepe your mom made – but it might just be the best you’ve ever tasted.
The article is based on information from The Guardian.
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