Cereal and Pasta Dishes
Pasta all'Amatriciana
One of four classic Roman pastas, and the only one with a tomato sauce. Bucatini or spaghetti with guanciale, San Marzano tomatoes, a touch of chilli, and Pecorino Romano. The dish comes from Amatrice — a small mountain town in Lazio — and was brought to Rome by shepherds who traded in the city. It predates the tomato: the earlier version, Pasta alla Gricia, is the same dish without the tomatoes. The key is in the guanciale: cured pork cheek with a higher fat content than pancetta, it renders into the pan and flavors the tomato sauce with a deep, porky richness that no substitute fully replicates. The rules here are strict — no garlic, no onion, no herbs — because the dish doesn't need them.