Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (2024)

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By Shawn Williams

4.19 from 85 votes

Sep 23, 2019, Updated Oct 18, 2023

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Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (2)

Table of Contents

  • What is Chicken Carbonara?
  • Creamy Carbonara Sauce
  • Bacon Versus Pancetta
  • How to Make Chicken Carbonara
  • Recipe Prep Makes All The Difference
  • More Pasta Recipes
  • Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe

What is Chicken Carbonara?

Creamy chicken carbonara is inspired by a classic Italian (Roman) pastadish made with bacon or pancetta, whisked egg, and hard cheese. Bacon, egg, and cheese me all day, baby. Carbonara sauce is an egg-based white sauce featuring Parmesancheese, black pepper, fresh herbs, and sometimes cream. It’s creamy, delicious, date-night worthy, and will rock your world.

Thanks to the magic of bacon, this is the most heavenly-smelling pasta dish I or you will ever make. Chicken, garlic, and linguine swirled in bacon fat and melted Parmesan cheese. It’s a cheesy pasta dish loaded with flavor without being overly heavy like fettuccine, which I’ve never really been a fan of. It just makes me feel gross.

The recipe is really simple if you break it down into simple parts, plus it all comes together (mostly) in a single cast iron skillet in about 30 minutes.

If you loved this recipe, also try some similar favorites such as cacio e pepe recipe, creamy mushroom pasta, creamy Tuscan chicken and pasta, and chicken broccoli ziti!

Creamy Carbonara Sauce

This simple carbonara sauce is comprised of 4 eggs, grated Parmesan cheese, salt, pepper, and fresh basil. Recipes will occasionally only call for egg yolks, omitting the whites, but I think the whole egg contributes to the overall texture and flavor. I’ve added a little heavy cream to my sauce for additional creaminess.

Adding reserved starchy pasta water at the very end will also help thin the sauce out, keeping it creamy without being too thick or dry.

Whisk all carbonara sauce ingredients together in a bowl and stir into the warm pasta at the very end. The hot pasta, plus the warm skillet will cook the egg just enough without scrambling the eggs. If your pan is too hot, then you’ve just made breakfast.

Bacon Versus Pancetta

Pancetta is a common Italian substitute for bacon—it’s considered Italian bacon. Both bacon and pancetta come from cured pork belly. You can substitute either interchangeably in the recipe depending on availability. Pancetta is often sold predicted into small pieces and is considered recipe-ready.

How to Make Chicken Carbonara

Cook the thick-cut bacon in a skillet (thick is important) first, reserving some bacon fat for flavor. Cook the chicken second with the garlic in that flavorful bacon fat.

Add the bacon back to the skillet, add linguine or pasta of choice, and stir in the carbonara sauce until you have a creamy, rich pasta dish. Finish with plenty of freshly cracked black pepper, Parmesan cheese, and chopped basil.

Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (3)

Recipe Prep Makes All The Difference

Prep makes a big difference in this recipe. Cutting the chicken and bacon before you start anything else makes the recipe move quickly and smoothly. As you get your pasta water boiling, whisk together the sauce and slice your proteins so you can fly right out of the gate. If you’re making something for the first time, I’ve always found it tends to cut down on the stress, especially if you’re cooking for guests.

If it’s Italian it’s got to be served with wine. I think this would go well with a crisp, fruity white or Chianti Classico. I’m going with Chianti.

Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (4)

More Pasta Recipes

Pappardelle Cacio e Pepe Recipe

Simple Creamy Gnocchi Recipe

Simple Creamy Mushroom Pasta Recipe

Creamy Shell Pasta with Sausage Recipe

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4.19 from 85 votes

Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe

By: Shawn Williams

Servings: 6

Prep: 15 minutes mins

Cook: 15 minutes mins

Total: 30 minutes mins

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Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (9)

Creamy chicken carbonara is inspired by a classic Italian pasta dish made with bacon, whisked egg, and hard cheese. It’s creamy, delicious, date-night worthy, and will rock your world.

Ingredients

  • 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-sized strips
  • 12-14 ounces linguine
  • 4 strips thick-cut bacon, or pancetta, chopped into 1/2 inch pieces
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • salt and pepper, to taste

Carbonara Sauce

  • 4 eggs
  • 3/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
  • 1/3 cup heavy cream
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil, plus more for garnish
  • salt and pepper, to taste

Instructions

  • Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and cook linguine al dente. Reserve 1/2 cup of pasta water before straining.

  • Combine eggs, cream, Parmesan cheese, basil, and a pinch of salt and pepper in a medium bowl. Whisk thoroughly and set aside.

  • Meanwhile, cook bacon in a cast iron skillet on medium heat until fully cooked, remove from the skillet and place on a paper towel lined plate to drain. Keep1-2 tablespoons of bacon grease in the skillet and discard the rest.

  • Add minced garlic and sliced chicken to the skillet. Season with salt and pepper and cook until chicken is fully cooked through, about 5-7 minutes.

  • Return bacon to the skillet, add the warm linguine and toss with chicken and bacon. Turn the burner down to low and let the skillet cool for 2-3 minutes. If the skillet is too hot you run the risk of scrambling the eggs.

  • Add egg mixture to the skillet and toss with the pasta until fully incorporated. Stir in 2-3 tablespoons of reserved pasta water until creamy. Serve immediately with extra Parmesan cheese and garnish with fresh basil.

Notes

Prep makes a big difference in this recipe. Cutting the chicken and bacon before you start anything else makes the recipe move quickly and smoothly. As you get your pasta water boiling, whisk together the sauce and slice your proteins so you can fly right out of the gate.

Pancetta is a common Italian substitute for bacon—it’s actually considered Italian bacon. Both bacon and pancetta come from cured pork belly. You can substitute either interchangeably in the recipe depending on availability. Pancetta is often sold predicted into small pieces and is considered recipe ready.

Nutrition

Serving: 1gCalories: 706kcalCarbohydrates: 37.2gProtein: 91.4gFat: 20.7gSaturated Fat: 7.4gCholesterol: 363mgSodium: 906mgSugar: 0.3g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Dinner

Cuisine: Italian

Tried this recipe?Mention @kitchenswagger or tag #kitchenswagger!

About Shawn Williams

My name is Shawn, author behind Kitchen Swagger. I'm a food & drink enthusiast bringing you my own simple and delicious restaurant-inspired recipes.

Read More About Me

Creamy Chicken Carbonara Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is chicken carbonara sauce made of? ›

The creamy sauce is made by tossing eggs and Parmesan with cooked pasta and its still piping hot cooking water. It's so simple but can be intimidating.

How do you keep carbonara creamy? ›

The creaminess comes from the eggs and the rendered fat from the guanciale or pancetta. The key to making a creamy carbonara is to toss the spaghetti with the egg mixture and the rendered fat immediately after draining it. This helps to cook the eggs and thicken the sauce.

Which ingredient should never be used in traditional carbonara? ›

What not to put in Spaghetti Carbonara? Don't put garlic, cream, milk or butter. It is not needed. It is fine if you want to make a dish with those ingredients, but if you want to learn how to make this dish correctly, use only pecorino, eggs/egg yolks, black pepper, guanciale, and pasta water.

What's the difference between carbonara and alfredo sauce? ›

The difference between alfredo and carbonara is that carbonara contains an egg while alfredo sauce does not. Carbonara is usually thinner in consistency than alfredo sauce, using the egg to coat the noodles instead of relying on the cream.

Is carbonara just alfredo sauce? ›

Alfredo is basic – pasta, cream, parmesan, parsley. Carbonara is a little more complicated – pasta, onion, pancetta, garlic, egg yolks, cream, parmesan, parsley. Because this is a gluten-free version we have to use spaghetti – if you're not gluten-free use anything from penne to linguini.

What is the golden rule of cooking a carbonara? ›

The golden rule to silky carbonara is to whisk your egg whites so that they're completely incorporated with the egg yolks. This will create a smooth, velvety sauce. As like any pasta dish, including carbonara, cook the pasta perfectly al dente so that it's soft but still firm, with some bite.

How does Gordon Ramsay make carbonara sauce? ›

How to make Gordon Ramsay's 10-minute Carbonara
  1. 125g of spaghetti (4.41 ounces)
  2. 80g of streaky bacon or pancetta (2.82 ounces)
  3. 30g of frozen peas (1.06 ounces)
  4. Two eggs.
  5. Two mushrooms.
  6. One chili.
  7. Two garlic gloves.
  8. One and a half tablespoons of creme fraiche.
Nov 7, 2023

Why is my carbonara not creamy? ›

As with all pasta, you have to keep the pasta water – the starchy water is how you get a perfectly creamy sauce. The best pasta shape for carbonara has to be bucatini, followed closely by rigatoni. For the cheese, do majority pecorino but also a little bit of parmesan.

Why is there no garlic in carbonara? ›

Because in the traditional recipe there is no garlic, if you add it you will lower quality of a very good food. Why is there no garlic in carbonara? Because it's an Italian dish, not an Italian-American dish, and Italian cooking does not use garlic as heavily as Italian-American cuisine.

Why don t Italians use cream in carbonara? ›

Authentic Italian carbonara does not contain cream. The absence of cream in traditional carbonara is a matter of culinary tradition and the desire to preserve the simplicity and purity of the dish's flavors.

What thickens carbonara? ›

Equally important is that the fat that melts out of the guanciale is required to thicken the carbonara sauce to make it creamy. Basically, what happens is that when the fat from the guanciale and in the egg yolks is mixed with starchy pasta cooking water, it thickens.

Do Italians put cream in pasta carbonara? ›

The Italian version doesn't use cream or ham. It is made with pancetta (pork belly meat that is salt cured, also referred to as Italian bacon), Parmigiano Reggiano or pecorino romano cheese, eggs, and black pepper—called the basics.

Does carbonara use whole eggs or just yolks? ›

Traditional carbonara sauce is made with whole eggs, not just the yolks. However, some recipes do call for just yolks. In the traditional recipe, the eggs are beaten together with grated Pecorino Romano cheese, black pepper, and sometimes a bit of Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese.

Does garlic belong in carbonara? ›

While the spaghetti is cooking, fry the pancetta with the garlic. Drop 50g unsalted butter into a large frying pan or wok and, as soon as the butter has melted, tip in the pancetta and garlic. Leave to cook on a medium heat for about 5 minutes, stirring often, until the pancetta is golden and crisp.

What's the difference between chicken Alfredo and carbonara? ›

The addition to guanciale in carbonara sauce is the main reason the flavor of Alfredo and carbonara sauce differs to such a degree. Guanciale gives carbonara an earthy, funkier edge whereas Alfredo sauce relies solely upon its buttery virtues to seduce its way into your mouth.

Is chicken Alfredo just carbonara? ›

Alfredo and carbonara are totally separate dishes. Carbonara traditionally consists of guanciale, beaten eggs, black pepper, and pecorino Ramano cheese. Traditional alfredo contains Parmigiano Reggiano and butter.

Is chicken Alfredo a carbonara? ›

Carbonara is egg. Carbonara is made by rendering Guanciale or Pancetta (traditionally Guanciale) out in a pan, adding cooked pasta, and tossing with a mixture of egg, Parmesan, lots of black pepper so that the egg and fat emulsify to create a creamy sauce. Alfredo is butter and Parmesan cheese. That's it.

Does carbonara sauce taste like egg? ›

No, you do not have to worry about your Spaghetti Carbonara tasting like eggs! Although the sauce contains eggs, it also boasts an almost ridiculous amount of sharp, salty, tangy, and pungent Pecorino Romano cheese and rich, salty, savory pork. These two ingredients overshadow any taste of eggs!

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