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Carbonara Day: Italy celebrates iconic Roman dish on 6 April | Collector
Carbonara Day: Italy celebrates iconic Roman dish on 6 April
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Carbonara Day: Italy celebrates iconic Roman dish on 6 April

Carbonara recipe was first published in Italy in 1954. Carbonara, one of the signature dishes of Roman cuisine, will be celebrated in Italy and around the world with the annual Carbonara Day on Monday 6 April. There will be a marathon of carbonara-themed events to mark the 10th edition of the special day which can be followed with the #CarbonaraDay hashtag. To mark the occasion, the pasta makers of Unione Italiana Food are launching the #Carbonara10eLode challenge, inviting chefs, food creators and experts to share their versions of a dish that continues to spark debate on social media, both online and beyond. According to an AstraRicerche survey conducted ahead of the 10th anniversary, Carbonara remains the favourite pasta recipe for 46.1 per cent of Italians. Organised by the Italian Food Union and the International Pasta Organisation since 2017, Carbonara Day features a series of online culinary events, with the chance to follow the carbonara recipes of top chefs live from your own kitchen.   Carbonara Day also represents a good excuse to visit your favourite trattoria for a bowl of the much-loved Roman dish made with five key ingredients: pasta, guanciale, pecorino, egg and pepper. Over the last decade the annual celebration has become the world's largest "spaghetti social", with more than a million social media posts containing the #Carbonara hashtag last year. The 2026 event can be followed on social media from midday on 6 April when carbonara fans will start posting live video recipes and sharing their opinions, photos and tips. Carbonara origins But what are the origins of the classic dish which can be found in Italian restaurants all over the world? The answer is slightly hazy. To some, the name suggests a connection to the coal-workers, or carbonari, of the Lazio and Abruzzo regions, with the black pepper used to season the dish thought to resemble coal dust. This would indicate that the carbonara was first created in the mid-19th century. However another theory suggests that the dish arrived in Rome during world war two when American troops brought their army rations of bacon and eggs to the Italian capital. Carbonara timeline Carbonara Day organisers have published a timeline of important carbonara milestones.   1950: The first ever mention is in an article in La Stampa newspaper. The context is the Festa de' Noantri in Trastevere which hosted Pope Pius XII. The author cites Ceseretto alla Cisterna whose owner was allegedly the first to welcome the American officers who arrived in Trastevere in search of spaghetti carbonara.   1951: In the Italian film Cameriera bella presenza offresi, Aldo Fabrizi asks Elsa Merlini if she knows how to make spaghetti alla carbonara. The answer is no.1952: A carbonara recipe is published, not in Italy, but in a Chicago food guide. The author Patricia Bronte writes about the carbonara at Armando's, an Italian-owned restaurant, made with “tagliarini (thin wide noodles), mezzina (italian bacon) e Parmesan cheese”. The same year, Corriere della Sera reports that Hollywood star Gregory Peck, in Anzio during the filming of Roman Holiday, is enamoured with the dish.1954: La Cucina Italiana magazine publishes a recipe for Spaghetti alla carbonara, with garlic, Gruyère cheese and pancetta. The recipe is picked up by The New York Times and promoted by the Italian tourism board.1960: Luigi Carnacina consecrates carbonara in his culinary bible La grande cucina, for the first time introducing guanciale instead of pancetta, as well as cream (today considered a major no-no by carbonara purists).   1966: The classic recipe as we know it today is published in Il grande libro di cucina by Carlo Santi and Rosino Brera. Carbonara controversies In more recent times, Carbonara made international headlines after the Financial Times stirred up a culinary controversy over its interview with Italian food scholar Alberto Grandi who claimed that "Italian cuisine really is more American than it is Italian." The article also cited the noted food historian Luca Cesari, author of A Brief History of Pasta, who claimed that carbonara is “an American dish born in Italy”.   Internationally there is an ever-increasing amount of variations to the classic dish, to the consternation of Italians who insist that any deviation from the original recipe means it simply cannot be called carbonara. In 2020 Romans reeled in horror at celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay's "nightmare carbonara" while in 2021 The New York Times caused upset in Italy with its Smoky Tomato Carbonara recipe. In December 2025, Italian cuisine was officially recognised as a cultural treasure by UNESCO, following a successful bid backed by Italy's ministries for culture and agriculture. Where to eat Carbonara in Rome Some of Rome's best "carbonara restaurants" include Flavio al Velavevodetto in Testaccio, Armando al Pantheon in the historic centre, Tanto Pè Magnà in Garbatella, Da Enzo al 29 in Trastevere, Da Danilo in the Esquilino quarter, and Eggs in Trastevere. Meanwhile for those seeking to create their own perfect carbonara at home, here is our recipe in English.

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