Japanese Udon ♥ Italian Carbonara
A bowl of dialogue. A comfort reshaped. A whisper between Kyoto and Rome.
Why
Because comfort meets craft. Japan’s udon noodles — thick, chewy, grounding — step into Italy’s most iconic pasta dish. Carbonara’s creaminess finds new rhythm in a new texture.
The Dish
Udon noodles tossed in a miso-Parmesan sauce, laced with crisp pancetta (or shiitake for the vegetarian table), finished with a golden yolk and a scatter of scallions. The umami of miso, the bite of cheese, the silk of egg — a union both surprising and inevitable.
Ingredients
- 14 oz (400 g) fresh udon noodles
- 3 oz pancetta (or shiitake mushrooms), diced and crisped
- 2 egg yolks
- ½ cup finely grated Parmesan
- 1 tsp white miso paste
- 1 clove garlic, gently sautéed
- 2 scallions, thinly sliced
- Black pepper, freshly cracked
Method
- Cook udon noodles until just tender. Drain, reserving ½ cup of cooking water.
- In a skillet, crisp pancetta (or shiitake) with garlic until golden.
- In a bowl, whisk egg yolks, Parmesan, miso, and a splash of hot noodle water into a silky sauce.
- Toss hot noodles with pancetta and remove from heat. Quickly add the egg-miso mixture, stirring until noodles are coated in glossy creaminess.
- Top with scallions and cracked black pepper. Serve immediately — steam rising, cultures mingling.
Storyline
Noodles as bridge builders — a Roman whisper in a Kyoto bowl.
H&F Note: This dish is best served in a deep ceramic bowl, with chopsticks resting against the rim and a fork nearby — because some meals deserve both languages at once.