
Pasta alla Zozzona — Roman Street Food Gold with Guanciale and Sausage
This is Roman comfort food at its most indulgent — crispy guanciale and crumbled sausage create the base for silky egg-thickened pasta that coats every ridge. Originally street food, it's carbonara's wild cousin that breaks all the rules and tastes incredible doing it.
Roman street vendors invented zozzona as carbonara's rebellious cousin — all the creamy egg-coating technique with twice the meat and none of the purist rules. The name translates roughly to "dirty" pasta, which tells you everything about its origins in the working-class neighborhoods where cooks threw whatever pork they had into the pan.
What makes this dish sing is the interplay between two different pork textures: silky rendered guanciale fat and chunky, fennel-scented sausage crumbles. The wine deglazing step isn't traditional in carbonara, but here it adds a bright note that cuts through all that richness. The egg-thickening technique follows the same principles as its famous cousin, but the extra rendered fat from two meats makes the sauce even more luxurious.
This is weekend cooking — the kind of dish you make when you want to fill the kitchen with the smell of browning pork and gather people around bowls of pasta that coat your spoon. It's not elegant, but it's exactly the kind of indulgent comfort food that Rome does better than anywhere else.
Pancetta works better than bacon since it's not smoked, but guanciale's higher fat content and different texture really make this dish. If you can only find bacon, use thick-cut and render it very slowly to get maximum fat.
Sweet Italian pork sausage with fennel gives the most authentic flavor, but hot Italian sausage works if you like heat. Avoid chicken or turkey sausages — you need the fat content from pork.
The pan was too hot when you added the egg mixture, which scrambled them instantly. Turn off the heat completely before adding the pasta, and toss quickly with plenty of pasta water to cool things down.
This really needs to be served immediately — the egg-based sauce doesn't reheat well and will break. You can prep the meat mixture hours ahead and reheat it gently before adding the pasta.