
🇮🇹 Roman Cuisine
Lazio tradition featuring cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, and carciofi alla romana
Definition
Roman cuisine (*cucina romana*) is the culinary tradition of Rome and the surrounding Lazio region of central Italy, representing one of the most historically continuous and institutionally influential sub-national food cultures in the Western world. Rooted in the city's role as an imperial capital, a medieval religious center, and a modern metropolis, Roman cooking balances rustic frugality with a deep sense of civic identity.
The cuisine is defined by its economy of means and bold flavor: a small canon of aged cheeses — principally *Pecorino Romano* — and cured pork fat (*guanciale*, cured pork cheek) form the backbone of its most iconic dishes. Pasta preparations such as *cacio e pepe*, *carbonara*, *amatriciana*, and *gricia* exemplify the Roman principle of achieving complexity from minimal ingredients through precise technique. Offal cookery (*quinto quarto*, the "fifth quarter") constitutes a distinct and historically significant branch of the tradition, reflecting the cucina povera heritage of working-class neighborhoods like Testaccio. Vegetables — above all the *carciofo romanesco* (Roman artichoke) — play a structurally important role, prepared either braised with herbs (*alla romana*) or fried whole (*alla giudia*, a preparation associated with Rome's Jewish community).
Roman cuisine also encompasses a living tradition of *trattoria* culture, in which codified recipes are maintained with unusual conservatism, and deviations from canonical preparations are subject to public and critical scrutiny — reflecting the cuisine's function as a marker of local civic identity.
Historical Context
The culinary traditions of Rome draw on an extraordinarily long and layered history. Ancient Roman gastronomy, documented in sources such as Apicius's *De Re Coquinaria* (c. 4th–5th century CE), featured fish sauce (*garum*), spiced wines, and legume-based preparations; while direct continuity with modern practice is limited, the foundational emphasis on preserved ingredients and pork products persists. The medieval and Renaissance periods saw the consolidation of a civic food culture organized around the city's markets, abbatoirs, and religious calendar, with the Jewish community of Rome — one of Europe's oldest — contributing lasting preparations including *carciofi alla giudia* and *filetti di baccalà*.
The modern canon of Roman pasta dishes crystallized largely in the 19th and early 20th centuries, shaped by the integration of ingredients from neighboring Lazio towns (notably Amatrice, in what is now the province of Rieti) and the migration of rural populations into working-class urban neighborhoods. The post-Unification period (after 1870) accelerated culinary standardization as Rome became Italy's national capital, attracting cooks and ingredients from across the peninsula while simultaneously reinforcing local identity through the *trattoria* system.
Geographic Scope
Roman cuisine is primarily practiced in Rome and the broader Lazio region of central Italy. It is also reproduced with notable fidelity in Italian diaspora communities worldwide, and its canonical pasta dishes have achieved global diffusion through restaurants and home cooking, though preparations outside the region frequently deviate from orthodox technique and ingredients.
References
- Boni, A. (1930). La cucina romana. Newton Compton.culinary
- Machetti, S., & Nocera, C. (2013). Il quinto quarto: Frattaglie e altre interiora nella tradizione culinaria italiana. Slow Food Editore.culinary
- Goldstein, D. (Ed.). (2015). The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets. Oxford University Press.academic
- Riley, G. (2007). The Oxford Companion to Italian Food. Oxford University Press.culinary
Recipe Types (414)
Cambodian Sweet Soup

Canoli with Cream

Caramelized Sugar Cream
Caraway Soup

Carbonara
Carp on Rice

Carquinyoli

Cauliflower salad
Cauliflower Soufflé
Cauliflower with Butter and Breadcrumbs
Celery Root with Mayo

Cheddar Cheese Sauce

Cheese filling
Chef Chat’s Whole Bunch of Love
Cherry Avocado
Cherry Cheese Brownies
Cherry Compote
Chestnut Charlotte

Chestnut Cream

Chestnut Layered Cake
Chewy Chocolate Candies

Chicken with Okra

Chicken with Tarragon

Chicken with Tomatoes

Chocolate Cream with Praline Walnuts or Hazelnuts
Chocolate Jello Pudding
Chocolate Pecan Fudge

Choux à la Crème

Christmas Cheesecake
Coffee Charlotte

Coffee Ice-cream

Coffee Icing
Coffee Jello Pudding

Coffee Truffles I
Coffee Truffles II

Cookies II
Crayfish Butter
Cream of Dried Bean Soup
Cyan Star

Date Layered Cake with Whipped Cream

Defrutum
Delicious "Lies"
Delicious Mazurka
Dessert with Everything
Dried beans, Greek style
Dried beans salad
Dried Beans with Mayo
Dried Pea and Sour Cream Soup
Dry Biscuits II
