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Spaghetti all’Assassina

Author:

Vincenzo Prosperi

Updated:

15th Apr, 2025

26 Comments

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SPAGHETTI ALL’ASSASSINA

Spaghetti all’ assassina is the “Assassin’s Spaghetti” or what I like to call the “Killer Pasta.” Why? Because this pasta has killed the way we make traditional spaghetti. Spaghetti all’ assassina is cooked in a pan and not boiling water, giving it a beautifully burnt and crunchy texture – a way you’ve never experienced pasta before.

The tomato sauce, (the “blood”) is simple and loaded with traditional Italian flavor, while the red-hot chilli gives this dish a spicy kick.

Originally from Bari and Puglia, spaghetti all’ assassina was popular in the 1960s but faded away in Southern Italian cooking. But now, it seems to be trending. This recipe brings all the amazing flavors of crispy Spaghetti all’assassina but I’ve added a twist at the end.

Watch the Spaghetti all’Assassina video recipe:

How to make SPAGHETTI ALL’ASSASSINA like an Italian

how to make spaghetti all'assassina

Vincenzo’s Plate Tips

Cook Pasta in a Cast Iron Skillet

In this dish, we cook the pasta in a pan instead of boiling water. If you own a cast iron skillet, this is the best pan to cook the spaghetti. If you don’t, you can use a large steel pan. Do not use a non-stick pan because it won’t give pasta the crispy and burnt texture we want. Make sure the pan is large enough that the pasta can lay flat inside the pan.

We Are Looking for Burned Pasta

Burning food in cooking is usually a bad thing, but not in Spaghetti all’ assassina, in fact it’s the number one rule, you must do it! We want to burn the pasta a little bit to get a toasted and crunchy spaghetti. If you begin to see a black, burned layer forming at the bottom of the pan while cooking, don’t be scared, this is exactly what we are looking for. We are “killing” the pasta to give it a perfect crunch.

Eyeball the Extra Virgin Olive Oil

When you add the extra virgin olive oil to your pan, be generous with it. I recommend about 10-15 tablespoons, but it doesn’t have to be exact. We just need a lot of olive oil in the pan to help us fry our pasta noodles.

Cook the Pasta For Less than 10 Minutes

Once the pasta is added to the skillet, the whole cooking process from start to finish should take a maximum of 8-10 minutes. Don’t move it around and stir while it’s cooking. Letting the pasta still and flat will help it become caramelized. You will have to roll it over once or twice to get an even crispy coating.

Slowly Add Tomato Concentrate

When adding the tomato concentrate to the pasta, slowly add a couple of ladles at a time. Adding a little sauce at a time will allow the pasta to feel the pan’s heat and get the burning, crispy texture it needs. Slowly add in the sauce and continue to pour in more as the pasta absorbs it.

spaghetti all'assassina

How To Serve Spaghetti All’ Assassina

Once your pasta is nice and crispy, remove it from the pan with tongs and put it on a plate. Use the tongs to help swirl the pasta into a small mountain. Now it’s time to drizzle a little extra virgin olive oil over the top to give it a bit of added flavor. Add a little black pepper as well.

Finally, the modern twist: a dollop of Stracciatella cheese. Spaghetti all’ assassina is spicy and crunchy, but the Stracciatella cheese brings a refreshing and creamy texture that takes this dish to the next level!

 

how to make killer pasta

how to make spaghetti all'assassina

Spaghetti All’ Assassina

Print Recipe
4.80 from 5 votes
This Spaghetti all’ assassina recipe is cooked in a way you’ve never had pasta before. We use a risottatura cooking technique, meaning we fry the Spaghetti in a pan rather than boiling it in water. It toasts the pasta to bring a little crunch to every bite. The hot peppers give this dish a spicy killer kick, and the Stracciatella cheese balances it all out with a fresh and creamy finish.
Prep Time: 10 minutes mins
Cook Time: 15 minutes mins
Total Time: 25 minutes mins
Servings: 2

Equipment

  • 1 large pot
  • 1 Cast iron skillet or large steel pan
  • 1 wooden spoon
  • 1 Chopping-board
  • 1 knife
  • 1 Ladle
  • Metal tongs
  • Measuring spoons and cups

Ingredients

  • 300 g Spaghetti, 11oz
  • 1-2 red hot chilli peppers
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 150 g Tomato concentrate, 5oz
  • ½ Bottle of tomato passata
  • Salt, as much as required
  • Pepper, as much as required
  • Extra virgin olive oil, as much as required
  • Stracciatella cheese, as much as preferred

Instructions

How to cook Spaghetti all’ assassina

  • Bring 1 liter (4 cups) of water to boil in a large pot.
  • Once boiling, add the tomato concentrate to the pot and cook for less than 10 minutes and then take off heat and put to the side.
  • Cut the red hot chilli pepper into nice thin strips and finely chop the garlic cloves.
  • In a cast iron skillet or large steel pan, add about 10-15 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil.
  • Bring the pan up to high heat. Once hot, add the garlic and the chilli pepper into the olive oil and cook for 20 seconds.
  • Add the tomato passata to the pan and cook for 2-3 minutes while stirring to help reduce the sauce. Keep the pan on high heat and let the sauce create bubbles.
  • Add the spaghetti into the pan by putting it down in a flat, even layer and begin to push the sauce on top of the pasta and cook for about 4 minutes.
  • Roll over your pasta to start cooking the other side.
  • Next, begin to slowly add the sauce from the tomato concentrate and water into the pan, but don’t move the pasta. Let it sink flat in the pan and cook.
  • Add a little rock salt and a generous amount of pepper into the pan and periodically push the sauce back on top of the pasta while you cook.
  • Push the pasta closer together and continue to cook as the pasta will continue to absorb the sauce.
  • Let the spaghetti cook for 1-2 minutes without much sauce in the pan to help the pasta get crispy.
  • Then, continue to add in the tomato concentrate sauce. The pasta should be cooked for a maximum of 8-10 minutes from the moment it is in the pan.
  • Stir the pasta and spread it out around the pan so it starts to toast and get a little extra crunchiness.
  • Put extra virgin olive oil over top of the past then remove it from the pan and plate it up.
  • Top with extra virgin olive oil, black pepper, and a dollop of Stracciatella cheese.

Video

E ora si mangia, Vincenzo’s Plate….Enjoy!

spaghetti all'assassina Vincenzo's Plate

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Recipe Rating




26 responses

  1. Heiko Blumentritt
    February 10, 2023

    Question: I make my pasta fresh since a few months and I prefer it over the dried one. Does it also work with fresh pasta?

    Reply
  2. Kathleen
    April 4, 2024

    5 stars
    Took time to master as smoke detector had to be temporarily disabled but Worth it! Molto Delicioso

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      April 4, 2024

      Ciao Kathleen! I’m thrilled to hear it was worth the effort and turned out molto delizioso. Just maybe give the smoke detector a heads up next time! 🤣

      Reply
  3. Martin
    May 23, 2025

    5 stars
    Very tasty.
    Need some time to clean the pan

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      May 23, 2025

      Ciao Martin! Haha, yes. Spaghetti all’Assassina is deliciously dangerous… especially to your pans! 😅
      But totally worth the clean-up, right?

      Reply
    2. Sunrose
      June 29, 2025

      I found soaking in water with baking soda a bit does all the work. No elbow grease or toxic fumes.

      Reply
      1. Vincenzo’s Plate
        June 30, 2025

        Grazie mille for sharing!

        Reply
  4. Fredrik
    May 30, 2025

    Hi Vincenzo,
    wonderful recipe. But I have one question: Why do you need a whole litre of tomato concentrate sauce? You don’t seem to use even half of it. I poured everything in and the dish became a little too saucy, a lot more sauce than the dish in your video. Keep up the great work!

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      May 30, 2025

      Ciao Fredrik! Ciao! Great question! Just to clarify… yes, the recipe calls for 1 liter of water to dissolve the tomato concentrate, but you’re not meant to pour it all in. That mix is your base sauce, and you only use a few ladles of it while cooking, just enough to stop the spaghetti from drying out too quickly.

      Think of it like making risotto: add a little at a time as needed. You’re aiming for the pasta to crisp up, not swim in sauce! You’ll probably have some of that sauce left over—that’s totally normal. The spaghetti cooking process should only take 8–10 minutes, so just add more concentrate sauce whenever the pasta starts to look too dry. Hope that helps!

      Reply
      1. Fredrik
        June 4, 2025

        Thanks a lot Vincenzo! I’ll think about this the next time.

        Reply
  5. Roger Bencivenga
    October 4, 2025

    5 stars
    Clear concise instructions and entertaining, too! Great job Vincenzo.

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 6, 2025

      Grazie mille for your kind words Roger! Have you tried my recipe yet? Let me know!

      Reply
  6. Jeffrey Paige
    October 4, 2025

    Wait to make this!

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 7, 2025

      Ciao Jeffrey! Please let me know how it goes, I’m excited for you to try it!

      Reply
  7. Ded
    October 5, 2025

    4 stars
    Hi. I’m confused. I thought stracciatella was a Roman soup. Did you mean Stacchino cheese?

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 7, 2025

      Ciao Ded! You’re right, Stracciatella can refer to a few different things in Italian cuisine. There’s the Roman egg-drop soup called Stracciatella alla Romana, but in this case I was talking about Stracciatella cheese, the creamy filling you find inside Burrata.

      Reply
  8. Dana W
    October 12, 2025

    What is tomato concentrate? I can find it nowhere. Is it the same as tomato paste?

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 13, 2025

      Ciao Dana! Yes, it’s the same as tomato paste. I can’t wait to hear how it turns out when you give my recipe a try!

      Reply
  9. D Windhorst
    October 12, 2025

    There seems to be no nowhere to buy “tomato concentrate.” Every search I make for tomato concentrate takes me to tomato paste. Yet, a couple of AI summaries say they are not the same thing. Websites describing tomato concentrate don’t list a source to buy it, or any brand names. Why list an ingredient that is impossible to find? What to use instead?
    Thanks,

    Dana

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 13, 2025

      Ciao Dana! Tomato concentrate is the same as tomato paste, the thick, rich kind sold in small tubes or cans. In Italy, we call it concentrato di pomodoro. You can use any good-quality tomato paste brand such as Mutti, Cento, or De Cecco. Just dissolve it in water as mentioned in the recipe, and it will create the perfect base sauce to add gradually while the pasta cooks.

      Reply
  10. Margaret
    October 16, 2025

    Hi Vincenzo
    We had the pleasure of eating this unique pasta dish in Puglia a couple of years ago. It was magnificent, both my husband and I loved it, so unconventional but packed with flavour. I’m going to try your recipe after watching the video, which is great, because you can see how it’s done, quite simple really, but you have to get the burnt bottom, that’s the trick, bit similar to paella. Also the correct frypan, I may need to invest in one that suits. Thanks for sharing this with us, makes me hungry just watching the video.

    Reply
    1. Vincenzo’s Plate
      October 16, 2025

      Ciao Margaret! Thank you for sharing. You’re absolutely right. Getting that perfect burnt bottom is the secret to Pasta all’Assassina! 🔥 It gives the dish that smoky, bold flavor that makes it so special. I’m so glad this video recipe brought back those Puglia memories for you. Can’t wait to hear how your version turns out!

      Reply
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