In the reviews of the recipe, several people mentioned to double the recipe so that you make a lot and then freeze half of it for a later meal. I decided to double the recipe.... and got a MOUNTAIN of gnocchi balls. Shea and I stood in the kitchen for 3 hours making the dough, rolling it out into snakes, then rolling into balls.... THREE HOURS. We most definitely got our leftovers! I would suggest to those of you who want to try this recipe to NOT double it on the first try. It is a lot of work.
With all the work and time spent in the kitchen for this recipe, I must admit that it is great. Excellent. Quite tasty. And when the frozen gnocchi gets cooked, it tastes just as fresh as the first batch. I have served this with pesto and also served plain.
Ricotta and Chive Gnocchi (serves 4-6)
3 Russet potatoes
2 Eggs
1 c. Ricotta
1/2 c. Grated parmesan
1/3 c. Chives
2 c. Flour (making sure you have extra on hand for rolling them later)
6 T. Butter
6 T. Olive oil
Kosher salt & pepper
- Bring a large pot of water to boil and add the russet potatoes. Boil for 45 minutes, draing the water through a colander, and let the potatoes cool.
- Once the potatoes have cooled down, remove and discard the skins. In a large bowl, mash the potatoes. The mixture needs to be as smooth as possible, so use an immersion blender or hand mixer if that helps. Then, add the eggs and stir into the mixture. Once the eggs have been incorporated, stire in the ricotta, parmesan, and chives.
- At this point, the mixture should be very thick, but it needs to be as thick and maliable as dough. Add the flour and stir together until you get that consistency. The mixture will still be a little sticky, that's ok. Take a handful or two of flour and scatter it on a smooth surface. Place your dough on the flour and roll around until it's more dough-like and doesn't stick to everything in sight.
- Begin rolling with your hands as if you're forming a large snake. You will end up getting a very large tube of dough, about two feet long. Cut this into quarters, and continue rolling each individual segment until you form rolls that are no bigger than a quarter in circumference. (Any bigger and you'll have difficulty cooking them.)
- From the skinnier rolls, take a knife or pinch off little sections and roll them around in the palm of your hand to make the gnocchi. You may need to continue dredging them in a little flour as you go, which is fine. Set all the finished gnocchi on a large plate to the side.
- Once all the gnocchi have been formed. Dump them into a boiling pot of hot, salted water. Boil the gnocchi for five minutes to ensure their centers are nice and dense. (They will automatically start popping up to the top of the pot once they're cooking, but make sure you give them a little extra time in the water.)
- Drain the boiled gnocchi through a colendar. Then, in a very large saute pan over medium high heat, add two tablespoons of oil and butter. Add just enough gnocchi to the pan where they have enough space to get a light, brown crust around them. Add more oil, butter, and gnocchi when the first batch is done. Lightly season the gnocchi with a little kosher salt, parsley, or extra chives.
A mountain of rolled gnocchi.
Cooked to perfection.
3 comments:
Yum!
Once again, you've got me hooked. And I have to try this too!! Tell me, do you freeze them before or after you cook them???
Patsy -- I freeze them before cooking. To make sure that they don't freeze in one big glob, I put them in a single layer on a cookie sheet and had them slightly frozen before putting them in a tupperware. And -- beware when rolling out the dough into the little balls. We made a big mound of the little balls, but when we got finished and were trying to start storing them, everything on the bottom of the pile had become a big pile of mush. We had to re-roll some of the gnocchi and actually ended up throwing out a good portion because we didn't want to go through the whole process again. GOOD LUCK!! Please let me know if/when you do this. I can give you more tips if you need....
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