Gnocchi
Serves 4, takes 45 minutes
Serves 4, takes 45 minutes
One of our favourite kitchen gadgets is a potato ricer (see illustration below). This isn’t essential to this recipe, but if you love mash you’ll want one of these. They give perfect smooth mash, which with a little butter and salt and pepper is heaven. If we are feeling decadent, then it’s double cream and a small amount of grated cheddar cheese. Anyway, the gnocchi. It can be served in two ways. Either cooked in boiling water, or if you fancy a change, boiled and then fried in oil or butter to create fantastic crispy potato bites. Serve with your favourite pasta sauce and some greens. This recipe makes quite a bit, but if there’s just two of you eating, freeze half of it, in separate pieces, on a plate so it doesn’t stick together, then get it out a few days later and cook straight from frozen. It goes very well indeed with Quick Sauce for Pasta or Gnocchi
1 kg large waxy potatoes
175g plain flour + extra for shaping
salt and pepper
1 egg, beaten
100g ricotta cheese
Fresh herbs e.g. good handful of lemon thyme, curly parsley, tarragon, or winter savoury.
Boil the potatoes until cooked. Dry them out as much as possible. (5 minutes in a low oven on a baking tray works well) Using a potato ricer or masher, mash until smooth. Mix the potato with the flour, salt and pepper, egg, ricotta cheese and herbs. The mixture should be like soft dough
Shape the potato mixture into long cigar shapes about 1.5 cm thick
Cut into 3 cm lengths
Bring a pan of water to the boil. Add the gnocchi pieces in batches. Cook until they float to the surface of the water, and scoop out with a slotted spoon
They can either be served like this or be drained on kitchen paper and then fried in oil and/or butter until golden brown. We usually serve some boiled, and some boiled and fried