Mrs. Sebastiani’s Malfatti

- Total Time
- About 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2pounds fresh spinach (weighed after trimming) or 2 packages frozen
- 6ounces crusty Italian bread (about half a loaf)
- Hot water
- 1onion, finely chopped
- 1clove garlic, finely chopped
- 2tablespoons olive oil
- ½ to 1cup dry, coarse bread crumbs
- 1cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese, plus more for serving
- ½cup chopped parsley
- 1teaspoon salt
- ¼teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1teaspoon dried basil
- 4eggs, lightly beaten
- Flour
- 3cups hot tomato sauce, preferably homemade
Preparation
- Step 1
Cook the fresh spinach in the water clinging to the leaves after washing, or cook the frozen according to package instructions. Drain over a bowl, squeezing out as much water as possible — do this in small handfuls so you can press out the most water — and chop. Reserve the water.
- Step 2
Briefly soak the bread in the reserved spinach water plus enough hot water to cover and squeeze dry.
- Step 3
Sauté the onion and garlic in the olive oil until tender, 3 to 5 minutes. Mix the spinach, bread, sautéed onion and garlic and put through the finest blade of a meat grinder or pulse in a food processor until chopped, then scrape into a mixing bowl.
- Step 4
Add ½ cup of the dry bread crumbs, the cup of Parmesan, parsley, salt, pepper and basil. Stir in the eggs. With lightly floured hands, gently shape the mixture into sausagelike links, 1 inch round by 3 inches long. If they do not hold together, add more bread crumbs. Lay on a baking sheet.
- Step 5
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Drop the links, one at a time, into the boiling water. Reduce the heat to let the water barely simmer and cook until the malfatti float to the surface, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon, drain on paper towels and place in a greased baking dish, large enough to fit the malfatti in a single layer.
- Step 6
Spoon the tomato sauce over the links, sprinkle with lots of cheese and broil to reheat.
Private Notes
Comments
If you are ever in Napa, you must try them from Vals market downtown or Lawler’s—there’s nothing else like them!!!
I first made this for a large family dinner some years ago, having saved the recipe from the Jan 2009 NYT Magazine. I just made it again, the week after Thanksgiving when all turkey has left the house. It's a great dish & very simple. I originally served it as a generous side dish to a simple platter of lamb chops for 10 people. Today, I made some homemade meatballs and served it with those in individual gratin dishes for 2 of us. And, yes, I use bottled Tomato Herb Pasta Sauce.
I'm updating my notes from several years ago. I just made this wonderful dish again for Christmas Eve dinner, as a side dish to my sister's leg of lamb. I wanted to note a couple things: 1) It's not as simple as I stated last time. There are several steps & it will take longer than a 1/2 hour, start to finish. Closer to 1 hour. 2) I employed a salad spinner as a final step in removing moisture from the spinach. It worked very well but left some residue on the spinner for cleanup.
What an unusual and special dish. Really stretches the definition of a pasta, but whatever it is, it’s light and delicious and a keeper!
I just made this dish. Well, tried to make it. I think the instructions assume a very good cook is cooking it. I couldn’t get the sausages firm even after 2 cups of bread crumbs. I suspect you have to really get all the water out of the spinach/ bread mixture. I pressed the water out a lot. There was no residual water in the mixer, but i suspect too much still in the ingredients. Perhaps you need to let the mixture strain for several ours.
Jilly, I used a salad spinner to get residual water out, it makes a big difference. Also used some very dry, larger Italian bread crumbs I had in my freezer from 6 months ago. They were perfect, making very firm "sausages".
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