Spinach Gnocchi

- Total Time
- About 30 minutes, plus 2 hours' refrigeration
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½pounds bunch spinach, stemmed and thoroughly cleaned, or ¾ pound baby spinach
- Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter or extra virgin olive oil
- 8ounces ricotta (1 cup)
- ⅓cup all-purpose flour (about 45 grams)
- 2eggs, beaten
- Freshly grated nutmeg
- 2ounces Parmesan, grated (½ cup)
- Marinara sauce for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Blanch the spinach for no more than 20 seconds in salted boiling water. Transfer to a bowl of cold water, drain and squeeze out excess water. Chop fine.
- Step 2
Heat the butter or olive oil over medium heat in a heavy saucepan and add the spinach, salt (remembering that you will be adding Parmesan, which is salty), pepper, ricotta and flour. Stir together and let the mixture sizzle while you stir constantly for 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and beat in the eggs, nutmeg and Parmesan. The mixture should be stiff. Transfer to a bowl, cover well and refrigerate for 2 hours or longer.
- Step 3
Line a sheet pan with parchment and dust generously with flour. Remove the gnocchi mixture from the refrigerator. There are a few ways to form the gnocchi. You can scoop out small balls by the rounded teaspoon and place on the parchment (they will be sticky so use another spoon to scrape them out of the measuring spoon), or you can divide the dough into 4 pieces and on a floured surface, with lightly floured hands, gently roll each piece into a coil about ¾ inch wide. Cut into 1-inch pieces and place on parchment-lined baking sheet. Alternatively, place the mixture in a pastry bag fitted with a ⅝ inch round tip and pipe 1-inch blobs onto the parchment. Don’t worry if the dough is sticky.
- Step 4
Bring a large pot of water to a boil and salt generously. Meanwhile heat the tomato sauce in a saucepan. Adjust the heat under the water so that it is boiling gently and drop in the gnocchi, about 10 at a time. If they stick to the parchment or your hands lightly flour your fingers and sprinkle a little flour over the gnocchi. Once they float to the top simmer for 4 minutes, then move them to the pan of sauce with a slotted spoon. Serve with the sauce and additional Parmesan to taste.
- Advance preparation: The dough can be refrigerated for a day or two. The cooked gnocchi will keep for a day in the refrigerator and can be reheated gently in tomato sauce, in olive oil or butter, or by dipping into gently boiling water.
Private Notes
Comments
These gnocchi, though delicious, had very little structural integrity and turned to mush once topped with sauce. Would suggest adding more flour or only one egg. From past gnocchi experience, the egg could probably be foregone entirely for a drier mixture.
These are delicious and were a hit with my family, including my 2 year old, served with Kim Sverson’s marinara. I used only one egg and froze the gnocchi for an hour after forming them. Used quite a bit of flour to form them. They held their shape just fine and were so soft they melted in your mouth.
This needs patience. Squeeze that spinach. Use better ricotta, drain if too watery, butter rather than oil(adds firmness). Followed all steps, in order of ingredient list, stir thoroughly each time to incorporate... let chill as long as possible. Used 1 floured board for forming coils to divide into small gnocchi-like shapes. Then, into gently boiling water as directed. Not a doughy potato version. Lighter but flavorful. Added salt/pepper & parmesan at serving. Next time more nutmeg.
Oh, my… this, to my mind, is not a successful recipe. Granted, not all eggs are the same size and flour has differing moisture levels. I read all the comments and used only one egg and upped the flour. Made sure the spinach was as dry as I could get it. Let it sit in the fridge overnight only because my timing was off to serve for dinner. The mixture was so soft I had to add additional flour. When cooked, though they held together, they had a sort of…slimy? consistency. Not your Nonni’s gnocchi.
I had to add a lot more flour then what was called for. At least double. When I did a small test batch, I left the gnocchi boiling for 4 minutes after rising to the top (as instructed), but they turned out quite mushy. For the rest, I took them out as they rose to the top which improved the texture.
Is it necessary to blanch the spinach before the cooking? If chopped really fine/minced and then cooked in butter with other ingredients, wouldn't it have the same structure needed?
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