Gnocchi??
mommabenefield
Posts: 1,329 Member
in Recipes
Anyone ever made it from scratch? Successfully?
I tried last night didnt work.... may have not had enough flour...
Give me your best tips
I tried last night didnt work.... may have not had enough flour...
Give me your best tips
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Replies
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I'd like to make my own, too...bumping0
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bump too...plus I like saying it gnnn-O-chee!0
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Made it the other night, and it turned out pretty darn good. It takes a lot of flour - I added what was called for in the recipe, and then put quite a lot on the surface I was rolling the dough out on so the mixture picked up some more. Also, how long you boil it is important - big pieces seem to be able to handle 6 or 7 minutes, but smaller pieces get a bit slimy if you overcook them.0
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Anyone ever made it from scratch? Successfully?
I tried last night didnt work.... may have not had enough flour...
Give me your best tips
Use yolks as a binder, possibly get starchier potatoes, treat the dough gently, as soon as they float they are done0 -
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Can you post the recipe? Also any healthy ideas to serve them would be appreciated.0
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I typically use a 2 cup potato:1 cup flour:1 egg ratio.
How you cook the potato will affect how much flour you need to use and how well the dough binds. It is better to bake the potato rather than boil it. Boiling the potato adds excess water to the potato which means extra flour is needed.0 -
use cold potato when making the dough. like acg mentioned, when they float they are done - but you don't need to wait for them all to float. as soon as the first couple pop up you can take them out.
[edit: for clarification - cold, cooked potato. not raw potato ]0 -
I admire peoples patience with some foods. I usually only enjoy gnocchi at restaurants!0
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I really love gnocchi and have made it by hand before, but I honestly can't say homemade is worth it compared to the kind you buy in a box. The amount of time and effort to make all those tiny little pillows isn't worth the slight flavor improvement compared to the vacuum-sealed boxes you can buy in the pasta aisle. Or maybe I'm just making way too big a batch, because I get bored after rolling 20 gnocchi.0
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I saved this recipe recently, but I haven't tried it yet:
http://www.effyeahitsvegan.com/1/post/2013/06/vegan-gnocchi.html0 -
I really love gnocchi and have made it by hand before, but I honestly can't say homemade is worth it compared to the kind you buy in a box.
If you make it the right way it soooooo is worth it.
All I know is my Grandma used to make it when I was younger and it was the most delicious thing in the world. Haven't had anything close since from anywhere.0 -
I made them with sweet potatoes, needed to add WAY more flour than I thought I would need to make the dough workable. But they turned out great in the end, was afraid they'd be too floury!0
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I typically use a 2 cup potato:1 cup flour:1 egg ratio.
How you cook the potato will affect how much flour you need to use and how well the dough binds. It is better to bake the potato rather than boil it. Boiling the potato adds excess water to the potato which means extra flour is needed.
riiiight, so this is what I needed to change! thanks0 -
That's a great looking plate man...I want to make Gnocchi!0 -
Use old--as in wrinkly, but not mushy or moldy--potatoes as they have the most starch. I peel them, cut them in cubes, and then cook in the microwave until soft, which also takes out some of the moisture. Let cool then add an egg and flour, continuing to add flour until you get a dough. When you boil them, as someone else pointed out, they're done when they float. I've also successfully used acorn squash for gnocchi, and my sister has used pumpkin. I usually make a huge batch, typically over the weekend, and then freeze most of it. Makes for a great quick weekday meal as the gnocchi can be thrown in the boiling water while still frozen. If you do freeze it, though, make sure to spread all the gnocchi out on a cookie sheet to freeze. Once they're frozen, then pop them off and put them in a container. If you put them in the container right away, they freeze into a giant blob.0
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I use chestnut flour and I don't use potato.
I also make a Riccotta one.0 -
I just made a bunch of sweet potato gnocchi the other day. Gnocchi can be either potato-based or ricotta based and I've made both. Here are some recipes from my cooking blog:
http://heidicookssupper.com/blog/2010/12/13/potato-gnocchi/
http://heidicookssupper.com/blog/2009/07/30/return-to-gnocchi-the-continuing-search-for-pillowy-dumplings/
http://heidicookssupper.com/blog/2009/06/22/gnocchi-is-quick-to-make-in-small-amounts/
http://heidicookssupper.com/blog/2009/05/26/the-gnocchi-saga-continues/
For the most recent batch of sweet potato gnocchi, I had baked the sweet potato wrapped in foil and let the potato cool in the foil. The skin sloughed right off without any effort and the potato flesh was nice and moist. That meant, however, that the gnocchi needed relatively more flour. With this in mind, I made the gnocchi a lot smaller than usual. One large sweet potato made enough gnocchi for three dinners for two.
I like to saute lots of veggies, poach the gnocchi, and throw some of the gnocchi water and some grated cheese in to make a sauce. Pesto is also good on gnocchi and can be made out of almost any green leafy stuff. The most recent meal was parsley/slivered almond/olive oil whirred in the food processor into pesto.0 -
I made it once with a sweet poetatoe filling and it was awesome. The trick is to add more flour .....0
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one trick I learned from my nonna is to steam the potatoes instead of boil them... it will cut the amount of flour you need.... in your pot add few inches of water then put in the steam basket (you could use a colander) add the potatoes and cover with lid cook at medium heat til the potatoes are fork tender then proceed with your recipe...0
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I typically use a 2 cup potato:1 cup flour:1 egg ratio.
How you cook the potato will affect how much flour you need to use and how well the dough binds. It is better to bake the potato rather than boil it. Boiling the potato adds excess water to the potato which means extra flour is needed.
I agree with baking the potatoes rather than boiling. Here is a recipe that even has the nutritional info. I love gnocchi and making them with baked potatoes makes a huge difference in the texture and how much flour is needed.
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Potato-Gnocchi-3572580 -
Never that much of a bother for me. But it is a left over dish. Left over mashed potatoes from meat loaf night. Too many cousins on a diet and skipped the mash potatoes at thanksgiving? Than Gnocchi night comming real soon. Never learned from a Italian, but saw someone on top chef making his grand mothers gnocchi recipe and thought it was looked a lot like making gordita shells which I was taught by someone's Mexican grandmother. No idea how athentic mine are but my homemade still always tastes better than store bought. Never heard of baking them. I always did the fork technic I saw on tv and put in water. No measuring I just make sure they bind well yet are not too dense0
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I really love gnocchi and have made it by hand before, but I honestly can't say homemade is worth it compared to the kind you buy in a box.
If you make it the right way it soooooo is worth it.
All I know is my Grandma used to make it when I was younger and it was the most delicious thing in the world. Haven't had anything close since from anywhere.
I agree! The stuff you buy doesn't even come close to the light little gnocchi I make. I do use them though if I'm being lazy but they are a totally different kettle of fish.
I'm dying to try the sweet potato version someone posted!
I'd like to add if you decide to steam the potatoes make sure they are the big old ones and keep them in the skin whole till cooked, peel then use a ricer for better results than a potato masher.0 -
I really love gnocchi and have made it by hand before, but I honestly can't say homemade is worth it compared to the kind you buy in a box.
If you make it the right way it soooooo is worth it.
All I know is my Grandma used to make it when I was younger and it was the most delicious thing in the world. Haven't had anything close since from anywhere.
I agree! The stuff you buy doesn't even come close to the light little gnocchi I make. I do use them though if I'm being lazy but they are a totally different kettle of fish.
I'm dying to try the sweet potato version someone posted!
I'd like to add if you decide to steam the potatoes make sure they are the big old ones and keep them in the skin whole till cooked, peel then use a ricer for better results than a potato masher.0 -
I've done a pumpkin one before (had a mix of potato and pumpkin). Delish but time consuming
Was something like this
http://ourkitchengarden.net/2013/04/25/pumpkin-gnocchi-with-burnt-butter-and-sage/
Ditto what was said before. They're cooked when they rise to the top just sccop them off with a slotted spoon0 -
I've made them with my dad before, not sure on measurements but we use flour, potato through a ricer, eggs, salt pepper and parmesan cheese. Sometime's they're too hard, sometimes too soft but omg when they're just right!!! lol0
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Thank You!!!! Everyone!! especially the pictures posted and the link and well everything... I boiled my potatos so they likely got too water logged... i didnt let them cool enough and did not use enough flour .... and man oh man im so eager to try sweet potato gnocchi ... --->:happy: drooling i say! thank you everyone....
Is there anything else gnocchi can be made from?0 -
I saved this recipe recently, but I haven't tried it yet:
http://www.effyeahitsvegan.com/1/post/2013/06/vegan-gnocchi.html
:laugh: I love that website title.0 -
Hot d@mn. Food p0rn.0 -
Hot d@mn. Food p0rn.
this guy posts amazing food! ... go check out that other link where everyone posts their meals, he has an amazing taste in food0
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