Potato Gnocchi

Gnocchi di Patate (Potato Gnocchi) - credit @another_food_blogger

I love versatile potato gnocchi, they’re delicious dressed with just about any pasta sauce including pesto, easy gnocchi Sorrentina from the Amalfi coast, or the simplest burnt butter and sage. You can even boil the gnocchi ahead of time, chill them in iced water then drain, toss with oil and set aside (or refrigerate overnight) and blanch in boiling water just before you’re ready to serve. Best of all they’re so easy to make, scroll to the bottom of the page for my top gnocchi making tips.

Serves 4 as a starter

Ingredients
  • Rock salt, for baking
  • 500g floury potatoes, washed
  • 75g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
  • Pinch salt flakes, crushed
  • 1 egg yolk
  • Sauce of your choice, for serving
Method
  1. Preheat oven to 180°C.
  2. Spread rock salt onto a baking tray.
  3. Place potatoes on the salt and bake for 60–90 minutes, until a wooden skewer easily passes in and out of them.
  4. Sift flour onto a clean, dry work surface.
  5. Pass potatoes through a ricer onto the flour (or pass through a mouli or peel and press through a fine sieve). Reserve skins to make Crisp Potato Skins.
  6. Add salt flakes and egg yolk and use a pastry scraper to cut the flour into the potato, then use your hands to form a soft dough without mixing any more than is necessary.
  7. Divide into 3 portions.
  8. On a lightly flour-dusted bench, use your hands to gently roll each portion into a 2cm-thick sausage.
  9. Using the pastry scraper, cut 2cm-long pieces, roll them along a gnocchi board for the traditional gnocchi shape if you like.
  10. Toss lightly in flour on a tray.
  11. Bring a large saucepan of well salted water to the boil (10g salt per litre of water).
  12. Boil gnocchi for a minute or 2, until they float.
  13. Using a slotted spoon, scoop them out of the water into the sauce, reserving the cooking water.
  14. Gently toss potato gnocchi and sauce together, adding a tablespoon or so of the cooking water to give a creamy, coating consistency.
  15. Spoon into warmed flat bowls and serve.

Like this recipe?
You’ll love A Month on the Italian Riviera Recipes+Videos Online Cooking Class Inspired by Lucio Galletto!

Share page on:

How To Make Potato Gnocchi

Join Me Soon

What Our Cooks Say

Melisa (Beacon Hill, NSW)
Melisa (Beacon Hill, NSW)
Read More
We made the pot-sticker dumplings and bang bang chicken from the Chinese class the other night. Once again both exceeded our expectations. My husband keeps saying it’s better than going out to restaurants as the recipes and quality are amazing.
Glennis (Caringbah South, NSW)
Glennis (Caringbah South, NSW)
Read More
The whole Be Inspired experience has helped me love cooking again. I was sick of cooking the same old things - meal time is a lot brighter thanks to you Roberta.
Pam (Cammeray, NSW)
Pam (Cammeray, NSW)
Read More
Your recipes are something I always feel confident offering guests and also reasonable in the time to prepare. We often try your recommended wines and suppliers and enjoy your travel tales too!
Jen (Tamarama, NSW)
Jen (Tamarama, NSW)
Read More
Thank you for stocking our pantry with such authentic Ingredients and quality produce. We really like the flexibility of cooking over a couple of days and changing the order we cook the dishes in when we want to. And I love listening to the themed playlist while cooking.
Katrina (Arncliffe, NSW)
Katrina (Arncliffe, NSW)
Read More
I am absolutely loving Be Inspired! There are ingredients I have never worked with before so having the confidence to try something new is so much fun! The recipes are just amazing and the notes on what can be prep’d beforehand are a great help too. Thank you so much.
Deb (Belconnen, ACT)
Deb (Belconnen, ACT)
Read More
Awesome fun traveling through Emilia-Romagna experiencing first hand some of the produce I've worked with over the last couple of years cooking with Roberta's classes – the family are reaping the benefits now.
Judith (Woronora, NSW)
Judith (Woronora, NSW)
Read More
Food, wine and travel! Three of my favourite things! Be Inspired with Roberta has been a wonderful experience and given me more confidence in the kitchen. I have learnt so much, cooked things I never would have attempted without Roberta’s excellent videos, and used ingredients I have never tried before.
Sandra (Garran, ACT)
Sandra (Garran, ACT)
Read More
I'm a competent cook whose learned so much from Roberta's online cooking classes. The recipes are yummy and Roberta’s video guidance offers so many little tips to improve flavour and organise the flow of preparation. I enjoy her warmth, sense of humour, and ability to giggle at herself when she occasionally messes up.
Previous
Next

Gnocchi Making Tips

What is the secret to making good gnocchi?

Wonderfully light gnocchi are very impressive and very easy to make if you remember three simple guidelines: minimum moisture, flour and handling. Follow these simple tips to get great results everytime:

  • Rather than boil the potatoes, bake them on a bed of rock salt to draw out as much moisture as possible; a wooden work surface is also handy for absorbing moisture.
  • Make the dough while the potatoes are as hot as possible, giving off excess moisture via steam. A ricer or mouli is best as you can pass the unpeeled potato through them, alternatively wait until they’re just cool enough to handle then peel and pass through a fine mesh sieve.
  • Use a pastry scraper or firm spatula to mix the dough so that you don’t over work it.
  • Add just enough flour to hold the dough together and use a minimal amount when rolling it.

Can gnocchi be cooked ahead of time?

Gnocchi can be cooked a day or even 2 ahead. Cool in a bowl of iced water, drain well, toss in a little olive oil, spread on a plate, cover and refrigerate. Reheat by adding to a large saucepan of boiling water for a few seconds.

What do you do with leftover gnocchi?


Leftover gnocchi can be refrigerated for up to a week (depending on the sauce) and are great topped with cheese and baked.

Subscribe To My Newsletter & Get A Free Online Italian Cooking Class (RRP $39)