Potato Gnocchi

by Lidia Bastianich on Jun 7, 2024

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Servings
4 main course or 8 appetizer servings
Course
Entree

Ingredients

  • 4 large, unpeeled Idaho (Russet) potatoes, (about 2 ¼ pounds), washed
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 large eggs
  • 3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour, or as needed

Instructions

  1. Put the potatoes in a large pot and pour in enough cold water to cover them by at least three fingers. Bring to a boil and cook until they are tender when pierced with a skewer, about 40 minutes.
  2. Lift them out of the water and let stand just until cool enough to handle. The hotter the potatoes are when you peel and rice them, the fluffier the riced potatoes will be.
  3. Scrape the peels off the potatoes and rice the potatoes.
  4. Spread the riced potatoes out in a thin layer to expose as much of their surface as possible to the air.
  5. While the potatoes are cooling, bring 6 quarts of salted water to a boil in an 8-quart pot over high heat.
  6. On a cool, preferably marble, work surface, gather the cold riced potatoes into a loose mound with a well in the center.
  7. Beat the eggs, 1 teaspoon salt, and the white pepper together in a small bowl until blended and pour into the well.
  8. Work the potatoes and egg together with both hands, gradually adding as much flour as necessary to form a firm but moist dough. Stop frequently as you mix to scrape up the dough that sticks to the work surface and reincorporate it into the dough. Forming the dough should take no longer than 10 minutes from start to end. The longer the dough is worked, the more flour it will require and the heavier the dough- and the finished gnocchi- will be. As you work, dust the dough, your hands, and the work surface lightly with flour as soon as the dough begins to feel sticky.
  9. Cut the dough into six equal portions. Using the outstretched fingers and palms of both hands, roll each piece of dough into a rope about 1/2 inch thick.
  10. Cut the rope crosswise into 1/2-inch pieces. Sprinkle the pieces with flour, then roll each piece between your palms into a rough ball. Reflour your hands as necessary to prevent sticking.
  11. Hold a fork at an angle to your work surface. Dip the tip of your thumb in flour. Take a dough ball and, with the tip of your floured thumb, press it lightly but firmly against the tines of the fork while, at the same time, rolling it downward along the tines. The dough will wrap around the tip of your thumb, forming a dumpling with a deep indentation on one side and a ridged surface on the other. (You can use the nongrating side of a flat or curved cheese grater for a different effect.)
  12. Set the gnocchi on a baking sheet lined with a lightly floured kitchen towel as you form them. Repeat with the remaining five pieces of dough. At this point the gnocchi must be cooked or frozen immediately.

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