Purple potato gnocchi – Pizza today

Purple potato gnocchi - Pizza today

There is nothing as delicious as light, pillowy gnocchi. Add to that the flavorful flesh of the purple potato and you have a real winner. This purple potato gnocchi version is from Veneto and Lazio, which uses eggs, unlike the gnocchi of Piedmont, which does not use eggs. Scouring the gnocchi takes a few minutes, but it’s worth it for each gnocchi to catch a thin sauce like this butter-garlic-sage sauce.

Purple potato gnocchi

Author:

Type of recipe: entry

  • 16 ounces of purple potatoes
  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup flour (Preferably Italian “00”) and more for rolling
  • 1 ¼ tsp salt
  • 5 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 3 peeled and crushed garlic cloves
  • 5 leaves, fresh sage
  • Parmigiano Reggiano to finish
  1. Peel the purple potatoes and put them in a large pot of boiling water for 25 minutes.
  2. Remove with a slotted spoon and put in a food processor (or food mill or potato grater) and let cool for 5 minutes.
  3. Mash the potatoes in the food processor until the mixture is smooth. Cool until mixture is room temperature.
  4. Place the egg in a large bowl and stir with a fork, add salt and the potatoes.
  5. Add half the flour and knead with a spoon or a spatula, gradually adding more flour until all is used. The dough should be smooth, soft and slightly sticky.
  6. While kneading the dough, boil water in a 5-quart pot. Do not add salt or the gnocchi will stick together.
  7. Roll the dough out on the table into ½-inch diameter snake-like rolls.
  8. Cut each inch and toss the pieces in the flour. You can use the underside of a fork with the tines back on the counter to roll each piece towards the end of the tines. This should produce gnocchi that have ridges on a convex side and a smooth concave side. (You can also use “Rigagnocchi, this is a small fluted board used to make ridges on pasta like garganelli.)
  9. While you roll the gnocchi, place the garlic butter and sage in a large sauté pan to simmer on low. Stir to incorporate the flavors. The sauce is ready when the butter is light golden and the foam disappears.
  10. Keep warm and discard the garlic if desired.
  11. When the water boils, add the gnocchi 15-20 at a time. They will sink to the bottom but eventually float on top of the water.
  12. When all the gnocchi have floated, wait 20 seconds before removing them with a slotted spoon.
  13. Quickly place the cooked gnocchi on a towel to dry (water will spoil the sauce.) and then into the hot garlic-sage sauce.
  14. Put the gnocchi in a bowl and top with the sauce and grated Parmigiano Reggiano and the cooked sage leaves and serve warm.

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