Potato Gnocchi
Recipe courtesy
Michael Chiarello
Kosher salt
1 pound russet
potatoes
3 to 4 large egg
yolks
1/2 cup freshly
grated Parmesan
1/4 teaspoon freshly
grated nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon gray
salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly
ground black pepper
1 cup all-purpose
flour, plus more for dusting board and dough
Preheat the oven to
425 degrees F.
Spread a layer of
kosher salt on a baking sheet and arrange the potatoes on top (see Cook's
Note). Bake until a bit overcooked, about 45 minutes. Let sit until cool enough
to handle, cut in half, and scoop out the flesh. Reserve the potato skins, if
desired, for another use.
Pass the potatoes
through a potato ricer or grate them on the large holes of a box grater. You
should have about 2 cups. Make a mound of potatoes on the counter with a well
in the middle, add 3 of the egg yolks, the cheese,
nutmeg, salt, and pepper. Mix in the potatoes and mix well with hands. Sprinkle
1/2 cup of the flour over the potatoes and, using your knuckles, press it into
the potatoes. Fold the mass over on itself and press down again. Sprinkle on
more flour, little by little, folding and pressing the dough until it just
holds together, (try not to knead it.) Work any dough clinging to your fingers
back into the dough. If the mixture is too dry, add another egg yolk or a
little water. The dough should give under slight pressure. It will feel firm
but yielding. To test if the dough is the correct consistency, take a piece and
roll it with your hands on a well-floured board into a rope 1/2-inch in
diameter. If the dough holds together, it is ready. If not, add more flour,
fold and press the dough several more times, and test again.
Keeping your work
surface and the dough lightly floured, cut the dough into 4 pieces. Roll each
piece into a rope about 1/2-inch in diameter. Cut into 1/2-inch-long pieces.
Lightly flour the gnocchi as you cut them. You can cook these as is or form
them into the classic gnocchi shape with a gnocchi board, ridged butter paddle,
or the tines of a large fork turned upside down. Rest the bottom edge of the
gnocchi board on the work surface, then tilt it at
about a 45 degree angle. Take each piece and squish it lightly with your thumb
against the board while simultaneously pushing it away from you. It will roll
away and around your thumb, taking on a cupped shape -- with ridges on the
outer curve from the board and a smooth surface on the inner curve where your
thumb was. (Shaping them takes some time and dexterity. You might make a batch
just for practice.) The indentation holds the sauce and helps gnocchi cook
faster.
As you shape the
gnocchi, dust them lightly with flour and scatter them on baking sheets lined
with parchment paper or waxed paper. Set gnocchi filled cookie sheet in front
of a fan on low for 1/2 hour (turning gnocchi after 15 minutes). If you will
not cook the gnocchi until the next day or later, freeze them. Alternatively,
you can poach them now, drain and toss with a little olive oil, let cool, then
refrigerate several hours or overnight. To reheat, dip in hot water for 10 to
15 seconds, then toss with browned butter until hot.
When ready to cook,
bring a large pot of water to a boil and add salt. Drop in the gnocchi and cook
for about 90 seconds from the time they rise to the surface. Remove the cooked
gnocchi with a skimmer, shake off the excess water, and serve as desired.
Cook's Note: Baking
potatoes on a layer of salt allows heat to circulate 360 degrees. Scrape the
salt into a jar and reuse it again and again. If you do not have time to shape
the gnocchi, you can freeze the dough, defrost it in the refrigerator, and then
shape it. To freeze shaped gnocchi, line baking sheets with
waxed paper and dust with flour. Spread the gnocchi on the prepared
sheets and freeze until hard. Remove to individual-portion-size freezer bags. Store in the freezer for up to 1 month. To cook, drop the
frozen gnocchi into boiling salted water. Cook for about 2 minutes after they
rise to the surface