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Garlic-Buttered Crispy Gnocchi

by , featured in Poppy Cooks
Published by Bloomsbury
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Introduction

So classic, but so good! I’ve found that gnocchi are something you might order in a restaurant, but not necessarily make at home. There’s something about making pasta that seems super-scary... but making gnocchi is so easy! Think of it as kinda one step beyond making mashed potato. Even successfully pronouncing the word gnocchi makes you feel sophisticated. It’s like ‘nyoh-kee’. Doesn’t that sound fancy?

So classic, but so good! I’ve found that gnocchi are something you might order in a restaurant, but not necessarily make at home. There’s something about making pasta that seems super-scary... but making gnocchi is so easy! Think of it as kinda one step beyond making mashed potato. Even successfully pronouncing the word gnocchi makes you feel sophisticated. It’s like ‘nyoh-kee’. Doesn’t that sound fancy?

Image of Poppy O'Toole's Garlic-Buttered Crispy Gnocchi
Photo by Louise Hagger

Ingredients

Serves: 2

Metric Cups

FOR THE CONFIT GARLIC

  • 2 whole bulbs of garlic
  • about 200 millilitres olive oil

THE CORE

  • 6 confit garlic cloves (chopped)

FOR THE GNOCCHI

  • 250 grams red skinned potatoes (about 3)
  • 20 grams Parmesan cheese (finely grated, plus extra to serve)
  • A pinch of ground nutmeg
  • 1 large egg
  • 80 grams pasta flour (plus extra for dusting)
  • 1 tablespoon salt for the cooking water, plus extra to season
  • black pepper

FOR THE SAUCE

  • 50 grams butter
  • a large bunch of sage (leaves picked)

FOR THE CONFIT GARLIC

  • 2 whole heads of garlic
  • scant 1 cup olive oil

THE CORE

  • 6 confit garlic cloves (chopped)

FOR THE GNOCCHI

  • 9 ounces red skinned potatoes (about 3)
  • ¾ ounce Parmesan cheese (finely grated, plus extra to serve)
  • A pinch of ground nutmeg
  • 1 large egg
  • 2¾ ounces pasta flour (plus extra for dusting)
  • 1 tablespoon salt for the cooking water, plus extra to season
  • black pepper

FOR THE SAUCE

  • 2 ounces butter
  • a large bunch of sage (leaves picked)

Method

Garlic-Buttered Crispy Gnocchi is a guest recipe by Poppy O'Toole so we are not able to answer questions regarding this recipe

For the confit garlic

Confit garlic is such a winner – it’s basically caramelised garlic that keeps for weeks in a jar. You can pretty much use confit garlic as you would use normal garlic in any recipe.

  1. Slice the bottom off each bulb of garlic just enough that you can see the garlic cloves inside, but no more. Remove the outer, papery skin of the garlic bulb to release the cloves, but leave the cloves themselves with their skins on. (I do this because it’s easier to peel the cloves once they’re cooked than it is to peel them raw.)
  2. Place all the individual cloves into a small saucepan and cover well with the olive oil (use more if you need to – the cloves should be covered).
  3. Place the pan over a low–medium heat and cook, keeping an eye on the temperature of the oil throughout – it shouldn’t boil, but just gently plod along with the occasional movement in the garlic.
  4. After 30–40 minutes, test to see if your garlic is ready: use a fork to lift out a clove and when it’s cool enough to touch, give it a squeeze. If the garlic clove drops out from the skin easily and is soft and golden in colour, your garlic is ready. If it’s not quite there yet, pop it back in for another 5–10 minutes and test again.
  5. Remove the pan from the heat. Leave the oil to cool down completely, then carefully pour it, with all the cloves, into a clean glass jar. Seal with a tight-fitting lid. Use as needed – and that goes for the oil as well as the cloves. For the cloves, simply squeeze them out of the skin and away you go!

For the gnocchi

  1. Preheat your oven to 200°C/180°C fan/400°F/Gas 6.
  2. Once the oven is hot, prick your potatoes with a fork, then bake them for 1 hour, until the flesh is cooked through and tender. Remove from the oven.
  3. When the potatoes are hot enough to handle, cut them open and scoop out the flesh into a fine sieve. Press the potato through the sieve on to a clean surface. Weigh out 250g/9oz and discard (by which I mean eat) any that’s remaining.
  4. Place the 250g/9oz spud flesh into a mixing bowl (or you can do this on your work surface if you’re feeling like a gnocchi pro) and, while it’s still hot, mix through the parmesan and nutmeg and season with salt and pepper.
  5. Make a well in the centre of the potato mixture and crack in the egg, then dust your hands with a little flour and use them to bring the potato and egg together. Once fully combined, add half the flour to start forming a dough. When that’s mixed in, add the other half and knead to combine again. Stop kneading as soon as the dough is no longer sticky.
  6. Take a quarter of the dough and cover the rest with a clean tea towel so it doesn’t dry up. Using floured hands, roll the quarter of dough into a long sausage shape about 2cm/¾ inch thick and about 45cm/18 inches long.
  7. Use a sharp knife to cut 2.5cm-long (1 inch) pillows of soft gnocchi. Transfer the cut pieces to a board dusted with flour and cover with a clean tea towel. Repeat the rolling and cutting with the next quarter of dough, and so on until you’ve used up all the dough.
  8. Fill a deep saucepan with water (about three-quarters full) and add the 1 tablespoon of salt. Place the pan over a high heat and bring the water to the boil. Then, add the gnocchi to the pan, allowing them to sink to the bottom and bob around – when they float to the top (about 1–2 minutes), they’re ready.
  9. While all this is happening, make the sauce. Place a large frying pan (big enough to fit all the gnocchi) over a medium–high heat. Add the butter and leave it to melt. Add the chopped confit garlic cloves and the sage leaves.
  10. As the cooked gnocchi come to the surface of the water, use a slotted spoon to transfer them straight into the sage-y, garlick-y, butter-y goodness.
  11. Cook them in the pan until they’re getting golden on both sides, giving the pan an occasional toss to prevent any gnocchi from burning. Transfer to serving bowls and sprinkle over some parmesan to serve.

For the confit garlic

Confit garlic is such a winner – it’s basically caramelised garlic that keeps for weeks in a jar. You can pretty much use confit garlic as you would use normal garlic in any recipe.

  1. Slice the bottom off each head of garlic just enough that you can see the garlic cloves inside, but no more. Remove the outer, papery skin of the garlic bulb to release the cloves, but leave the cloves themselves with their skins on. (I do this because it’s easier to peel the cloves once they’re cooked than it is to peel them raw.)
  2. Place all the individual cloves into a small saucepan and cover well with the olive oil (use more if you need to – the cloves should be covered).
  3. Place the pan over a low–medium heat and cook, keeping an eye on the temperature of the oil throughout – it shouldn’t boil, but just gently plod along with the occasional movement in the garlic.
  4. After 30–40 minutes, test to see if your garlic is ready: use a fork to lift out a clove and when it’s cool enough to touch, give it a squeeze. If the garlic clove drops out from the skin easily and is soft and golden in colour, your garlic is ready. If it’s not quite there yet, pop it back in for another 5–10 minutes and test again.
  5. Remove the pan from the heat. Leave the oil to cool down completely, then carefully pour it, with all the cloves, into a clean glass jar. Seal with a tight-fitting lid. Use as needed – and that goes for the oil as well as the cloves. For the cloves, simply squeeze them out of the skin and away you go!

For the gnocchi

  1. Preheat your oven to 200°C/180°C fan/400°F/Gas 6.
  2. Once the oven is hot, prick your potatoes with a fork, then bake them for 1 hour, until the flesh is cooked through and tender. Remove from the oven.
  3. When the potatoes are hot enough to handle, cut them open and scoop out the flesh into a fine sieve. Press the potato through the sieve on to a clean surface. Weigh out 250g/9oz and discard (by which I mean eat) any that’s remaining.
  4. Place the 250g/9oz spud flesh into a mixing bowl (or you can do this on your work surface if you’re feeling like a gnocchi pro) and, while it’s still hot, mix through the parmesan and nutmeg and season with salt and pepper.
  5. Make a well in the centre of the potato mixture and crack in the egg, then dust your hands with a little flour and use them to bring the potato and egg together. Once fully combined, add half the flour to start forming a dough. When that’s mixed in, add the other half and knead to combine again. Stop kneading as soon as the dough is no longer sticky.
  6. Take a quarter of the dough and cover the rest with a clean tea towel so it doesn’t dry up. Using floured hands, roll the quarter of dough into a long sausage shape about 2cm/¾ inch thick and about 45cm/18 inches long.
  7. Use a sharp knife to cut 2.5cm-long (1 inch) pillows of soft gnocchi. Transfer the cut pieces to a board dusted with flour and cover with a clean tea towel. Repeat the rolling and cutting with the next quarter of dough, and so on until you’ve used up all the dough.
  8. Fill a deep saucepan with water (about three-quarters full) and add the 1 tablespoon of salt. Place the pan over a high heat and bring the water to the boil. Then, add the gnocchi to the pan, allowing them to sink to the bottom and bob around – when they float to the top (about 1–2 minutes), they’re ready.
  9. While all this is happening, make the sauce. Place a large frying pan (big enough to fit all the gnocchi) over a medium–high heat. Add the butter and leave it to melt. Add the chopped confit garlic cloves and the sage leaves.
  10. As the cooked gnocchi come to the surface of the water, use a slotted spoon to transfer them straight into the sage-y, garlick-y, butter-y goodness.
  11. Cook them in the pan until they’re getting golden on both sides, giving the pan an occasional toss to prevent any gnocchi from burning. Transfer to serving bowls and sprinkle over some parmesan to serve.

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