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Foodie Friday: Rosa’s spinach & ricotta gnudi

Foodie Friday

This week’s recipe comes from Pasta Grannies, a gorgeous new cookbook from Hardie Grant that’s brimming with traditional Italian recipes straight from the nonne of Italy. Gnudi means nude and alludes to these dumplings being pasta-less; they are ravioli without their coats.

Spinach & ricotta gnudi
Image: Emma Lee

Ingredients

For the gnudi

  • 250 g cow’s milk ricotta, drained weight
  • 600g spinach
  • 25g finely grated Parmigiano Reggiano (or other parmesan cheese)
  • 1  large egg, beaten
  • Plain (all-purpose) flour, for rolling and dusting
  • Salt

For the dressing

  • 30g unsalted butter
  • 5 sage leaves
  • Several scrapes of nutmeg

To serve

  • 2 tablespoons grated Parmigiano Reggiano

Method

  1. Place the ricotta in a sieve over a bowl and leave it to drain for an hour or so, then weigh out 250g.
  2. Meanwhile, place the spinach leaves in a saucepan, turn the heat up to high and add 2 tablespoons of boiling water. Cover the pan with its lid and steam until spinach has collapsed. Drain the spinach through a sieve and leave it to cool. Squeeze out as much water as possible and roughly chop. You should end up with about 300g cooked spinach.
  3. Mix the spinach with the ricotta, Parmigiano Reggiano and beaten egg. Season to taste and make sure the ingredients are playing nicely together.
  4. Pour some flour into a bowl. Pinch off 20g pieces of the mixture (about the size of a large walnut) and toss each on in the flour before rolling it between your palms to create a nice little ball. Dust off any excess flour. Place on a lightly floured board, away from each other so they don’t stick.
  5. Have a frying pan on one side of your stove, and a sauté pan on the other. Melt the butter in the frying pan with the sage and nutmeg and keep it warm while you cook the gnudi.
  6. Fill a sauté pan with salted water and bring to a gentle simmer. Lower the gnudi gently into the pan and let them tremble in the water for 5 minutes, or until they bob to the surface.
  7. Use a slotted spoon to transfer them to the butter in the frying pan. You may have to cook the gnudi in batches.
  8. Spoon the butter over the gnudi, then serve them with a shower of grated cheese over the top.

Pasta Grannies, $39.99, is published by Hardie Grant, and is available now at all good book stores.

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By Amy Collins-Walker

Amy is our regular feature writer, an experienced journalist and interior stylist living in Perth, Western Australia. Find out more about her styling work at http://www.amycollinswalker.com/

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