Thursday, April 19, 2012

Homemade gnocchi

A home cook takes on the challenge of making gnocchi from scratch.

One of my?food goals for 2012?was to try my hand at making gnocchi from scratch.? I love these little potato dumplings, whether served with a simple marinara sauce, sage and browned butter, or?lamb ragu.? I bought a?gnocchi board?just to encourage myself, but it languished in the pantry for a few months awaiting the right opportunity.? Last weekend, that opportunity came.

Skip to next paragraph Christina Masters

The Rowdy Chowgirl

Christina Masters is a Seattle-based food blogger. As The Rowdy Chowgirl, she writes about recipes, gardening, restaurants, food ethics, feeding the hungry, and more. She believes that food is never just food ? it is always part of a larger story that includes context, community and connections. An enthusiastic home cook, she favors local, seasonal ingredients prepared in simple, flavorful ways

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I spent a recent weekend with my friend?Christie?in Eastern Washington, and Saturday was gnocchi making day.? We went over to the home of her friends Pete and Jewel late in the morning.? Jewel is a cook of extraordinary calibre, and was gracious enough to teach us how to make Pete?s mother?s gnocchi, also known as Cavatele, or ?sinkers? ? a reference to the lead sinkers put on fishing lines. Gnocchi can have that effect, filling the tummy surprisingly quickly.

Jewel had done some advance work in the kitchen. A crockpot of sauce burbled on the counter. A cauldron of potatoes boiled on the stovetop. And the large center island was already stacked with eggs, flour, bowls, and utensils.

When the potatoes were done, we peeled them while they were still hot, then shot them through a ricer into a bowl of flour. We sifted and stirred this mixture with our hands until the potatoes were incorporated into the flour and cooled enough to not cook the eggs.? Jewel warned us not to mash the potatoes into the flour, so we tried to use a light touch.

She dumped this mixture onto the counter, created a well in the center, and cracked eggs into it.? After salting the eggs she stepped back and let us mix the eggs into the flour with our hands, smashing and kneading until we had a ragged but cohesive pile.

Then it was our turn to step back while Jewel kneaded the dough until she judged it smooth enough, but not too stiff.? The dough rested under a bowl for half an hour, while we rested on stools around the counter and engaged in the sort of relaxed conversation that happens best in a warm kitchen during the pauses in a cooking project. Kitchen wisdom was shared. Ideas were batted back and forth.?

Soon the dough was ready and we began by rolling it into snakes, then cutting these snakes into inch-long nuggets. I felt my brow furrowing and my tongue poking out between my teeth as I tried to follow Jewel?s swift movements. She took a piece of dough and, pressing two fingers into the middle, gave it a sort of roll and a flick on the counter top, set aside a gnocchi with the characteristic dimple in the middle, then made another and another. My hands struggled to copy her practiced motions, but after a few tries, using the gnocchi board for assistance, I had it ? more or less ? and began to produce a series of irregular dumplings.

Jewel started boiling the gnocchi while Christie and I made more.? When she decided that they were perfect ? plump and firm but no longer chewy ? she drained the gnocchi and mixed them with sauce. We all got a little sample bowl of gnocchi and one of her meatballs to enjoy.? Our gnocchi were good, but I nearly burst into applause after my first bite of meatball. Truly, it was worthy of a standing ovation. But this was only a teaser to whet our appetites for later.

We returned that evening for dinner, to gather around a long table set with a big pan of saucy gnocchi, meatballs the size of my fist, Italian sausage, garlic bread, grated cheese, and an extra pitcher of sauce.? We laughed, and talked, and ate. I felt proud of our efforts, as I slowly savored the pillowy gnocchi.? Everything on the table was incredibly delicious, but more than that; it was made and served with love.

?Do you ever write about how food is more than just food?? Pete asked as he gazed down the loaded table in my direction.

May I never write about anything else.

Jewel?s Cavatelli (Gnocchi) Recipe

3 to 5 medium red potatoes
3 to 5 cups flour
3 to 5 eggs
1 tablespoon cooking oil
1 teaspoon salt?

Start with cold water. Boil 3 to 5 medium red potatoes with skins in unsalted water for 25 ? 30 minutes.? Peel potatoes while still hot.

Place 3 to 5 cups of flour in kneading bowl. Rice the skinned potatoes into flour bowl and slowly add flour. Sift potatoes and flour through fingers until cool; do not mash together.

Add 3 to 5 unbeaten eggs to well made in mixture?after cool.?Salt eggs. Knead until smooth.

Cover 1/2 hour. Roll out into a snake 1/2-inch thick. Cut 1 inch long pieces. Press with two lightly floured fingers in center and roll open like large macaroni to form cavatelli, little hot dog bun-shaped dough rolls

Let dry 10 minutes.

Add 1 tablespoon oil and 1 teaspoon salt to boiling water. Drop the cavatelli?in large pot of rapidly boiling water, boil for approximately 30 minutes. Add a handful at a time so the water keeps boiling. If you let the water cool down they get gummy. Be sure to use lots of water when you cook and stir gently but often.?

Drain and mix with spaghetti sauce and serve or keep warm in oven until ready.?

Serve with spaghetti sauce and meatballs.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of food bloggers. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by The Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own and they are responsible for the content of their blogs and their recipes. All readers are free to make ingredient substitutions to satisfy their dietary preferences, including not using wine (or substituting cooking wine) when a recipe calls for it. To contact us about a blogger, click here.

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Continue reading YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor

YouTube wants more videos to have background music, adds audio editor originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 03:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget HD Podcast 295 - 04.18.2012

One half of this week's podcast is coming live from Las Vegas, where we're checking out the National Association of Broadcasters show. There's plenty to talk about, from Media Center news centered around Windows 8 and Ceton's upcoming offering (expect details on a beta test soon) to the latest edition of MythTV. We'll also take a look at the latest shot fired by Reed Hastings at Comcast and ponder the possibilities of Sharp's new LCDs. All of that and more is waiting, o go ahead and press play.


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Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh (@bjdraw), Richard Lawler (@rjcc)

Producer: Trent Wolbe

00:07:18 - Microsoft outs three flavors of Windows 8: Windows 8, Windows 8 Pro and Windows RT
00:14:53 - Ceton's Echo Extender for Media Center will be the first to support DTS surround sound
00:19:30 - Ceton previews DVR companion apps on Android and iOS, teases Echo beta 'soon'
00:23:13 - Hauppauge Broadway scores DVR-like record and playback features
00:25:40 - MythTV 0.25 is finally available with a bundle of new features
00:26:46 - Time Warner and Verizon begin selling bundled packages just to annoy regulators
00:29:05 - Reed Hastings takes Comcast to task for skirting net neutrality
00:38:35 - IKEA puts away your TV cables, tech credentials
00:41:50 - Kaz Hirai reveals 'One Sony' turnaround strategy, will cut 10,000 jobs
00:47:30 - Sony Japan blends the Torne PS3 TV tuner with 500GB of NAS, calls it Nasne
00:48:44 - THX manages AV settings for pros and consumers with Cinespace HD and Media Director
00:50:30 - Dreamworks Animation joins Walmart's disc to digital program
00:52:55 - Comcast Xfinity TV iOS app adds integrated DVR manager so you don't miss Deadliest Catch
00:55:43 - Canon shows off prototype 30-inch 4K reference display, won't put a price tag on love
00:56:12 - REDray 4K cinema laser projector and player eyes-on (video)
00:57:50 - Sharp rolls out high-res IGZO LCDs destined for tablets, laptops and monitors
00:59:24 - Dolby Labs and Philips unveil Dolby 3D tech, want to deliver glasses-free 3D in HD
01:01:19 - Jaws debuts on Blu-ray August 14th remastered and upmixed (video)
01:04:35 - Must See HDTV (April 16th - 22nd)

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Engadget HD Podcast 295 - 04.18.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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