Gnocchi | |
Country: | Italy |
Course: | Italian: [[Italian meal structure#Formal meal structure|Primo]] (Italian course) |
Type: | Dumpling |
Main Ingredient: | Potatoes, semolina, wheat flour, breadcrumbs; sometimes eggs, cheese |
Similar Dish: | Italian: [[Gnudi]] |
Gnocchi ([1] ;[2] [3] pronounced as /it/; : gnocco) are a varied family of dumplings in Italian cuisine. They are made of small lumps of dough, such as those composed of a simple combination of wheat flour,[4] potato,[5] egg,[6] and salt. Variations of the dish supplement the simple recipe with flavour additives, such as semolina flour,[7] cheese,[8] breadcrumbs,[9] cornmeal[10] or similar ingredients,[11] [12] [13] and possibly including herbs, vegetables, and other ingredients. Base ingredients may be substituted with alternatives such as sweet potatoes for potatoes or rice flour for wheat flour. Such variations are often considered to be non-traditional.
Gnocchi are commonly cooked in salted boiling water and then dressed with various sauces. They are usually eaten as a first course (Italian: [[Italian meal structure#Formal meal structure|primo]]) as an alternative to soups (Italian: minestre) or pasta, but they can also be served as a contorno (side dish) to some main courses. Common accompaniments of gnocchi include melted butter with sage, pesto, as well as various sauces. Gnocchi may be homemade, made by specialty stores, or produced industrially and distributed refrigerated, dried, or frozen. Small soup gnocchi are sometimes made by pressing the dough through a coarse sieve or a perforated spoon.
The word Italian: gnocchi may be derived from the Italian word Italian: nocchio, meaning 'a knot in wood',[14] or from Italian: nocca, meaning 'knuckle'.[15] It has been a traditional Italian dish since Roman times.[16] It was introduced by the Roman legions during the expansion of the empire into the countries of the European continent. One ancient Roman recipe consists of a semolina porridge-like dough mixed with eggs; similar modern dishes include the baked Italian: [[gnocchi alla romana]] and Sardinian Italian: [[malloreddus]], which do not contain eggs.
After potatoes were introduced to Europe, they were eventually incorporated into gnocchi recipes.[17] Potato gnocchi are particularly popular in Abruzzo, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Veneto, and Lazio.
Ingredients typically include wheat flour, potato, egg, and salt. Variations of the dish supplement the simple recipe with flavour additives, such as semolina flour, cheese, breadcrumbs, cornmeal or similar ingredients, and possibly including herbs, vegetables, and other ingredients.
The dough for gnocchi is often rolled out before it is cut into small pieces about the size of a wine cork or smaller.[18] The dumplings may be pressed with a textured object, such as a fork or a cheese grater, to make ridges or cut into little lumps. Professional tools exist for this purpose, known as gnocchi or Italian: cavarola boards.
Gnocchi that are homemade are usually consumed the same day they are made. However, they can be cut into bite-sized dumplings, spread evenly on a baking sheet, frozen, then packaged in an air-tight bag and back into the freezer for later consumption. This method can allow the gnocchi to last two months in the freezer.
Commercial gnocchi are often sold under modified atmospheric packaging and may achieve a shelf life of two weeks or more under refrigeration.[19] [20] Some are sold in vacuum packaging that is shelf-stable, only needing refrigeration once it is opened.[21]
Gnocchi vary in recipe and name across different regions.
Lombard and Tuscan Italian: malfatti are made with ricotta, flour, and spinach, as well as the addition of various other herbs if required.[22] Tuscan Italian: [[gnudi]] distinctively contains less flour;[23] but some varieties are flour-based, such as the Campanian Italian: strangulaprievete, the Apulian Italian: [[cavatelli]], the Sardinian Italian: [[malloreddus]],[24] and so on.[25] Certain kinds are made of cooked polenta or semolina, which is spread out to dry, layered with cheese and butter, and baked.
Italian: Gnocchi di pane, derived from the German: [[Knödel|Semmelknödel]], is made from breadcrumbs and is popular in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Veneto, and Trentino-Alto Adige. Another variety from the latter region is spinach gnocchi.
In Austria, gnocchi are a common main or side dish, known by the original name and Austrian variant, nockerl (: nockerln). As a side dish, they may accompany main dishes such as goulash.
Gnocchi are very popular and often served as a dish in coastal Croatia, typically being served as a first course or a side dish with dalmatinska pašticada. The Croatian name for gnocchi is njoki.[26]
Gnocchi, known locally as njoki, are common in Slovenia's Primorska region, which shares many of its culinary traditions with neighboring Italy.
In France, French: gnocchis à la parisienne is a hot dish of dumplings made of choux pastry[27] served with béchamel sauce.
A specialty of Nice, French: gnocchi or French: gnoques de tantifla a la nissarda[28] are made with potatoes, wheat flour, and eggs. Another version including French: blette (Swiss chard) is called French: merda dé can ([29]).
In Provence, potatoes gnocchis can be made in a longer shape and called French: longettes.[30]
Due to the significant number of Italian immigrants who arrived in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay, gnocchi, ñoqui (pronounced as /es/), or Italian: nhoque (pronounced as /pt/), is a popular dish, even in areas with few Italian immigrants. In Uruguay, Paraguay, and Argentina, there is a tradition of eating gnocchi on the 29th of each month, with some people putting money beneath their plates to bring prosperity.[31] [32] Indeed, in Argentina and Uruguay ñoqui is slang for a bogus employee (according to corrupt accountancy practices or, in the public sector, the distribution of political patronage), who only turns up at the end of the month to receive their salary.[33]