Yesterday I decided to make two Italian dishes, one being Tomato Sauce with Sautéed Vegetables and Olive Oil from
Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan and the other was Spinach Gnocchi from
How to Cook Everything: Simple Recipes for Great Food by Mark Bittman.
The sauce was served over some spaghetti for dinner yesterday and the gnocchi were frozen to be served today with a sage brown butter sauce.
The sauce was interesting, being that it is 1/3 cup each of olive oil, onion, carrot, celery and then 2 cups tomato (I used canned plum). No other seasoning, spices or herbs, just salt. As I had 4 28 oz cans, I decided to make a big batch using all of them. The sauté of the veg looked more like a deep fry, and after simmering with the tomatoes for a while I decided to skim some oil off the top. Next time I will not use an even multiple of the oil, as it was a bit too much, and I am hardly oil adverse. The picture below is from the pot just pulled from my fridge, so it is cold. It is quite thick, and had a nice acid bite but a sweet tinge from the vegetables. Over all quite good and a bit different than the standard red sauce I am used to. It was served over pasta with a dollop of Caputo's ricotta on it, which melted it into more of a pink sauce.
After weighing my potatoes, I realized I had about 4 lbs. The recipe only called for 1 lb but I figured if I was going to make the effort I might as well do it right. So I prepped all 4 pounds, but decided to make 1/2 spinach and 1/2 plain. So I riced 2 lbs of the potatoes and figured I'd use the 10 oz of spinach for the double batch, even though it was only enough for one recipe. After making the spinach batch and realizing the finished product covered an entire half sheet pan and a dinner plate (reorganized TWICE so I could fit more) I figured I had enough. So, I ended up with 2lb 10oz of frozen spinach gnocchi. I had boiled a few to make sure they would hold together, and they were delicious: tender, fluffy and a nice spinach taste. Here is the finished (frozen) product in a gallon bag waiting for dinner this eve:
I also started a Rustic Italian Bread from
The New Best Recipe by Cook's Illustrated yesterday (well, started the sponge for it), that is now in the first of three rising stages.
Well the bread may not have looked the prettiest, but it was incredible tasting. I think there may have been a bit too much water as it sort of flattened out a bit and the dough was quite wet/soft while handling. This was a rather big loaf as well, about 16" long. The outside had a nice light crunch and the inside was moist, dense and chewy.
The final meal was worth the effort. The gnocchi did fall a part a bit while cooking. I had even tested them the day before when fresh and they held up great. I think putting a full batch into a pot of water while frozen was the culprit. Next time I'll try cooking them in a few smaller batches. They were served with a Sage and Brown Butter sauce, with the fresh bread and some roasted cauliflower.
Jamie
BTW: After working some bread and gnocchi on my granite counters, I realized that they kind of suck. When I "flour" the surface, it simply slides around in big clumps. Anyone have a good solution? I figured maybe a wooden cutting board but none of mine are big enough and not sure I'd have room to store something massive that wouldn't get used too often.
Last edited by
Jamieson22 on December 4th, 2006, 8:03 am, edited 1 time in total.