Gnudi, the most 'lascivious' dish of Tuscany

Gnudi, the most 'lascivious' dish of Tuscany

One recipe, two names: malfatti (badly made) in Siena, gnudi (naked) in Florence. Malfatti, because their characteristic is to be irregular, homemade. Gnudi because they are ultimately the filling for ravioli, without the outer dress of home-made pasta. They do not require much manual skill, just a bit of practice and patience.







Ingredients

250 g boiled and squeezed spinach

250 g of fresh ricotta

2 tablespoons of grated Parmigiano Reggiano

1 egg

Nutmeg

Salt

Flour

For the sauce

150 g mascarpone

60 g milk

60g butter

80 g shelled walnuts

50 g Parmigiano Reggiano/ Pecorino


Preparation

Follow these steps:

Start with the ricotta: you need to remove any whey from it, so spoon the ricotta into a colander and let it drain for a few hours (if the ricotta is very liquid, you can leave it in the fridge overnight).

Chop the perfectly squeezed spinach with a knife.

Collect in a bowl the well-drained ricotta, the cold spinach, the Parmigiano Reggiano and a beaten egg. Add a generous pinch of grated nutmeg and mix thoroughly with a fork. Season with salt.

Sprinkle generously a tray with flour. Form the gnudi shaping with your hands balls bigger than gnocchi(see photo). Gently roll the gnudi in the flour.




For the sauce

heat the milk+ butter and the mascarpone in a pan add salt and pepper, add the walnuts and add the gnudi to the

sauce, sprinkle with a handful of Parmesan cheese or the Pecorino cheese.


Francesco's Pairing

Gnudi is a Tuscan classic, I would suggest a mid bodied red for this vegetarian, yet rich, dish. I'd pair it with a Chianti Classico or with a young Vino Nobile di Montepulciano.


Enjoy!

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