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Gnocchi di Castagne con Porcini Trifolati

Twenty kilometers from our home sits the bustling Latian village of Acquapendente. There we find our trustworthy pork butcher, our panificio di famiglia (family bakery), and the only shop between Rome and Florence where Erich can find the music of Astor Piazzola. Hence, Acquapendente is a sort of vortex for us. It is on early Friday mornings when it beckons us most plaintively, the day the market—the mercato—comes to town. It is a good-enough market at any time of the year, but steeled in late January fogs is how we like it best. From our home in San Casciano dei Bagni, higher up by four hundred feet and, in winter, sitting nearly always in crystal air, we descend the narrow, sloping road past the sheepfolds, past the ostrich farm, away from the new, gold sun, fresh from its rise, and into the thick, purply mists of the rough little place. Wrapped in our woolens we stroll the abundant tables of green-black Savoy cabbages and violet broccoli, baskets of potatoes and turnips unwashed of their Latian earth. Here and there are lit small, consoling charcoal fires in funny little tripod burners over which the farmers thaw their ungloved hands. Just outside the fray are the humbler posts, those that beg no rent, that are had for their predawn staking. The farmers, sober in the unpacified cold, unwrap their often meager stuffs—a basket of chestnuts, one of cauliflower, and once, a man, standing beside his little pile of pumpkins, held a brace of pheasant, still dripping their blood on the frozen ground, his booty from a predawn hunt—offering them at far lower prices than those asked by their more prosperous colleagues inside the village. It was there, too, at the Friday mercato in Acquapendente that a woman from Bolsena, who was selling just-ground chestnut flour, sat on the edge of her table and wrote out this most wonderful recipe. The smokiness of the chestnut flour enlarges upon the forest scents of the mushrooms, the whole combining into a sensual sort of rusticity. If chestnut flour is not to be found at your specialty store, substitute whole wheat or buckwheat flour and mix 3 ounces of canned, unsweetened chestnut puree with the mascarpone.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 4

Ingredients

The Gnocchi

12 ounces whole-milk ricotta
3 ounces mascarpone or natural cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup just-grated pecorino
3 large eggs
4 tablespoons chestnut flour, plus additional as needed
1 1/2 teaspoons fine sea salt
Generous grindings of cracked pepper
1 teaspoon freshly scraped nutmeg

The Sauce

1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
3 fat cloves garlic, peeled, crushed, and finely minced
1 1/2 pounds fresh, wild mushrooms (porcini, chanterelles, cèpes, portobelli, etc.), wiped free of grit, trimmed, and thickly sliced
1 1/2 teaspoons fine sea salt
Freshly cracked pepper
2 cups dry white wine
1/2 cup flat-leaf parsley

Preparation

  1. The Gnocchi

    Step 1

    Force the ricotta through a fine sieve into a large bowl. Add the mascarpone, the pecorino, and the eggs, beating with an electric mixer only until mixture is smooth.

    Step 2

    Combine the flour, salt, pepper, and nutmeg and stir them into the ricotta mixture, combining all into a thick paste. Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and permit it to rest in the refrigerator at least 4 hours, or as long as overnight.

    Step 3

    Roll portions of the rested, chilled dough into ropes about 3/4 inch in diameter and 10 inches in length. Cut the ropes into 1-inch lengths and place them on a tray lined with a clean kitchen towel sprinkled with chestnut flour. Roll the gnocchi about in the flour. Repeat the process until all the gnocchi are coated. Cover the gnocchi with another clean kitchen towel and permit them to dry while you make the sauce.

  2. The Sauce

    Step 4

    In a large sauté pan over a medium flame, heat the olive oil and cook the garlic until it is transparent, taking care not to color it. Add the mushrooms, sprinkling with sea salt and generous grindings of pepper. Toss the mushrooms about in the fat, until they give up their juices. Add the wine and bring to a quiet simmer.

    Step 5

    Cover the pan with a skewed lid and, over a gentle flame, permit the mushrooms to absorb their juices and the wine until they are plumped and soft, about 1/2 hour. Mince the parsley leaves and stir into the mushrooms.

    Step 6

    Cover the pan and let the mushrooms rest for a few minutes while you cook the gnocchi.

    Step 7

    In a large pot, bring abundant, sea-salted water to a boil and drop in the gnocchi.

    Step 8

    As the gnocchi begin to rise to the surface, remove them with a slotted spoon and place in a warmed, shallow bowl. When all the gnocchi have been cooked, pour over the barely reheated mushrooms and all their juices and portion onto plates or shallow bowls.

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