Gnocchi alla Romana

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Gnocchi alla Romana baked with pancetta.

Gnocchi alla Romana, or, less often, gnocchi di semolino alla romana, is a popular Italian dish that is made with semolina flour instead of the potatoes used in the more usual kind of gnocchi widely made in both Italy and France. "Gnocchi" in Italian means "lumps", as those gnocchi made from potatoes are definitely lump-like in appearance. One English translation of the Roman version is "semolina cakes baked with butter and cheese". [1] Rather than being lump-like, though, they are thinnish, relatively smooth disks that have been cut like cookies or biscuits from a sheet of cooled dough. Originally eaten primarily in Rome, where it remains a standard of family kitchens, gnocchi alla Romana has now spread throughout Italy. It is also made in France, where it is called gnocchi de semoule. Its ingredients are simple, and readily available in most homes: milk, semolina flour, eggs, Parmesan cheese, and butter, with salt, black pepper, and nutmeg as seasonings. The well-known Italian cooking instructor Marcella Hazen adds small strips of prosciutto, bacon, or boiled ham to the top of dish, but this is far from standard. [2] "Semolina," Julia Child tells us, "is farina, which in turn is the residue of middle-sized particles left over from the sifting of durum wheat, the type of wheat used for making macaroni." [3] Gnocchi alla Romana can be served as either the first or second course of a meal, or, in larger quantities, as the main course.

A typical homemade preparation of tagliatelle
The ingredients are flour, eggs, and, possibly, a little water
The ingredients are flour, eggs, and, possibly, a little water  
The ingredients in a food processor
The ingredients in a food processor  
Processing until the ingredients form a ball
Processing until the ingredients form a ball  
Ready to be put through a pasta machine
Ready to be put through a pasta machine  
Using the widest thickness
Using the widest thickness  
After the first time through the machine
After the first time through the machine  
On the left, after 20 times through the machine
On the left, after 20 times through the machine  
Beginning to use a narrower thickness
Beginning to use a narrower thickness  
Rolled through the machine to #3 or #4 thickness
Rolled through the machine to #3 or #4 thickness  
Cutting, although this is actually fettucine width
Cutting, although this is actually fettucine width  
Drying the cut pasta
Drying the cut pasta  
Boiling the pasta
Boiling the pasta  
Buttered, and ready to eat, but without sauce
Buttered, and ready to eat, but without sauce  

References

  1. Recipes: The Cooking of Italy, Time-Life Books, Foods of the World, New York, 1968, Library of Congress catalogue card number 68-19230, page 33
  2. Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, by Marcella Hazan, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1992 ISBN 0-394-58404-X, page 264
  3. Mastering the Art of French Cooking, by Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle, and Julia Child, Alfred E. Knopf, New York, 1961, L.C. catalog card number 61-12313