Ingredients
- 6 cups all-purpose flour, divided
- 1/2 cup dry potato flakes
- 2 cups water
Directions
Place 5 cups of all-purpose flour, and 1/2 cup of potato flakes in a large bowl. Retain 1 cup flour for later use. Add 1/2 cup of water to the dry ingredients and mix by hand. Continue to add water by the tablespoon until the flour is incorporated - but not sticky. If the dough mixture becomes too sticky - add flour until the dough is dry to the touch. Lightly flour the working surface. Turn the dough mixture onto the floured working surface and continue to knead the dough until it is smooth.
Cover the dough with a clean towel and let rest for approximately 15 minutes.
Once the dough has rested for approximately 15 minutes, divide the dough into 4 pieces. Re-flour each piece thoroughly. Using a rolling pin, flatten each piece of dough until it is approximately 1/8-inch thick. Using a pizza cutter - cut each piece of dough into strips approximately 1/2-inch wide and each strip into "little nuggets" approximately 3/4-inch wide. Using the tip of a dinner fork slightly tilted on an angle, press each "nugget" into the fork tip and roll downward. This will give you a little round piece of dough with ridges. Place the finished gnocchi on a floured pan until the process has been completed with all of the remaining dough.
Bring 6 quarts of water to a rolling boil - add the finished gnocchi carefully to the boiling water and stir completely to avoid sticking. Reduce the heat to a slow boil and cook the gnocchi for approximately 8 minutes or until the desired tenderness is attained. Drain the gnocchi thoroughly using a colander and serve immediately with your favorite sauce
- This recipe was provided by professional chefs and has been scaled down from a bulk recipe provided by a restaurant. The Food Network Kitchens chefs have not tested this recipe, in the proportions indicated, and therefore, we cannot make any representation as to the results.

















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By vcuhokiefan2
on July 22, 2011
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I guess the lowest you can go is one star? The food was good if you like canned pasta sauce, store bought noodles, and high prices for not much food. This was very disappointing. The episode should have never been aired. Guy lost a lot of credibility with this one. I want my money back....
By quietmann
Pittsburgh, PA ...
on July 19, 2011
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They must have put on one heck of a dog & pony act for the TV show. The food was bland, the staff was obnoxious and condescending. Requests for extras like more grated cheese or olive oil were met with distain and sarcasm by the old woman. Her attitude was "go someplace else if you dont like it....". Segneri's is a block over, and Anthony Jrs. is down the street. Both places offer a much better dining experience.
Oh.....and a real "Italian" cook would use real potatoes and mash them - not go the cheap way and use potato flakes. The recipe also failed to mention that you wait for them to float to the surface. THEN they are done. Letting them boil away only makes them tough.
By Chef Chuck Love
York PA
on March 29, 2011
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This is NOT a recipe for Gnocchi!
This is a recipe for flour dumplings.
Gnocchi is an Italian name for dumplings made of one of three ingredients: Potato, Semolina or Ricotta.
In all 3 of these gnocchi recipes the main ingredient is the potato, semolina or ricotta, NOT flour.
I'm sure this is an interesting dish when sauced, but not a gnocchi that any native Italian would recognize!
UPDATE:
Since I posted the above, this restaurant has beeen very poorly reviewed by most of the FTV reviewers and their website is gone(?
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