Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (2024)


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (1)


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (2)

vegan | wfpb |gluten-free |dairy-free|easy | year-round

The Plantpower Couple

Two of my favorite people in the plant-based world are Rich Roll and Julie Piatt. Rich has a way of making anything seem possible. He went from "pounding Big Macs on the couch" to becoming a plant-based Ultraman athlete. To learn more about how that happened, you can read his book, Finding Ultra - it's a page turner! A new version of it was just released with even more fascinating details. Now you can listen to him weekly on The Rich Roll Podcast, where he interviews positive people doing inspiring things in the world, from vegan athletes &chefs to doctors & rock stars. Julie is the kind of person that cuts straight to the truth while having an open, loving heart. She sings, teaches yoga and meditation, and is the chef of the two. She also has a podcast called Divine Throughlinewhere she discusses spirituality. A great example of her recipe-developing abilities is the cookbook she put out last year of vegan cheese recipes, This Cheese is Nuts: Delicious Cheese at Home.


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (3)

Yeah, these people are pretty amazing. The two put their skills together to write The Plantpower Way a few years ago, and now have a new cookbook that is centered around recipes they developed for the retreat they've been leading in Tuscany: The Plantpower Way: Italia! Sounds dreamy, doesn't it? This is a beautiful book full of that Italian countryside vibe, with images from their retreat and food that reads as authentically Italian and is 100% plant-based. Seem too good to be true? It's real, people. These are recipes that you can reasonably make at home and will wow everyone! Meat eaters and vegans alike will love this food.

Gnocchi Empowered

Italian food has always been a family favorite, so when I started learning more about preparing plant-based foods, I longed for a cookbook to help me prepare simple yet delicious vegan Italian. One Christmas Eve, I tried to start a new tradition of making homemade gnocchi for our special Christmas Eve dinner, following a recipe I'd found online. It was an epic fail. The dough didn't come together well and it became a big gloppy mess. I figured gnocchi was just too difficult and let the idea go. Well, The Plantpower Way: Italia has restored my faith in my gnocchi-making abilities! The gnocchi recipe in this book is straightforward and really pretty easy, and my gnocchi actually turned out great! It's a fun process, and a great activity for the whole family to get involved in. While you can use a fork to form the gnocchi, I found an inexpensive gnocchi board to be worthwhile (link to purchase one below). I'm already looking forward to Christmas Eve, although I'm now thinking we need to make it a more frequent tradition..


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (4)


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (5)


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (6)


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (7)

Gnocchi Recipe +

Julie & Rich have not only shared their Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi recipe with us, they've also shared two complimentary recipes: Simply Red Tomato Sauce and Macadamia Parmesan! There are so many other wonderful recipes in this book, too, like the Beluga Lentil Caviar with Cashew Sea Cheese, pictured above.

To buy your copy of The Plantpower Way: Italia, I've provided a link to purchase it through Amazon below, along with links to helpful tools for making these recipes. You can find the recipes themselves below the tools. It feels like such an accomplishment to successfully make gnocchi by hand for the first time, so I hope you give it a try soon!

SHOP

The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook is now available at your local bookstore, or you can purchase by clicking "Buy on Amazon" under the book's image, which will take you directly there. If you decide to purchase, Amazon will provide Beautiful Ingredient with a small "finder's fee" at no extra cost to you. The same is true for the helpful kitchen tools below. Thanks for your support!

HELPFUL TOOLS FOR THESE RECIPES

FOR THE GNOCCHI

Fantes Gnocchi Board

Sur la Table Marble Pastry Board 16"x20" (pattern in marble varies)

Calphalon Classic Stainless Steel Dutch Oven with Cover, 5 Quart

RSVP Endurance 3-piece Colander Set

FOR SIMPLY RED TOMATO SAUCE

FOR THE MACADAMIA PARMESAN

Vitamix 5200 Blender

Cuisinart Stainless Steel Saucepan with Cover, 2 Quart

Emile Henry 5 inch Creme Brulee (Set of 2)

Cuisinart Mini-Prep Plus

Mangia!

PLUS RECIPES FOR SIMPLY RED TOMATO SAUCE AND MACADAMIA PARMESAN

FROM THE PLANTPOWER WAY:ITALIA COOKBOOK, BY JULIE PIATT & RICH ROLL

vegan | wfpb |gluten-free |dairy-free|easy | year-round

Print Recipes

Kari's note: It's so satisfying to make gnocchi from scratch and see how much everyone appreciates it. It takes a little time, but isn't very difficult. Getting friends and family involved in the preparing as well as the eating makes it more fun and cuts the time. I used chickpea flour as my gluten-free flour and was happy with the results. It's possible it ends up a little on the heavier side that way, but we didn't mind!

Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free Gnocchi

Making gnocchi is so easy and fun that it’s a great place to start when you are learning how to make pasta. The potato-and-flour mixture already holds together nicely from the natural starch in the potatoes, so any gluten-free flour you like will work well in this recipe. Keep kneading the dough for at least 15 minutes to get rid of the lumps. You can use a grooved wooden pasta board to create your gnocchi shape, or using a fork will work too.

Prep/Cook time: About 1 ½ - 2 hours for all three recipes.

Serves 4

Ingredienti


Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (20)

  • 2 medium yellow potatoes (about 2 cups)

  • ¼ cup organic fine corn flour, rice flour, or other gluten-free flour, plus extra for kneading and rolling

  • 1 tablespoon nutritional yeast

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil, plus more for drizzling

  • 1 teaspoon Celtic sea salt

  • Simply Red Tomato Sauce (recipe below)

  • Macadamia Parmesan (recipe below)

  • 1 bunch of fresh basil, thinly sliced

  • Freshly cracked black pepper to taste

Preparazione

  1. Peel the potatoes. Bring water to a boil over high heat in a medium saucepan and add the potatoes. Boil them for about 30 minutes, until they are tender when a fork is inserted. Drain the potatoes and let them cool.

  2. On a large cutting board or work surface, dice the cooked potatoes until the pieces are very small.

  3. Add the flour, nutritional yeast, olive oil, and salt to the potatoes.

  4. Combine the mixture with your hands and knead until the mixture forms a dough. Keep kneading the dough, flipping it over and turning it for about 15 minutes, until all the lumps are removed.

  5. Add a handful of flour to the work surface. Divide the dough into four sections.

  6. Using both hands, roll each section into a long, cord-size piece about 16 inches long. Cut the cords into ½-inch pieces.

  7. Roll the ½-inch pieces between your hands and gently place them on the wood pasta board. Make a slight indentation with your thumb and roll them gently into a gnocchi shape using the grooved wooden pasta board or the tines of a fork. Repeat with the other sections of dough.

  8. Bring a large pot of water to a boil over high heat. Carefully add the gnocchi and boil for just a few minutes, until they float to the top of the water.

  9. Drain the gnocchi in a colander. Transfer them to a serving plate and drizzle them with olive oil.

  10. Pour the tomato sauce over the gnocchi and sprinkle with Macadamia Parmesan.

  11. Garnish with basil and pepper.

Reprinted from The Plantpower Way: Italia by arrangement with Avery Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, A Penguin Random House Company. Copyright © 2018, Julie Piatt and Rich Roll

Simply Red Tomato Sauce

Ingredienti

  • 7 garden tomatoes on the vine

  • 3 garlic cloves, peeled and minced

  • ½ cup chopped onion

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil

  • 1 teaspoon Celtic sea salt

  • ½ teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper

Preparazione

  1. In a deep saucepan, bring 6 cups of water to a boil over high heat and add the tomatoes. Boil for 5 minutes, or until the skin begins to peel off.

  2. In the pitcher of a Vitamix or high-speed blender, place the tomatoes, garlic, and onion. Blend on medium speed for 30 seconds. Then add water in 2-tablespoon increments and blend again to reach the desired consistency.

  3. Pour the blended sauce into a saucepan over medium-low heat and add the olive oil. Heat until warm, about 5 minutes. Add the salt and pepper and adjust to taste.

Reprinted from The Plantpower Way: Italia by arrangement with Avery Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, A Penguin Random House Company. Copyright © 2018, Julie Piatt and Rich Roll

Macadamia Parmesan

Ingredienti

  • 2 cups raw macadamia nuts

  • 1 tablespoon chickpea miso paste or light yellow miso

  • 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast

  • 1 teaspoon Celtic sea salt

  • 1 capsule acidophilus (3-billion-active-culture strain)

  • 1 tablespoon refined coconut oil, plus more for greasing the mold

Preparazione

  1. Place the macadamia nuts in the bowl of a food processor and pulse until mealy.

  2. Add the miso and pulse for 15 seconds.

  3. Add the nutritional yeast, salt, and acidophilus and pulse for 15 seconds.

  4. Add the coconut oil and process.

  5. Grease a 6 x 31/2 x 2-inch rectangular mold with coconut oil or line with plastic wrap.

  6. Press the mixture firmly into the mold, cover with parchment paper, and refrigerate for 24 to 48 hours.

  7. Turn the cheese out of the mold and place it on a cutting board. Cut with a very sharp knife or crumble. This cheese will keep for about 2 weeks covered and refrigerated.

Reprinted from The Plantpower Way: Italia by arrangement with Avery Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, A Penguin Random House Company. Copyright © 2018, Julie Piatt and Rich Roll

Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Gnocchi Recipe from The Plantpower Way: Italia Cookbook by Julie Piatt and Rich Roll (2024)

FAQs

What is vegan gnocchi made of? ›

This homemade vegan gnocchi recipe is eggless and so simple. Just potatoes, flour, and some oil come together to make these perfectly fluffy yet dense pillows of pasta that taste just like traditional gnocchi!

Can you buy vegan gnocchi? ›

Vegan Gnocchi by BIO PRIMO - a delicious vegan version of the popular Italian classic. Enjoy it with hearty sauces or simply pan-fried with melted butter or olive oil. Always a welcome dish at any meal.

Does gnocchi have gluten? ›

While the primary ingredient in gnocchi is potatoes, flour is typically used as a binder in traditional gnocchi so this makes them definitely NOT gluten-free. However, if you need to eat gluten-free and you love gnocchi, not all hope is lost!

Is gnocchi healthier than pasta? ›

Nutritional Value

Believe it or not, regular pasta is actually more carb-heavy than gnocchi, coming in at around 2 times the amount of carbs per serving. Gnocchi is also notorious for having a lot more sodium, with over 200 grams of it per serving. Regular pasta doesn't have nearly as high of a sodium content.

Is Trader Joe's gnocchi dairy free? ›

Contains Milk, Egg, Wheat. May Contain Traces Of Soy.

Why isn t gnocchi gluten-free? ›

Traditional gnocchi is made using pureed potatoes and wheat flour. So no - gnocchi is not gluten free. It can be made gluten free but typically no. It's potatoes but not all potato, there is flour.

What is a good substitute for gnocchi? ›

Potato Gnocchi Substitutes:Pasta: If you're making a pasta dish, you can substitute gnocchi with various pasta shapes, such as penne, rigatoni, or farfalle. These will provide a similar starchy texture.

What is a good flour substitute for gnocchi? ›

A simple mix of white rice flour and sweet rice flour does the trick. And the sweet rice flour is important. Made with only white rice flour, the gnocchi were too soft. A half cup of sweet rice flour, which is ground from glutinous, short-grain rice, added a nice bite without making the gnocchi gritty.

Is Trader Joe's gnocchi gluten free? ›

This freezer item from Trader Joe's has become a cult fave and for good reason, it's a great gluten-free, veggie-filled “pasta” option! I'm sharing my all of my cooking cauliflower gnocchi secrets, plus the best way to cook Trader Joe's cauliflower gnocchi so that it turns out golden and crispy, not mushy and soggy.

What are gnocchi made of? ›

What is gnocchi? Gnocchi, pronounced 'n(y)oh-kee' (singular 'gnocco'), are a type of pasta consisting of soft, fat and chewy dumplings, typically paired with ragú, tomato or butter sauce. Traditionally, gnocchi dough is made of semolina or plain wheat flour, egg, and mashed potato.

What are the main ingredients in gnocchi? ›

They are made of cooked mashed potatoes, flour and eggs. Some gnocchi recipes add ricotta to the dough. "Gnocchi" is the plural for "gnoccho," (which you rarely hear, perhaps because who can eat just one?).

Which brands of gnocchi are vegan? ›

  • GIA Potato Gnocchi, Traditional. 16 oz.
  • DeLallo Gnocchi, Gluten Free, Mini. 12 oz.
  • Taste of Inspirations Skillet Gnocchi, Classic. 9 oz.
  • Tattooed Chef Cauliflower Gnocchi, Basil Pesto. ...
  • Napoleon Co. ...
  • Nocca Gnocchi Pasta, Original. ...
  • Nocca Gnocchi, Gluten Free, Original. ...
  • Ark Foods Veggie + Sauce Kit, Sweet Potato Gnocchi & Alfredo.

Is gnocchi good or bad for you? ›

Similar to pasta, gnocchi is high in carbohydrates and low in protein. Although both are carbohydrate-heavy foods, it has been shown that regular pasta may have less of an effect on blood sugar levels. One publication points to the fact that pasta doesn't raise blood sugar after a meal to the level that potatoes do.

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