Frozen them before to cook them. Make sure to do not put too many gnocchi in every bag and make it flat in the fridge, or you will have a gnocchi ballAll this talk about gnocchi had me making some this morning. I decided to have Spring Vegetable and chcken soup with potato gnocchi for lunch. Question: to freeze the rest, do I cook them first, or freeze them and cook them when I want to eat them?
Some of the store-bought are not frozen. I have seen them in Aldi's in the noodle aisle. They had gnocchi and tortellini. I have had the tortellini but not the gnocchi. I don't know how they keep without being frozen. Probably lots and lots of preservatives! The tortellini were delicious.
Why would they need preservatives? Other pasta is just dried.Some of the store-bought are not frozen. I have seen them in Aldi's in the noodle aisle. They had gnocchi and tortellini. I have had the tortellini but not the gnocchi. I don't know how they keep without being frozen. Probably lots and lots of preservatives! The tortellini were delicious.
Why would they need preservatives? Other pasta is just dried.
The stuff I have seen with lots of preservatives is the "fresh pasta" in stores.
Ah, I thought you guys were talking about dried gnocchi.I just looked at the back of one of my packages of Gia Russa gnocchi and you wouldn't eat it. There is all kinds of stuff in there. Of course, there might be all kinds of stuff in the frozen, too. I don't know.
Typically when there is moisture present you need preservatives. That is why (for instance) the bacon I make needs refrigerated, but the bacon they made way back when doesn't. No moisture.
The "fresh" gnocchi is the vaccum sealed package are soft, not hard like boxed pasta.
I Googled dried gnocchi. I got to some forum where someone was asking about it. Someone else tried and said they weren't as big and they were very dense. He did however say that homemade, dried gnocchi held up to frying much better than fresh ones and that he would dry half his gnocchi in the future 'cause they were really good fried.I wonder why they don't have dried gnocchi... Too thick?