• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

The Pasta Project logo

  • Home
  • Pasta Recipes
  • Pasta Types
  • Italy's Regions
  • About
  • SHOP
menu icon
go to homepage
search icon
Homepage link
  • Home
  • Pasta Recipes
  • Pasta Types
  • Italy's Regions
  • About Me
  • SHOP
×
Home » Pasta Types » Homemade & Fresh Pasta

Published: Dec 1, 2022 by Jacqui

Spinach Ricotta Gnocchi Recipe from Piemonte.


Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Known as ‘rabatòn’ in the local dialect, these glorious large baked spinach ricotta gnocchi come from Alessandria in Piemonte (Piedmont) in Northern Italy. Made with spinach and Swiss chard and ricotta these Italian dumplings are both luxurious and light. Traditionally baked with butter and sage, this homemade gnocchi dish is perfect as a starter or side dish for special occasions and holidays!

Homemade spinach ricotta gnocchi from Italy.

A little rabatòn history!

Traditionally made with Swiss chard and spinach or nettles and wild field herbs and greens (erbette di campo), these divine homemade gnocchi are a traditional dish from a historical area east of the city of Alessandria, known as La Fraschetta. This is where, in 1800, Napoleon fought and won the battle of Marengo against the Austrians.

Homemade spinach gnocchi with ricotta (rabaton).

La Fraschetta is an agricultural area made up of 8 small towns and villages located on what is known as the Alessandria plain. One of these villages is called Litta Parodi and it is here that rabatòn is said to have originated. In fact, every year the village holds a rabatòn festival in September.

Baked spinach ricotta gnocchi in oval oven dish.

According to some food historians, these large spinach gnocchi were originally made with ricotta and wild greens and herbs bartered for bread and other foods by herders travelling through with their cattle to the summer mountain pastures from the lowlands in the spring. Local women would then make the gnocchi by mixing eggs and bread with the ricotta and greens.

Ingredients for spinach gnocchi with ricotta (rabatòn) on wood work surface.
Step 1 Gather your ingredients: Spinach, chard, eggs, breadcrumbs, ricotta, flour, butter, Parmigiano, and herbs.

What are Italian erbette di campo?

Italy apparently has one of the richest varieties of plant life in Europe and Italians have long used foraged edible plants, known as erbette di campo, in traditional dishes and herbal medicines. Interestingly, with the advent of agriculture, many wild plants such as rocket (arugula), asparagus and fennel were and still are both cultivated and foraged.

Washed and chopped Swiss chard in saucepan with water.
Step 2 wash and clean the greens and cook the spinach and Swiss chard separately if using both.

Apart from those mentioned above, the most popular foraged edible plants used in the Italian kitchen are nettles (ortica), tarrasaco (dandelion), tarragon (dragoncello), sorrel (acetosa), wild garlic (aglio orsino), chicory (cicoria), Swiss chard (bietola), mint (menta), puntarelle (the flower shoots of Catalonian chicory) capers (capperi) and salsola soda (agretti). Of course, there are more.

Puréed Swiss chard and spinach in food processor.
Step 3 Drain the greens really well squeezing out as much water as possible. Then puréé in food processor.

Spring is the best season for foraging edible plants, but they don’t all grow at exactly the same time of year or in the same parts of the country. Some, like wild fennel, are more prevalent in the south and therefore used in Southern dishes. Others, like wild garlic (aglio orsino), can be found mostly in the North where the climate is more temperate.

Mashed fresh ricotta in a white bowl with fork.
Step 4 Drain the ricotta well and mash it with a fork in a large bowl.

Which greens should you use in your rabatòn?

Originally, these large baked spinach and ricotta gnocchi would have had only wild greens in them. These included wild spinach, chard, nettles, chicory and others depending on the season and availability.

Ricotta, puréed greens, eggs, and herbs in white bowl.
Step 5 Add the eggs, puréed greens, marjoram, parsley and nutmeg to the ricotta and mix well.

Today, most Italian recipes call for either cultivated spinach or Swiss chard or both. I used both. However, some recipes I found included foraged greens. I think you can use what you have. Frozen spinach would work too. Just make sure you get as much liquid out of it as you can.

Grated Parmigiano cheese in white bowl with spinach gnocchi mixture.
Step 6 Add the grated Parmigiano or vegetarian parmesan to the gnocchi mixture. Mix .

The Swiss chard.

Did you know that chard, also generally known as Swiss chard, doesn’t come from Switzerland but was originally domesticated from wild beets in Sicily? Nowadays, there are many types of chard available to grow and buy. Many people love rainbow chard (which is actually just a mix of different varieties). Whatever the colour of the stems, chard can be used in much the same way as spinach or kale.

Breadcrumbs added to white bowl with spinach and ricotta gnocchi mixture.
Step 7 Finally add in the breadcrumbs and mix them into the gnocchi dough.

There isn’t a great difference in the flavour of different varieties of Swiss chard so you can use any type for this spinach ricotta gnocchi recipe. You can even use just Swiss chard and leave out the spinach. However, I’m not sure if the coloured stems of certain types of chard will affect the colour of the ‘green’ in these gnocchi.

Uncooked large cigar shaped spinach ricotta gnocchi on wood pastry board.
Step 8 Form the spinach ricotta gnocchi (see recipe instructions).

I used Barese Swiss chard which has white stems. So, I used both the stems and the leaves. Apparently, originally chard had only white stems not coloured. I would suggest using just the leaves if your chard has coloured stems. You can use the latter in another recipe. You can add them to soups, bake them and even ferment them.

The ricotta for your homemade spinach gnocchi.

This recipe calls for fresh cow’s milk ricotta. In Piemonte, these gnocchi are also made with a unique ricotta called seirass. Seirass is the local dialect word for ricotta. However, unlike other types, they make this ricotta with milk not whey.

One spinach gnocchi on slotted spoon held over pot of boiling water.
Step 9 Cook the spinach ricotta gnocchi in boiling water until they rise to the surface. Remove with a slotted spoon.

I haven’t tried seirass as it’s not available outside of Piemonte but, apparently, it is a very light, smooth, and fresh ricotta with cream in it.  They say it has a more buttery flavour than normal ricotta and is sweeter too. On my to try list!

Other ingredients.

Apart from the greens and ricotta you need eggs, breadcrumbs, parmigiano, nutmeg, parsley and marjoram for the spinach gnocchi. Plus, flour to roll them in and butter, more parmigiano and sage when you bake them.

Boiled spinach ricotta gnocchi in oval oven dish with pieces of butter.
Step 10 Place the boiled spinach ricotta gnocchi in a well buttered oven dish. Add more pieces of butter.

How to make this recipe vegetarian or gluten free.

Apart from Parmigiano, this recipe is vegetarian. Italian Parmigiano is made with animal rennet and therefore not vegetarian. Use a vegetarian parmesan instead.

The only ingredients with gluten are the flour used to roll the ready gnocchi in and the breadcrumbs. You can substitute the wheat flour with a gluten free flour such as almond flour or rice flour. You only need a little.

Boiled spinach gnocchi covered in grated parmigiano and some sage leaves in oven dish.
Step 11 Sprinkle your spinach gnocchi with more grated cheese and add some sage leaves.

Homemade breadcrumbs from gluten free bread are better than ready-made, store-bought GF breadcrumbs, unless the latter are plain breadcrumbs. Sometimes they are made of nuts and other ingredients which may change the flavour of your spinach gnocchi. Plus, I’m not sure how well the gnocchi will hold together without bread.

Baked spinach ricotta gnocchi in white oval oven dish.
Step 12 Bake the spinach ricotta gnocchi in a preheated oven until the cheese starts to brown.

How to serve your homemade spinach ricotta gnocchi.

Traditionally, these large gnocchi are served straight from the oven with some of the melted butter from the baking dish spooned over them. They are also fantastic baked and served in individual portion dishes! Italians eat them as a ‘primo’ or first course (starter) before the main course. But, you can also serve them as a side dish.

Homemade spinach gnocchi with ricotta (rabatòn).

What to do with leftovers.

Your cooked spinach gnocchi can be kept sealed in the fridge for 2-3 days and then reheated in a hot oven with a little more butter and sage, which means you can actually make and bake them a day or two in advance. You can also re-bake them in a tomato sauce in a similar way to this recipe for Tuscan spinach gnudi. Gnudi are very similar to rabatòn.

Homemade spinach gnocchi with ricotta (rabatòn)

Let me know what you think.

I can honestly say that rabatòn are the best spinach and ricotta gnocchi I have ever made or tasted! In fact, I’m planning to serve them as one of our Christmas pasta recipes this year because not only are they so very good, but they can be made and baked the day before and then just reheated when you want to serve them without losing any deliciousness! Just a perfect dish for entertaining!

If you try these large baked spinach gnocchi I’d love to hear what you think. Please, write a comment here on the blog or post a comment on the Pasta Project Facebook page.

Your feedback means a lot to me!

Buon Appetito!

Homemade spinach ricotta gnocchi from Italy

Homemade Spinach Gnocchi with Ricotta (Rabatòn)

Jacqui
These luxurious homemade large spinach ricotta gnocchi from Northern Italy are just the best gnocchi ever! Perfect as a starter or a side dish you can make and bake them in advance and then reheat without losing any deliciousness!
5 from 54 votes
Print Recipe Save Recipe Saved! Pin Recipe
Prep Time 45 minutes mins
Cook Time 30 minutes mins
Course Main Course, Side Dish, starter
Cuisine Italian, Mediterranean, Northern Italy, Piedmont-Piemonte
Servings 6
Calories 399 kcal

Ingredients
  

For the spinach ricotta gnocchi.

  • 1.1 lbs fresh ricotta (500g)
  • 1.1 lbs fresh spinach and /or Swiss chard (500g) you can also use frozen spinach.
  • 3.5 oz Parmigiano Reggiano (100g) or vegetarian parmesan
  • 2.5 oz breadcrumbs (70g) can be gluten free breadcrumbs
  • 2 oz wheat flour (50g) or gluten free flour
  • 2 eggs One whole, one yolk.
  • 2 sprigs fresh marjoram
  • fresh parsley
  • ⅓ teaspoon nutmeg freshly grated
  • salt to cook gnocchi and to taste

For baking the gnocchi

  • 2 oz butter (50g) more if needed
  • sage leaves

Instructions
 

Prepare the ingredients

  • Wash, prepare and cook the greens. If using fresh Swiss chard, wash the chard and cut off the hard end of the stems. Then cut the leaves off from the rest of the stem and cut them into pieces. Finally, slice the stems, so they are quite small. Cook stems and leaves together until the stems are soft. You can also use the stems for another recipe.
  • If using fresh spinach, wilt it in a saucepan with just the water on the leaves after washing them.
  • Drain the greens really well after cooking and squeeze out as much water as possible. Chop the spinach and chard leaves and stems. Then purée in a food processor. Keep the purée a little rough not too smooth.

Make the gnocchi mixture

  • Drain and mash the ricotta in a large bowl with a fork. Add the vegtable purée, one whole egg and one yolk, the marjoram leaves, some fresh parsley and grated nutmeg. Salt to taste. Mix everything together.
  • Add the grated Parmigiano or vegetarian parmesan to the bowl and mix again. Then add the breadcrumbs and mix again! If the gnocchi dough feels a little too wet, you can add more breadcrumbs.

Make the spinach gnocchi

  • Take about a tablespoonful of the gnocchi mixture. Using your hands roll it into a ball and then roll into a cigar shape on a well floured pastry board. These gnocchi should be about as long as your thumb or half the length of a standard fork.
  • Pro tip Boil a small pan of water and cook one spinach ricotta gnocchi before making them all to be sure it holds together well. Rabatòn only need a couple of minutes to cook. Once the gnocchi rises to the surface of the water, remove with a slotted spoon and place in a buttered oven dish.

Cook and serve the gnocchi

  • Heat the oven. Cook the gnocchi 3 to 4 at a time as per above in boiling salted water. Place them in one layer in a well buttered oven dish.
  • Add pieces of butter on top of the spinach gnocchi along with some sage leaves. Finally, sprinkle with parmigiano and bake in a preheated oven at 200°c (392 °f) until the cheese on top starts to brown.
  • Serve immediately with some of the melted butter from the oven dish spooned over the gnocchi.
Prevent your screen from going dark

Notes

Traditionally, these large gnocchi are served straight from the oven. They are also delicious baked and served in individual portion dishes! Italians eat them as a ‘primo’ or first course (starter) before the main course. But, you can also serve them as a side dish.
Rabatòn can be made and baked the day before and then just reheated when you want to serve them without losing any deliciousness! You can also rebake in a tomato sauce.
To make this recipe vegetarian use vegetarian parmesan instead of Italian Parmigiano.
To make this recipe gluten free, use GF flour and GF plain breadcrumbs (see content for more details)
Serves 6 as a starter, 4 as a main course. I got 18 gnocchi out of the ingredient quantities in this recipe.

Nutrition

Calories: 399kcalCarbohydrates: 22gProtein: 22gFat: 25gSaturated Fat: 15gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 7gTrans Fat: 0.3gCholesterol: 129mgSodium: 569mgPotassium: 624mgFiber: 3gSugar: 2gVitamin A: 8634IUVitamin C: 24mgCalcium: 484mgIron: 4mg
Keyword baked gnocchi, homemade gnocchi, spinach gnocchi, spinach ricotta gnocchi
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Other pasta recipes with spinach, chard or edible plants.

  • Spaghetti with agretti (salsola soda).
  • Puntarelle pasta with burrata.
  • Sicilian pasta with sardines and wild fennel.
  • Pansotti with walnut sauce.
  • Baked pasta shells with spinach and ricotta.
  • Tuscan pasta tordellata with ragu, Swiss chard and ricotta.
  • Casoncelli pasta (casonsei) from Lombardy
  • Strangolapreti (spinach and bread gnocchi)

If you are interested in learning how to make homemade pasta and other types of gnocchi, check out my shop page for some great video online courses from my friends in Rome! Nothing beats learning to make pasta from Italians! Plus while you’re there why not order a copy of one of my pasta recipe cookbooks or checkout some recommended pasta making tools?


More Homemade & Fresh Pasta

  • 8 Maltagliati recipes.
    8 Maltagliati Recipes
  • Chestnut maltagliati pasta with mushrooms
    Chestnut maltagliati pasta with creamy mushroom sauce.
  • Pasta alla peperonata in a bowl.
    Pasta alla Peperonata (sweet pepper sauce)
  • Sweet prune and fig ravioli in a bowl.
    Ravioli Dolci (Italian Sweet Ravioli)

Reader Interactions

Comments

    5 from 54 votes (28 ratings without comment)

    Tell us what you think Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recipe Rating




  1. Tom Leffingwell says

    January 13, 2024 at 3:49 am

    Jaqui,
    I tried the rabatòn recipe. Great flavor, but I had some difficulty with the dough. Although I drained the ricotta for about 6 hours and wrung out the spinach thoroughly, the dough was still quite wet. I wonder if some flour in the dough would have helped. When I ran the trial boiling of one gnocchi, it didn't disintegrate completely, but did slough off a lot of material.
    So, I tried just baking them -- about 20 minutes at 350 deg. F. They turned out pretty good. So, why boil them (other than tradition), rather just baking them from the get-go?

    Reply
    • Jacqui says

      January 13, 2024 at 12:31 pm

      Hi Tom, thanks for your comment. I'm not sure why your gnocchi were a little too wet and maybe more breadcrumbs or, as you say some flour, would have helped. I agree it's possible to just bake these without boiling first. I may try it next time myself. All the best from Verona.

      Reply
  2. michele says

    October 14, 2023 at 3:28 am

    I made this using frozen ricotta (very good local ricotta that I froze as I had extra) and a mix of spinach and sorrel, the latter from my garden. Oh yum, and as always a big thank you. I made a half recipe for a leisurely dinner and conversation with a good friend, and while I thought there would be leftovers we worked our way through almost all of them. This is a great recipe for dinners when you don't want to have to be focusing on cooking things at the last minute. We had it with some roasted red peppers with balsamic and very good olive oil, and a crispy green salad. The only thing I would add next time is some really good bread, to soak up the extra juices. This works very well with a medium bodied red wine.

    Reply
  3. Joanne and Bill Strauchon says

    February 10, 2023 at 10:16 pm

    We recently made the Spinach Gnocchi with Ricotta. They were like little clouds floating in the sky.
    We made Jacqui's Lamb Ragu to serve with the gnocchi and it was a marriage made in Heaven.
    The gnocchi and ragu froze great so don't be afraid to make the whole recipe.
    I have since used the gnocchi in brodo and also in pasta e fagiola.
    Joanne and Bill
    Arizona, USA

    Reply
  4. Sue Zammit Maempel says

    December 31, 2022 at 2:36 pm

    These were a great hit as the vegetarian option at Christmas lunch - delicious, excellent and worth the work! Took me quite a bit longer to prepare though and were slightly flattened after baking. How do I keep them round cigar shaped? (I probably didn’t have quite the right consistency). I put them on a bed of salsa pomodoro when reheating.

    Reply
  5. Maddy says

    December 20, 2022 at 12:20 am

    These turned out wonderful. So glad I gave homemade pasta a try and the sage butter for serving was really delicious too.

    Reply
  6. Kristina says

    December 20, 2022 at 12:19 am

    These look wonderful and I can't wait to try them. Do you have recommendations for that other herbs than sage I can use? I don't really love sage, but the rest of the recipe sounds and looks incredible!

    Reply
    • Jacqui says

      December 20, 2022 at 3:10 pm

      Thanks for your comment Kristina. Instead of sage, you could use fresh or dried marjoram, thyme or oregano. If using fresh herbs, I would add them at the end of baking so they don't burn. The leaves are much smaller than sage leaves.

      Reply
  7. Ksenia says

    December 19, 2022 at 4:06 am

    These feel like a truly luxurious Italian recipe. A great starter to a meal!

    Reply
  8. Tristin says

    December 18, 2022 at 7:30 pm

    I haven't had gnocchi like this before and your steps make it look so easy to make! Will be making it this weekend.

    Reply
« Older Comments

Primary Sidebar

Close up of Jacqui

Buon giorno and welcome to my pasta project! My name is Jacqui. I’m originally a Londoner but in 2003 life’s journey brought me to the beautiful Veneto region of Italy where…

More about me →

TOP ITALIAN FOOD BLOG

3rd place in Top 50 Italian Food Blogs Awards by Feedspot

Italian Food Blogs

FEATURED IN

A few website logos showing where the pasta project has been featured in: Insider, Wikipedia, Food52, Buzzfeed, The Guardian, Parade

FOLLOW ME

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

VISIT MY SHOP

Shop Icon

In my weekly newsletters, I write about my life in Italy, Italian places, traditions and culture, as well as other foods not just pasta! As a Pasta Project subscriber you'll also get a FREE recipe e-book series! Plus links to the latest recipes and posts.

So, sign up now and get the first recipe e-books to download!

Footer

↑ back to top

About

  • Legal Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Web Stories

Follow Me

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Contact

  • Copyright & Disclaimer/ Terms of Use

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Copyright © 2024 The Pasta Project

Rate This Recipe

Your vote:




A rating is required
A name is required
An email is required

Recipe Ratings without Comment

Something went wrong. Please try again.