Cheesy gnocchi and Swiss chard bake
Swiss Chard is like the surly, unloved offspring of a furtive tryst between celery and choy-sum. It's slender and leafy, savoury, kind of stringy, and has a bold enough flavour to carry a dish largely on its own. Most of the recipes I looked at used only the stalks. The books advised keeping the leaves for making a soup or cooking as greens, and then never went so far as to actually offer the corresponding recipe.Don't let this make you suspicious - the leaves will cook like turnip tops, or a robust spring green. Or you can just shred them in with the stalks. It works just fine.Most of the recipes I saw were either tossed through pasta with a strong cheese, or in a creamy sauce. There were plenty of gratins, and actually the odd suggestion for steaming or frying the leaves. I opted to combine some of the cream/gratin ideas and make a quick gnocchi bake with cheese.
Cheese problems
Ideally, I'd have liked Taleggio. It's strong and gooey and melts deliciously if you stir it through a cream sauce in little cubes. But there was no Taleggio to be had yesterday. Instead, I opted for Ossau-Iraty. This was not a massively informed decision - it smelled good, and the name is fun to say. In practice, it's like a compromise between Taleggio and something firmer and gentler like Gouda. It's a semi-soft sheep's cheese,and it ended up working quite well. In fact, it's possible Taleggio would have smothered the chard.
Ingredients:
- A large bunch of Swiss Chard
- Ossau-Iraty cheese
- Milk
- Crème fraîche
- A little flour
- Gnocchi
- A little butter
- Wine (optional, and in this case about a glass of Chilean Pedro Ximénez)