Stinging Nettle Ravioli with Sage Butter

WHAT BETTER WAY to kick off a new year of foraging than an early spring Stinging Nettle Ravioli. You’ll want your pasta maker for this one, which might require an additional spring cleaning.

Filling

Make the filling while your pasta dough is “resting” in the fridge. 

10 oz stinging nettles (equivalent to 1 package frozen spinach)
1 15 oz ricotta
1/2 cup grated parm
1/4 cup whipped cream cheese
1 egg
1/2 tsp white pepper
1/4 tsp salt
1/8 tsp grated nutmeg

1. Blanche nettles for 1 minute in boiling water and drain. This is enough to neutralize the sting and cook the nettles. Squeeze out excess water. Chop nettles. Later in the season, when the nettles are more robust, you’ll want to remove the lower stem.

2. Combine cheeses, seasoning, and egg into a bowl. Stir in chopped nettles.

Pasta

I follow Marcella Hazan’s recipe, which calls for 2 large eggs per cup of flour and a half-teaspoon of milk for filled pasta. I doubled the amounts. (Be prepared to add more flour as necessary; as with baking, anything can influence the making of fresh pasta: heat, humidity, the stock market…)

2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
4 large eggs
1 tsp milk

Unlike Marcella, however, I combine my pasta ingredients in a food processor (horrors!), removing the dough when it starts to ball up and adding more flour by hand until I can reach a finger into the dough and pull it out without any dough sticking.

Next I commence to kneading. The technique here is to use the heel of your palm and push down on the dough, flattening it in the middle, then turning the dough clockwise a half turn, folding it over and pressing the heel of your hand into the dough again. Repeat. Repeat some more. Repeat until it’s smooth as the proverbial baby’s bottom, no less than eight minutes according to Marcella. Now refrigerate in plastic wrap while you make the filling.

After retrieving the pasta dough from the fridge, roll it into a log and cut it into a dozen equal parts (Marcella calls for six parts per 2 eggs). Each part then gets fed into the pasta maker, starting at 1 and finishing at 6.

Make two leaves at a time (top and bottom layers), trim them, and use a melon ball scoop to add the filling at intervals. Next sandwich the two leaves and use a fluted pasta wheel to get those nice scalloped edges, making sure to firmly press the two leaves together around each dumpling.

Sage Butter Sauce

Figure a minimum of a tablespoon of butter and a tablespoon of chopped fresh sage per serving (with more butter for those of us not hung up about fat content). Melt butter in small saute pan over medium heat. While the butter is starting to melt, gently drop ravioli into a pot of salted water on low boil. Add sage to butter. The ravioli should start floating to the surface after a couple minutes. Remove to a warm plate with slotted spoon. Meanwhile, stir the butter and sage as the butter foams, and just as it starts to brown a tiny bit kill the heat and pour sauce over ravioli. Add a few grindings of salt. The specks of brown, caramelized butter sweeten the sauce ever so slightly, and combined with the sage, this simple sauce packs a wallop that belies its meager list of ingredients.

Serves 6-8.

10 thoughts on “Stinging Nettle Ravioli with Sage Butter

  1. Lo

    Lawd, I love me a good batch of nettles. So jealous that you have so many at your disposal.

    I’m thinking some nettle ravioli would totally hit the spot right about now.

    Reply
  2. audrey

    Nice looking ravioli. So symmetrical! Any thoughts for the lazy among us on whether that nettle filling might also convert to a good pasta sauce?

    Reply
  3. drfugawe

    “… with more butter for those of us not hung up about fat content …”
    The older I get, the more I believe medical science(he he) has this fat thing all wrong! I’ve always been one of the world’s butter lovers, which my doc knows well – so when I recently had an angio-gram which came up entirely negative, he just looked at me and said, “I won’t bother you anymore.”

    Reply
  4. sally

    I love scouring the woods for nettles. They look so ‘green’ right now, so young and vulnerable, but I swear they’re more toxic when they’re young. I was ‘stung’ recently and it lasted for days. The nettle tea was worth it though, and the ravioli even better. Thanks for inspiration.

    Reply
  5. LC

    Jon – Chickens unite! Channel that Italian grandmother deep within yourself.

    Lo – Do you get ramps where you live?

    Audrey – I’m thinking a small lasagna with the leftover filling.

    Doc – Like the proud smoker willing to lose a few years, I’m an unrepentant butter eater. Butter eaters unite!

    Sally – I hear ya. Those lil’ nettles pack a punch. Some arthritis sufferers swear by it, though.

    Reply
  6. Fawnwood's June

    My partner David made them last week and they were delicious! We’re living in a place in Oregon where the nettles are abundant and we’ve found much inspiration in your blog. Also, united on the butter front!

    Reply

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