Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

German Potato Balls

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2 hours, 40 minutes. Makes about 75 dumplings.

This family recipe for German potato dumplings — an adaptation of kartoffelk­lösse — is prepared for holidays. It makes about 75 dumplings and can easily be doubled or tripled. The dumplings freeze well too, if you want to serve some and freeze more for later. Rolling and boiling the dumplings works best as a two-person project, one rolling and one monitoring the wiggle-woggling. You may want to test-boil two or three dumplings to be sure they hold together. If they come apart, add flour in 1-tablespoon increments to the dough and retest until the dough coheres.

DUMPLINGS

1 1⁄2 pounds potatoes (you want starchy potatoes; baking potatoes work well, or a mix of baking and Yukon Gold)

1 large egg

⁄4 cup all-purpose flour 3

1⁄2 teaspoon salt

FOR PREPARATIO­N

4 tablespoon­s unsalted butter, room temperatur­e

1⁄2 teaspoon salt 1 Prepare the potato mash: Peel the potatoes and place them in a medium pot with cool water to cover. Bring to a boil over medium heat and cook until potatoes are tender, about 20 minutes. Drain, cool and mash. You should have about 3 cups.

2 Put a large pot of water on to boil.

3 In a large bowl or the potato cooking pot, combine the potato mash with the egg, ¾ cup of flour and ½ teaspoon salt. Mix together with clean hands until a sticky dough forms. (If, as you try to roll the dumplings, it seems unworkably sticky, add more flour in 1-tablespoon increments, mixing the dough as you go, but the less flour you use the better they’ll be in the end.)

4 With clean, floured hands, take a small clump of the sticky dough and roll it into a ball about the size of a grape. Repeat with remaining dough. You should have about 75 balls.

5 Drop several balls into the boiling water. After about a minute, they will float and “wiggle-woggle” for a minute or two before rising to and remaining on the surface. Use a slotted spoon to move them to a paper-towellined plate where they can cool and dry.

6 Once you’ve rolled and wiggle-woggled all the dumplings, you can store them in large zip-top bags in the fridge until you’re ready to serve.

7 For serving, fill a 12-inch skillet — we use one of those plug-in skillets so we don’t take up a stove burner — with a single layer of room-temperatur­e potato balls, leaving enough space to comfortabl­y stir and rotate them. Add the butter and ½ teaspoon salt. Cook on medium-low until warmed through, regularly rotating with a wooden spoon, about 10 minutes. The balls should get warm and butter-coated first on the low heat; then increase the heat to just below medium and allow a beautiful golden-brown crust to form, again, regularly rotating them for even cooking. When you have a steaming skillet of golden-brown spheres, 15 to 20 minutes, they’re ready to serve.

Make Ahead Dumplings can be prepared through Step 6 and stored in a zip-top bag in the refrigerat­or for up to three days or frozen until ready to use.

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