Malfatti means “badly formed” in Italian. These rustic spinach ricotta gnocchi-like dumplings may look a bit wonky, but they taste incredible – the very definition of the perfectly imperfect!

Malfatti – rustically delicious!
I love being proven wrong when it comes to food.
As I dubiously fished the totally unimpressive-looking, slippery dumplings from the poaching liquid and plonked them in tomato sauce to pop into the oven, I was mentally preparing for what I could do to save the dish if it came out as bland as I was expecting. Bury in cheese and stick it back in the oven, I thought to myself. Cheese’ll save anything!
How very wrong I was about Malfatti! This is one of the most delicious things I’ve made all year. (Yes, yes, I know I’ve said that a few other recipes I’ve shared this year, but this time*, I really mean it!!) Those plump little gnocchi-like balls are delightedly savoury, ultra-soft and incredibly juicy on the inside. They’re often paired with a tomato-based Napoli Sauce like here, and finished with a shower of parmesan.
Like all addictively tasty things that come in bite-size packages, they’re dangerously difficult to stop popping them in your mouth once you start. One, two, three, five, ten …
* I really meant it the other times I declared this as well. There is room in my life for more than one “most delicious thing I’ve made all year”. I have a big appetite!!

What exactly are Malfatti, anyway?
Malfatti are traditional Italian dumplings made out of spinach and ricotta. They’re bound together with a little flour and egg, and flavoured with parmesan and basil.
Meaning “badly formed”, the name malfatti is an affectionate jibe at their rough and rustic looks. They’re also known as gnudi in other parts of Italy, which means “naked” – a reference to their appearance like pasta-less ravioli.
They are often served with a tomato-based Napoli sauce, though you also see it with other sauces such as brown butter and sage.
Here’s an up close and personal look at the inside of Malfatti. Looks good, eh? 🙂

Boiled like gnocchi, baked in the oven
Malfatti are cooked much like gnocchi in boiling water. Like gnocchi, the most common way serve them is also just like that – simply drained, and topped with the sauce.
Sometimes however you see baked versions, where the Malfatti is placed in the sauce and finished in the oven and is my preferred way of making them. Baking them “sets” the surface of the dumplings so they don’t seem soggy (they’re quite wet and slippery straight out of the boiling water). Plus, you get the benefit of a little browning on the edges of the Napoli Sauce which has a change to meld with the dumplings.
I’d be interested in opinions on this (even bold?!) statement from any Italians reading this!



Ingredients in Malfatti Dumplings
Here’s what you need to make the dumplings.

Ricotta (dry and crumbly = good!) – The key ingredient here! Whereas ordinarily ricotta-based recipes will call for the freshest, softest and creamiest ricotta you can find, for Malfatti, we are after drier ricotta so the mixture is firm enough to shape into dumplings.
Rule of thumb – If you can spread the ricotta like butter, it’s too wet and needs to be drained to remove excess water (just set over a colander or wrap in tea towels, see recipe notes). If you can virtually crumble it with your hands, it’s perfect!
Emergency fix: If you decide to proceed anyway with a ricotta that you suspect is too wet and find the mixture is so loose you can’t form dumplings, just add the minimum amount of flour required to thicken the mixture (I did);
Garlic and eschalot (US: Shallots) – For flavour and sweetness. If you don’t have eschalots, use 1/2 a red onion instead. (PS. Eschalots are the little tear-drop shaped alliums sometimes labelled as “French Onions” here in Australia);
Parmesan – Much of the seasoning (flavouring and salt) for Malfatti. It also helps to firm up the mixture;
Flour – Just 1/2 a cup, far less than most dumplings. Required to bind the mixture;
Egg – The universe’s natural food glue, this is what holds the dumplings together! We use one whole egg as well as one egg yolk because one egg alone is not quite enough to make the Malfatti hold together. Bonus: An extra yolk makes them just that little bit richer and delicious!
Basil – Just a handful, for its lovely fresh flavour. If you don’t have fresh basil, just leave it out rather than substitute with dried basil (dried basil really has no flavour)
Ingredients in Napoli Sauce for Malfatti
One of the most popular sauces for Malfatti is a classic Italian tomato sauce called a Napoli Sauce (after the city of Naples, capital of the region where tomatoes and basil are staple flavours). Here’s what you need:

Onion and garlic – Classic foundation flavourings;
Tomato paste – For a small boost in tomato intensity, and to thicken the sauce slightly (the sauce for Malfatti is typically thick and chunky, rather than loose and runny);
Basil – Please pretend the basil sprig pictured here has been picked! 😂 The leaves are used in the dumplings, while we use pop the stem into the sauce to give it a small hint of fresh basil flavour.
Crushed or diced tomato – As always, the better the quality, the better the sauce;
Sugar – 1/2 a teaspoon, to soften the tartness of the sauce a touch. It’s a shortcut for this sauce, which we only simmer for 20 minutes. If you have the time to simmer on a very, very low heat for 1 hour or so to let the flavours really develop and the sauce to sweeten naturally, feel free to skip it. 😇
How to make Malfatti
The key thing here is to NOT get too hung about about perfectly perfect dumpling shapes. Remember, Malfatti means “badly formed”. Stick to the spirit of the name, a licence for imperfection!
Part 1: Remove water from spinach
Firstly we need to remove the excess water from the spinach otherwise it makes the Malfatti mixture too loose.

Sweat spinach with salt to remove water – Sprinkle spinach with a little salt and leave for 20 minutes. The salt will draw some moisture out of the spinach, which makes it easier to squeeze out the water;
Wring out water – Put a handful of spinach on a clean tea towel. Gather up the the corners of the tea towel and twist it firmly to squeeze out the water;
Roughly chop – Not too finely. We don’t want minced spinach dumplings!
Sauté lightly – Lastly, we sauté the garlic and eschalots, then add the spinach in and toss it through.
Finally, cool the spinach before stirring into the ricotta mixture.
Part 2: Make the Malfatti dumplings

Malfatti mixture – Once the spinach is cool, add it into the bowl with the remaining Malfatti ingredients. Then gently mix until combined;
Form dumplings (wonky or neat!) – Use two dessert spoons to form “football” shaped dumplings. Remember the name and don’t get too hung up about perfect shapes!!
Boil – The Malfatti are cooked in boiling water, just like other dumplings. Bring a pot of water to the boil and carefully lower 4 to 6 dumplings in. Don’t crowd the pot, you don’t want the Malfatti bashing into each other;
Cook until they float (~2 minutes) – You’ll know exactly when the Malfatti are cooked because they float to the surface! Don’t worry about whether they’re fully cooked through because remember we finish them in the oven. 🙂
Use a slotted spoon to fish them out and place onto paper towels to drain.
Part 3: Making Napoli Sauce and baking the Malfatti
The sauce is as simple as a sauté, a stir and a simmer. As the sauce takes 20 mins, I typically start the sauce while I’m sweating the spinach.

Make the sauce – Nothing ground breaking here! The usual sauté garlic and onion → add tomato → simmer 🙂 This sauce is only simmered for 20 minutes, but long enough for it to thicken and develop some flavour. If you’ve got the time, add a bit of extra water and simmer it on super low heat for 1 hour. This will make the sauce even more delicious!
Baking time! – Pour the sauce in a pan and top with Malfatti. Drizzle with olive oil and bake for just 15 minutes, long enough to just give the surface of the Malfatti the faintest hint of gold blush. More importantly, it gives the Malfatti a light crust, rather than being slippery and wet straight out of the boiling water;
Baked Malfatti result – In the photo above, you can see how the Malfatti is very lightly browned compared to the photo in Step 2. The other benefit of baking is that you get some tasty sauce caramelisation around the edges of the pan; and
Finish with parmesan – Give the Malfatti a generous dusting of parmesan and sprinkle of fresh basil. Then dish it out!!


How to serve Malfatti
Initially, I was confused about how to serve Malfatti. Over pasta? Over polenta?? Slop it up with bread??
Nope. Think of it like gnocchi. So just like you do with gnocchi, serve yourself a big bowl of Malfatti just like that.
There’s a fair amount of vegetables in this dish in the form of the spinach and tomato. But if you want to add more, add a big leafy salad tossed with Italian Dressing, or a simple Balsamic Dressing.
I also would not turn down a side of garlic bread, normal or cheesy. But hey, that’s just me! 😂 – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Malfatti (Italian Spinach Ricotta Dumplings in Napoli Sauce)
Ingredients
Napoli Sauce:
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
- 1/2 onion , very finely diced
- 800g / 24 oz crushed tomato (or diced)
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- 1/2 cup water
- 1 basil stem (leaves kept for the Malfatti)
- 1/2 tsp white sugar
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
Spinach for Malfatti:
- 300g / 10oz baby spinach (~6 tightly packed cups, Note 4)
- 1/2 tsp salt
Malfatti:
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 2 cloves garlic , finely minced
- 1 eschallot (large), finely chopped (or 1/2 red onion)
- 500g / 1 lb ricotta (must be dry type, not wet and spreadable, Note 1)
- 1/4 cup (lightly packed) basil leaves, finely sliced (use stem for sauce)
- 1 egg (Note 2)
- 1 egg yolk (Note 2)
- 1 cup parmesan , finely grated
- 1/2 cup flour , plain / all-purpose
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
Serving:
- 1/4 cup parmesan , finely grated
- Basil leaves , small (optional)
Instructions
Napoli Sauce:
- Saute garlic and onion: Heat oil in a small pot or large skillet over medium heat. Add garlic and onion and cook for 3 minutes until onion is softened.
- Simmer sauce: Add remaining ingredients plus the stem of basil. Bring to a simmer, then reduce stove to low and cook, stirring every now and then, for 20 minutes. It should be fairly thick rather than a loose runny sauce.
Malfatti:
- Drain ricotta, if needed: The ricotta should be the dry and fairly crumbly type rather than wet, soft and almost spreadable. If it's wet, see Note 1 for removing excess water (wet ricotta makes Malfatti hard to shape and cook!)
- Sweat spinach: Toss spinach with 1/2 tsp salt in large colander. Leave for 20 minutes. Roll up in tea towel and squeeze tightly to remove excess liquid. Roughly chop.
- Sauté garlic, eschalot and spinach: Heat oil in a skillet over medium high heat. Add garlic and eschalot, cook for 1 minute until translucent. Add spinach and cook until just wilted. Transfer to large bowl, allow to cool.
- Malfatti mixture: Add ricotta and all remaining Malfatti ingredients into the bowl. Mix well to combine. It should be too wet to roll with hands without sticking, but still firm enough to shape into dumplings.
- Form dumplings: Using 2 dessert spoons, scoop up about 1 1/2 tablespoons of mixture then shape into a football (quenelle) using the two spoons. Place on a paper-lined tray. You should get about 24-30.
- Boil dumplings: Bring a large pot of water to the boil, then carefully put 6 dumplings in. Cook for 2 minutes, they should float to the surface. Remove with slotted spoon on to paper towel lined tray. Repeat for remaining Malfatti.
Baking:
- Preheat oven to 180°C / 350°F.
- Assemble: Pour Napoli Sauce into a baking dish, then top with Malfatti. Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil.
- Bake 15 minutes or until the Malfatti has a faint blush of gold on the surface (Note 3).
- Serve! Sprinkle baked Malfatti with parmesan and basil leaves (tear large leaves). Spoon into bowls and served as-is. No starchy side is required, think of these as like gnocchi. Just add a leafy green salad with Italian Dressing or Balsamic Dressing!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More meatless Italian
Life of Dozer
When Dozer came shoe shopping. I live in a VERY dog friendly area!!!
(PS In case you re wondering, he is anti stilettos and pro sneakers. Something about me not being able to play with him in heels. 🤷🏻♀️)

I made these about 3 months ago – a little fiddley but delicious.
2 weeks ago I couldn’t stop thinking about them and made them again. Seemed a lot easier the second time around. We had them again last Friday – I’m now finding it easy to make them and make extra, to freeze. They freeze well individually and then put in a freezer bag in meal-size portions. ready for when you make the next batch of sauce. Again thank you sooooo much Nagi your recipes are great.
It took me 3 hours to make these but they were lovely. Would make again.m
I made this as per recipe WOW
Delicious thanks once again Nagi
When I started to make lasagna the noodles had weevils. The ricotta probably would not last but I recalled a recipe using it that had a link saved. My 8 oz. container was not the crumbly kind so first put it in a coffee filter in a sieve and kept pushing down with a spoon back. At least two tablespoons of liquid came out in about an hour.
Not having all the ingredients I used cooked and drained Chard instead of spinach. And cut recipe in half – there are only two of us.
It was fabulous! Will make brown butter sauce next time.
Thanks Nagi – love to see Dozer too.
I must admit that I did not know this dish existed. I followed your recipe almost exactly (not really, I couldn’t find the exact kind of ricotta) and everyone absolutely loved it (as in blown away). The only change was to further remove water from the spinach after it was sautéed and added a table spoon of flour to make up for the wrong ricotta. I could write to virtually every day for being so amazing. Thank you. I am waiting patiently for a Baccalà Mantecato recipe. I tried and failed miserably. Thank you for the Dozer updates!
Thanks so much about the extra flour am making tonight and my first ricotta came through 2 tea towels while trying to wring it out!!! So was hoping there was a different way of making it less watery and I found it m!! Thank you
So delicious! My husband said he’s never seen this dish in the restaurant, and would definitely eat it again. We paired it with buffalo mozzarella caprese and Prosecco – created little Italy during the lockdown
Hello Nagi,
I am planning on making a double batch of this recipe so I can use up the 1 kg of ricotta. Can the Malfatti be frozen after they’re cooked in the boiling water?
Hello, although I didn’t get a response Re: if they would be ok to freeze,. I went ahead and froze them, and I can now report than they turned out just like they were fresh, maybe even better. I froze them after cooking in the boiling water. Let them cool and froze them on trays and when they were frozen I put then into freezer bags and they turned out amazing.
Did you defrost them before baking? Was there much condensation? Do they get sticky? I’m wondering if it’s easier to plonk them frozen into the sauce and let them defrost on the bench for a day.
Greetings! I am nestled in the USA, where in local shops have been unable to locate the drier traditional ricotta. If I drain my homescratch ricotta long enough will it suffice? I want to avoid diluting quality/flavor by overloading batch with flour. Thank you!
Another delicious recipe! We enjoyed it very much.
Wow, these were amazing! And even fast enough that I made them on a weeknight. Thank you for the great recipe!
Hi Nagi this is truly a fabulous recipe. All your recipes are fantastic and I just want to give you credit for helping me help my husband drop 30 kg over a year period! It was much needed and he looks fantastic. He loves everything!! Greetings from The Netherlands X
WOAH! Oh my goodness SuzieB, that’s fantastic, you’re obviously committed – well done t you both!! N x
Hi Nagi,
Thank you for all your wonderful recipes.
I made this recently and my carnivore hubby loved it.
I’m thinking of making it again for guests but want to tone down the sauce a little. If I added cream or just made your tomato cream sauce, do you think it would split in the oven?
Absolutely fabulous! I loved how my first attempt turned out. It is a good ‘feeling like I went to some trouble’ recipes – without too much effort. We recently moved to Italy and are confident that this dish will even impress our dinner / Sunday lunch guests aka real Italians. My husband was thrilled to have more the next day as I had made the full recipe for just the two of us. Our Boston Terriers – major cheese lovers – got half a dumpling each and didn’t even notice the spinach.
Really wanted to love this recipe but what a disappointment. A faff to make and not worth it unfortunately! A very one sided and bland dish. I love this site otherwise. A huge fan in fact! Every other dish I have ever made from here turned out to be a winner. Not this though. Needs reviewing in my opinion. Sorry
I’m saddened to hear that M! I’ve made this so many times in recent months, even as recently as last Friday, and it’s always a hit. You didn’t skip the parmesan in it, did you? 1 cup of parmesan adds a stack of flavour into the dumplings! N x
I would love to make these ahead as part of a family Sunday lunch party – is this possible?
Thanks Nagi – your recipes are always the ‘go to’ in our family!
Hi Leslie. I made these for yesterday’s Sunday lunch and kept half for today in a second casserole dish. I figured that even if they weren’t as good 24 hours later it would only be the two of us eating them – and an easy lunch in exchange for perfection. I feel that they were just as good.
Thank you once again Nagi for sharing another fabulous recipe. I wonder……would it be possible to skip the boiling step altogether?
Made these tonight, we had them as a side to chicken schnitzel. Kind of reminded me of a parmigiana together 😁. So very time consuming though. Will probably make again as one of my sons really loved them but would probably make the sauce the day before perhaps and use frozen spinach and find drier ricotta as mine were still a bit wet
I’ve made a few ricotta spinach dumpling recipes and this once was my far the stand out. Delicious light fluffy clouds, was such a huge winner with the family! Thanks Nagi
Made this the other night. My dumplings were a bit on the too creamy side, but I had a heck of a time trying to get the ricotta to drain anymore than I did. I think when I make this again I’ll make my own ricotta to limit the moisture. Otherwise the recipe is a total winner. Made a small batch for dinner and froze the rest of the malfatti. I used the rest of the napoli sauce I had in some sausage and rice stuffed peppers. Will definitely be using that sauce for other recipes too. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for this wonderful recipe. I made it tonight & although somewhat time consuming, the result was worth the effort. The family loved it so will def make it again!