Kartoffelknödel, or potato dumplings, are a staple of Austrian cooking. Present these soft, pillowy dumplings with great roasts or stews or as part of a festive buffet. Kartoffelknödel’s strong taste and flexible pairing make everyone interested in Austrian cuisine should try it.
6
servings20
minutes25
minutes150
kcalKartoffelknödel, or Austrian potato dumplings, are not just a side dish—they're a quiet ritual threaded through autumn kitchens and winter tables, dense with steam and memory. You begin with a kilo of starchy potatoes—Russets, preferably—boiled until they split softly under a knife. There’s a hush as you peel them, still warm, releasing that earthy sweetness only a potato can yield. Flour, potato starch, salt, and a whisper of nutmeg follow, folded in with a single egg. You knead the dough gently—it's a tactile, grounding act—until it holds together like a story passed down. If you're using the traditional filling, you toast cubes of stale bread in butter until they smell like childhood: crisp, browned corners and a hint of something forgotten but comforting. Twelve dumplings take shape, each one formed around a toasted center or, for more elaborate days, sautéed mushrooms, fried onions, or bacon. They drop into salted water and, after 12 minutes, rise—floating, done, humble and complete. Kartoffelknödel belong beside goulash, Sauerbraten, or dark mushroom gravies. They carry sauce like they carry history. Freeze them uncooked, swap in gluten-free flour if needed—the soul of the dish stays the same. It's a dish built on simplicity, yes, but never emptiness.
1 kg (2.2 lbs) starchy potatoes (e.g., Russets)
150 g (1 ¼ cups) all-purpose flour
50 g (1/3 cup) potato starch (or corn starch)
1 large egg
1 tsp salt
Pinch of nutmeg (optional)
3–4 slices of stale bread, cut into small cubes (optional for filling)
Butter or oil for toasting bread cubes (optional)