Sunday, January 10, 2010

Big Balls o' Love - Basic Meatballs

Meatballs
2 lbs ground beef
2 small tomatoes, or 1 large, seeded and juiced
1 to 1 ½ cups fresh bread crumbs
1 small onion
2 cloves of garlic
1 egg
1 Tbsp SOS*
1 Tbsp olive oil

In the bowl of a food processer, pulse 2-3 pieces of bread until fine. I use whatever happens to need to be used up – hot dog buns, hoagie rolls, the heels of loaf bread – whatever. You can use the store bought stuff – but this is easier and cheaper and tastes better – doesn’t have the stale processed taste that store bought crumbs often has.

Once the texture of the bread crumbs is nice and fine, add the tomatoes, garlic, onion and egg and pulse again until you have a thick goopy paste.

Put the ground beef in the bowl of a mixer, add the bread crumb paste and mix just until combined. Don’t do this in the food processor – it will over mix the meat and the meatballs will be hockey pucks. I’ve made those. They’re not lovely. The trick to working with ground meats is not to over work them. You can certainly do this by hand in a regular mixing bowl as well – I just don’t like how the cold meats can make my hands hurt by the time it’s all mixed well. (I’m delicate. Like a pixie).

Heat olive oil in a large skillet on medium heat. Keep the heat nice and low – you’re going to brown the outside of the meatballs, and if you go too hot they’ll either fall apart or be totally raw inside. At the same time, you aren’t cooking them all the way through at this point – just getting a pretty brown crusty outside, and about halfway cooked through.

Once the oil is hot, form the meatballs into about 1 inch balls. An easy way to do this is with a small ice cream scoop, or a tablespoon. Scoop a bit out into the palm of your hand, roll it a bit so it’s pretty and round, then pop them into the skillet.

You’ll probably have two or three batches to get them all. As they are browned on all sides, drain them off on a paper towel and set them aside. You’ll finish them off in the soup.

*SOS - my own seasoning blend. Check out the recipe on it's own post.


*To make sure of your seasonings, test one meatball before you brown them all. Cook one, taste and decide if you need to reseason now. Go light on the salt though – there will be more in the soup.

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