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OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Authentic Italian Meatballs

one and a half slices recipe italian spaghetti meatballs

Last weekend my world was changed forever when I was schooled by a friend very dear to me in the subtle art of the perfect Lady and the Tramp style meatball. That fine grained, tender, perfectly seasoned Italian delicacy resting lightly atop a bird’s nest of egg noodles dusted with Parmesano Reggiano. The ultimate comfort.

For a while now I have been faithfully married to my essential Bolognese sauce. Considering this sauce the pinnacle of comfort food, I had relegated meatballs to a facet of my childhood and did not intend to explore them much further. Until, that is, a friend of mine suggested we spend a chilly Sunday afternoon cooking meatballs in the style of this-is-how-my-grandma-made-it lore. Skeptical of such lore, but always willing to learn something new, we threw a cooler in the back of the car and drove out to visit Jesse Straight at Whiffletree Farm, purveyor of local chicken, pork, beef, lamb, turkey, and other pasture raised meats (see more about #eatlocal and Whiffletree Farm here). Upon our return, we set to work simmering a basic marinara. 

As it turns out, the secret to the very best authentic Italian meatballs is threefold: 1) cook them a long ass time, 2) use a combination of meats (beef, pork, and lamb), 3) the love of cooking. Slow cooking. With a loaf of fresh Italian bread by the stove for all day marinara sauce dipping and taste testing, a playlist, and plenty of good vibes, we cooked. We opened a bottle of red wine that was fantastic but I can’t quite identify beyond the bright red eyeglasses on the label. Free OneandahalfSlices swag for anyone who can tell me what this wine is. We talked and dabbed marinara sauce on the noses of my slightly grumpy kittens. And we connected.

So here we have it. The Whiffletree Farm three-meat authentic Italian meatball recipe, worth the lore, worth the investment, and worth every moment spent in friendship in the kitchen. Happy cooking.

🍅🍅🍅

what you need

For the meatballs:

2 pounds Whiffletree Farm ground beef

1 pound Whiffletree Farm ground pork 

1 pound Whiffletree Farm ground lamb

4 eggs, or one egg per pound of meat

2 cups breadcrumbs, or 1/2 cup bread crumbs per pound of meat

5 garlic cloves, minced

one handful of parsley, finely chopped

1/8 cup dried oregano and basil

dash of cayenne pepper

salt and black pepper to taste

For the Marinara:

24 oz of canned, chopped Italian imported Roma tomatoes

three to four fresh Roma tomatoes, diced

one yellow onion or two shallots, finely minced

3 cloves of garlic, minced

dried oregano, basil, and parsley

salt and pepper to taste

(optional) parmesan cheese rinds

how to make it

First, get the sauce going.  Place a few tablespoons of olive oil in the bottom of a large pot stovetop. Add the minced onions and garlic, all the spices, and, if you are so inclined, a few pieces of ground pork. Sauté over medium heat for a minute or two and then add the canned and fresh tomatoes. Add salt, pepper, and spices, bring to a boil, then reduce to the gentlest possible simmer. Add the Parmesan cheese rinds and cover the pot.

Now, craft your meatballs. Set the oven to high broil and combine all three meats in a large mixing bowl. Add the eggs, breadcrumbs, garlic, spices, and fresh parsley. Stir with a wooden spoon until well combined. Try not to compress the meat down into the bowl too much in the process.

Gently roll meat into 1 1/2 inch balls, careful not to squeeze or compress the balls too much. Ideally, you want finely-ground meat and loosely-compressed meatballs. Arrange on a baking tray and broil for five minutes, remove from oven, turn each meat all over once, and broil five minutes more. 

Simmer. Carefully transfer all meatballs into the Marinara sauce. Ensure all the meatballs are covered by the sauce and, if they aren’t, add a bit of water so that this is the case. Simmer your meatballs in the sauce for two to three hours covered, then an additional hour uncovered until sauce reaches desired thickness. Serve over pasta of choice and sprinkle with finely-ground Parmesano Reggiano cheese. 

Don’t forget the red wine! 🍷

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Coconut Harissa Meatballs

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Coconut Harissa Meatballs

one and a half slices coconut harissa meatballs local recipe

This struck me as the strangest recipe and just the thing OneandahalfSlices needed after what shall henceforth be known as The Great Fridge Hiatus. In the midst of back-and-forth work travel to Florida and other exotic locales (Dayton, Ohio???), my freezer door was mysteriously left – ahem – ajar. Upon my return, with a 14 hour turnaround window, I discovered that the smell of death filled my house and, for once, my sweet felines were not to blame. Chicken and meat juices filled the freezer drawer and I stared in sadness as $300 worth of condiments, to include at least seven types of miso paste, expired in front of my eyes. Fixing the fridge, restocking the freezer, replacing the condiments, and getting my cooking mojo back took a good two weeks. So here we are…with coconut harissa meatballs – by far one of the stranger things I’ve tasted (and, yes, that includes the $100 upcharge at Pineapple and Pearls in 2017 when an overenthusiastic waiter proceeded to steam raw truffles (mushrooms) in brandy over a candle and then pour the concoction over what I’m pretty sure was Breyer’s vanilla ice cream in a desperate attempt at fine dining. I made this dish over the mashed white beans as originally instructed but was not a fan of the beans and am curious to try it over spaetzle or mashed potatoes. If you’re feeling experimental, give this one a try. 

what you need

1 pound ground pork or loose sausage of choice

2 shallots, minced

4 cloves of garlic, minced

Fresh cilantro leaves

1 tablespoon garam masala

1 teaspoon sumac

1 teaspoon harissa seasoning

1/4 cup Moroccan harissa paste (or sauce)

2 tablespoons tomato paste

1/2 cup coconut milk

1 tablespoon coconut oil

1 can white beans, or 5-6 gold potatoes, or 2 servings egg noodles

how to make it

Mix the ground pork, half the minced shallots, half the minced garlic, and the garam masala together with salt and pepper. Roll the meatballs into 12 ~1 inch balls and set aside. 

Add coconut oil to a pan and sauté number of desired meatballs on several sides until brown, ~8 minutes. Remove the meatballs and set aside. 

Add the remaining shallots and garlic to the pan, sautéing until fragrant, ~2 minutes. Add the harissa seasoning, harissa sauce, and tomato paste to the pan, stirring well for another minute. Add the coconut milk, mix, and nestle the meatballs back into the sauce. Allow the mixture to simmer and thicken for ~8 minutes.

Prepare your egg noodles, mashed potatoes, or mashed white beans as desired, spreading them onto a plate and seasoning them with salt and sumac. Set the meatballs on top of your mash, topping with the harissa sauce and fresh cilantro leaves. Serve immediately.

one and a half slices coconut harissa meatballs local recipe
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