Special Italian Meatballs Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

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Special Italian Meatballs Recipe

Recipes Main Ingredients Meat Recipes

ByMichelle McGlinn/

Imagine the smell as you walk into your nonna's house; the scent of oregano and slowly stewed tomato sauce wafts through the air, leaving your mouth watering. Plates of pasta, potatoes, fish, and salad fill the kitchen countertops ready to feed a hungry crowd. Just when you think it couldn't get better, the meatballs arrive, still simmering in tomato gravy and so tender they threaten to fall apart. You don't have to stick to imagining it anymore.

Tasting Table recipe developer Michelle McGlinncreated a delicious rendition of the classic dish. Her special Italian meatballs recipebelow delivers the same mouth-watering meatball and savory sauce combination, perfect for scooping over spaghetti. Make this quickly for a weeknight dinner or let it stew for hours for the ultimate flavorful meal. Either way, this comforting dish is sure to bring you right back to nonna's kitchen — or far off to the culinary mecca itself.

Gather your Italian meatball ingredients

Special Italian Meatballs Recipe - Tasting Table (5)

Michelle McGlinn/Tasting Table

Meatballs can be made in many different ways, with different meats, seasonings, binding agents, and sauces. This meatball is made using a panade of milk and breadcrumbs to moisten the meat and help the egg yolk bind everything together. For the meat, you can use any ratio of beef, pork, and veal, as long as it adds up to 1 pound of meat. We use half beef and half veal here, but pork is a great choice for super moist meatballs.

For both the meatballs and sauce, you'll want plenty of garlic, Parmesan, and onion. The sauce is flavored with a base of salty, savory pancetta and rich Chianti wine. Chianti is earthy, smoky, and rustic, but you can use any dry red wine you love, such as cabernet sauvignon. You'll also need olive oil and a 28-ounce can of crushed San Marzano tomatoes. Finally, salt, pepper, oregano, and fresh parsley add layers of seasoning, and fresh basil at service seals the deal.

Create a panade

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Michelle McGlinn/Tasting Table

Begin by preheating your oven to 400 F.

Next, prepare a panade, a paste of bread and milk thatCook's Illustratedexplainskeeps the proteins in meat from drying out, creating a moist, flavorful meatball. You can use a slice of bread or store-bought breadcrumbs and any kind of cow's milk to form the panade. Simply mix everything together until the breadcrumbs moisten into a paste. Once your panade is combined, it's ready to fold into the meatball mixture.

Combine the meatball ingredients and roll

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Michelle McGlinn/Tasting Table

Using your hands, mix the meat, minced garlic, chopped onion, salt, pepper, oregano, finely chopped parsley, grated Parmesan cheese, and egg yolk in a large bowl until just combined. Avoid overmixingyour meatball mixture; overworking the meat will cause it to become tough and dry.

Roll the mixture into golf ball-sized portions and place them on a sheet pan fitted with a wire rack. The wire rack elevates the meatballs off of the sheet pan so that they cook evenly and do not stick. Once the oven has come to temperature, parcook the meatballs for about 15 minutes to eliminate the grease before adding them to the sauce.

Begin simmering the sauce

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Michelle McGlinn/Tasting Table

With the meatballs in the oven, begin making the sauce by first browning the pancetta to release its flavorful fat into the pan. If you're aiming for a smooth sauce, transfer the cooked pancetta to a plate. Then, use the fat to cook the onions and garlic, and further intensify the flavors with red wine. Don't worry about any browned, sticky bits on the bottom of the pot — simply scrape those up when you add the wine for optimal flavor.

Reduce the wine to half the volume, then empty the can of tomatoes into the pan and bring the contents to a simmer. If you want to have a silky smooth sauce, remove the pan from heat and blend the sauce with an immersion blender before adding the pancetta back.

Stew the meatballs and serve

Special Italian Meatballs Recipe - Tasting Table (9)

Michelle McGlinn/Tasting Table

Whether you have 20 minutes or 2 hours, add the meatballs back into the sauce and simmer them until they are cooked through and soaked in San Marzano tomatoes. We love using San Marzano tomatoes for their sweeter, smoother taste and consistency. For a deeper flavor and impossibly soft meatballs, keep the sauce on low heat for several hours. Your kitchen will be teeming with the luxurious smell of garlic and the sauce will be infused with delicious flavor.

Serve the meatballs over pasta or on their own. Alternately, stuff them into hoagie rolls for a classic meatball sandwich. To store leftovers, transfer the meatballs and sauce into an airtight container and keep it in the refrigerator. When you're ready to finish them, simply reheat them in the microwave or on the stove.

Special Italian Meatballs Recipe

4.9 from 79 ratings

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This recipe yields a mouth-watering meatball and savory sauce combination, perfect for scooping over spaghetti. Be prepared: Your kitchen will smell heavenly.

Prep Time

20

minutes

Cook Time

25

minutes

Servings

12

Meatballs

Special Italian Meatballs Recipe - Tasting Table (10)

Total time: 45 minutes

Ingredients

  • For the meatballs
  • ½ cup plain breadcrumbs
  • 4 tablespoons milk
  • ½ pound ground beef
  • ½ pound veal or pork
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped Vidalia onion
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon pepper
  • 2 teaspoons oregano
  • 3 tablespoons finely chopped parsley
  • ½ cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
  • 1 egg yolk
  • For the sauce
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 4 ounces (about ½ cup) cubed or diced cured pancetta
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 3 to 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • ½ cup dry red Italian wine, such as Chianti
  • 1 (28-ounce) can crushed San Marzano tomatoes
  • salt and pepper, to taste
  • basil, for serving
  • grated Parmesan, for serving

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 F.
  2. In a small bowl, make a panade by combining the breadcrumbs and milk until a dry paste forms. Set it aside.
  3. Add the meat, garlic, onion, salt, pepper, oregano, parsley, Parmesan, and egg yolk to a large bowl.
  4. Mix the contents with your hands until just combined, then add the panade until the mixture is firm but not dry. Do not overwork.
  5. Prepare a baking sheet fitted with a wire rack.
  6. Roll the meat into 12 2-ounce balls, or about the size of golf balls.
  7. Place the meatballs on the wire rack.
  8. Bake the meatballs for 15 minutes, until browned. (They will not be cooked all the way through.)
  9. While the meatballs are in the oven, heat the oil in a large deep skillet or Dutch oven over medium heat.
  10. Add the pancetta and cook until browned. If blending the sauce, remove it from the skillet.
  11. Add the onions and garlic to the skillet and cook them in the pancetta fat until they soften and begin to stick to the bottom of the pan.
  12. Deglaze with the wine, scraping any browned bits from the bottom of the skillet.
  13. Let the sauce simmer until it is reduced by half.
  14. Add the tomatoes to the skillet and bring everything to a simmer. If desired, remove the pan from the heat and blend the sauce with an immersion blender to make it smooth. If you removed the pancetta, add it back to the sauce.
  15. Once the sauce is simmering, add the parcooked meatballs and turn the heat down to low.
  16. Cover and cook for 10 minutes or 2 hours for best results.
  17. To serve, top the meatballs and sauce with torn basil and extra grated Parmesan.

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Special Italian Meatballs Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between Italian style meatballs and regular meatballs? ›

Italian-style meatballs often include additional ingredients such as milk, olive oil, ground pork, fresh parsley, red pepper flakes, Italian herb seasoning, and sometimes a combination of ground beef, veal, and pork [2].

Is it better to fry or bake Italian meatballs? ›

Baking will result in meatballs with a crunchy exterior, though the caramelisation achieved from frying will be superior. Baked meatballs take the least amount of effort, as you'll only need to turn them once or twice throughout the cook and you can make a larger batch at once.

What are Sicilian meatballs made of? ›

Sicilian meatballs, on the other hand, are typically made from a combination of ground beef and ground pork, along with ingredients like garlic, onion, parsley, breadcrumbs, and sometimes even pine nuts and raisins. They are often served in a tomato sauce or a sweet and sour sauce made from vinegar and sugar.

Is it better to fry meatballs or cook in sauce? ›

Letting your meatballs cook on the stove in a simmering sauce is the way to go. You'll end up with the most tender meatballs because as they simmer they soak up so much of that tomato sauce.

Are meatballs better baked or cooked in sauce? ›

The best meatballs are tender, baked and browned in a hot oven to seal in all the juices. Simmered in robust sauce for a couple of minutes ensures they soak up all of those saucy flavours, this is an easy dinner recipe that will be a hit with your family!

Is it better to bake meatballs at 350 or 400? ›

In an oven preheated to 350 degrees F, these meatballs should be fully cooked through and evenly browned in about 30 minutes. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the middle of the meatball should read at least 165 degrees F.

Should I fry my meatballs before putting in sauce? ›

You can brown the uncooked meatballs in a sauté pan before adding them to the sauce. You can brown them in the oven. Or you can skip browning altogether and put the raw meatballs straight into the sauce to cook.

What are the ingredients in cooked perfect Italian style meatballs? ›

Ingredients. Beef And Pork, Water, Textured Soy Flour, Bread Crumbs (Wheat Flour, Salt), Soy Protein Concentrate, Less Than 2% Of: Parmesan Cheese (Part Skim Cow's Milk, Cheese Cultures, Salt, Enzymes), Oregano, Basil, Black Pepper, Natural Flavors, Salt, Dextrose, Sodium Phosphate.

What are Maggianos meatballs made of? ›

WHAT MEAT IS USED IN YOUR MEATBALLS AND MEAT SAUCE? Our meatballs and meat sauce are made with 100% ground beef.

Why do Sicilians put raisins in meatballs? ›

In Sicily, and (I expect) Calabria the use of raisins and pine nuts came from contact with Arabs, who use them extensively (remember that Sicily was an Arab Province for a time). Though the Arabs never dominated further north you do find raisins in savory recipes in old cookbooks.

Why do Italians put raisins in meatballs? ›

The addition of Sicilian-inspired ingredients, like raisins (or currants) and pine nuts, give these meatballs the perfect sweetness and texture.

How do real Italians eat meatballs? ›

Although meatballs cooked in tomato sauce and served with pasta is likely what most Americans first imagine when they think of them, this meatball preparation is virtually nonexistent in Italy. In most regions, meatballs are just fried and eaten as is—enjoyed as a snack or served as a second course without any sauce.

Do they put meatballs on spaghetti in Italy? ›

Spaghetti and meatballs is a classic dish found all over the world and is considered a staple dinner menu item. While we believe that most pasta dishes are considered to be Italian, you likely won't find the dish anywhere in Italy.

Why are Italian meatballs so big? ›

They ended up going from eating meat once a week to eating meat every day! And meat was consumed in much larger quantities. So, the small moist polpettes made with 50% bread and 50% meat that they enjoyed in Italy changed to larger denser meatballs made with mostly beef.

Why are my Italian meatballs hard? ›

Usually if meatballs are dense or heavy then it is because the meatball mixture has been handled too much and the minced (ground) meat has become compacted. It may help to use beef with a slightly higher fat content, as the extra fat will provide a little extra moisture.

What are Italian meatballs called? ›

Called polpettes, Italian meatballs are often served sauceless and are much smaller than the meatballs you're probably used to. Traditional Italian meatballs typically contain equal portions of meat and soaked bread, and other additions such as egg and vegetables.

Are Italian meatballs pink inside? ›

Heat the olive oil in a large cast-iron skillet over medium heat. Add the meatballs and cook for around 5-7 minutes—or until the meatballs are cooked and only slightly pink on the inside. Pour the marinara sauce on top, mix and wait for the sauce to simmer and completely warmed through.

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