Swedish meatballs the way my mother and grandmother always made them. To be eaten traditionally with potatoes, gravy, lingonberry jam and pickles, or more modernly with pasta or why not try them in a sallad?
Servings 100meatballs
Prep Time 20 minutesmins
Cook Time 15 minutesmins
Optional pre-boiling 30 minutesmins
Total Time 1 hourhr5 minutesmins
Equipment
Bowl
Grater
Wooden Spoon or Danish whisk
Pot
Frying pan
Ingredients
750gminced meat
1grated yellow/brown onion
1egg
1 ½dl bread crumbsca. ½ cup
1 ½dlmilkca. ½ cup
3tspsalt
allspice
black pepper
for boiling (optional)
2stock cubes
water
for frying
olive oil or butter
Instructions
Creating the mixture
Start by grating the onion finely (this can also be done in a food processor if you don't want to grate by hand)
1 grated yellow/brown onion
Add in the bread crumbs and mix with the onion to soak up the juices. Add in the milk and egg and stir into the breadcrumbs. Let it sit for a little while to saturate the bread crumbs.
1 egg, 1 ½ dl bread crumbs, 1 ½ dl milk
Add in the spices you want to use. Allspice is a must, as well as pepper and salt. But then you can get somewhat creative if you want to have some other flavour in it as well. It is hard to put in an absolute measurement of spices as that is very much dependent on the person and taste.
3 tsp salt, allspice, black pepper
In the last step, add the minced meat and mix it until everything is evenly mixed and you get flavour in every part of the mixture.
750 g minced meat
Pre-boiling (optional) - restaurant version
Add water to the pot and put in 2 stock cubes and let it dissolve. Put the heat on high.
2 stock cubes, water
Roll the meatballs. Make sure you wet your hand in cold water now and then (you can have a small bowl with some water nearby) so that the mixture doesn't stick to your hands.
Once you've rolled 10-20 meatballs. Put them in the boiling water. They will sink down to the bottom. As they get cooked through they will start to float. Once they start to gently bob at the surface - let them bob for 1-3 minutes, then fish them up and put in a casserole dish/heat proof container.At this point, you can now freeze them as they are or add them to soups. Or you can fry them for a crunchy exteriour with lots of flavour.
Repeat with the rest of the meatballs until all are boiled.Top off with more water when needed. You can save the broth that's left over from the boiling to later make soup with or start of the gravy. Reduce it down and freeze it if you want to store it for later.
frying the meatballs
Add oil to a frying pan and put on medium heat. Put the required amount of meatballs into the pan once it has reached temp, and fry them until they have become dark golden.Make sure to shake (or stir) the pan now and then to evenly fry the meatballs.
olive oil or butter
Serve warm.
Notes
50-50 beef and pork makes for the best meatballs. But can be any kind of minced meat. Generally 100% pork will be juicy but slightly bland (need more flavour), beef tend to have more flavour but dries out quicker when frying. Why not try to make a lamb variant with some mint and hide a piece of feta in it? You don't have to boil them first. My mother generally doesn't. I like them boiled first as they are juicier - while you also know that they are thoroughly cooked, even before you fry them, so you just need to get the outer surface fried. It's not necessary to grate the onion - I know a lot of folks that don't want to do this step. However - I would say that if you have kids at home, or you like meatballs that don't fall apart - it is almost essential to grate the onion in my opinion. But this is one to experiment on! Dipping your hand in cold water every now and then when you are rolling the meatballs really help in the rolling process.