Buying ingredients to suit the household budget is a perennial challenge to all cooks. Growing up in the 1960s, my Dad received his salary fortnightly. Mum served “rissoles” (Aussie for meatballs) according to the budget. Rich man’s rissoles were made with minced steak, poor man’s rissoles with cheap butcher prepared sausage meat. I never cared much for the latter, until one day Mum announced that the poor man had struck it lucky. She pulled from the oven a steaming fragrant dish of “Porcupine Meatballs, ” a new recipe she’d made from a newspaper clipping.
Sausage meatballs, bulked up with steamed white rice, simmered in the oven in sweet creamy canned tomato soup made it an instant dinner table favourite.
Health awareness in 2013 means I’m discerning about the fat/salt/preservative content of my sausage and I prefer to cook with fresh tomatoes so this is how I prepare my Mum’s “Porcupine Meatballs ” for my grand daughters who love it as much as I did fifty years ago.
1 kg pork mince
1 cup cooked white quinoia
1 small carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
1 stick celery, peeled and roughly chopped
Handful fresh parsley, washed
1 clove garlic, peeled
2 teaspoons fennel seed
Sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1/4 cup rice flour
500mls homemade tomato passata
1 cup stock
250g cherry tomatoes
Fresh basil leaves
Pre heat the oven to 160C
In the food processor blitz the carrot, celery, garlic and parsley. Add half of the minced pork and process to a smooth paste. Tip the pork paste into a bowl, then knead in the quinoia, the remaining pork mince and fennel seeds. Season well. At this point I’d fry a little very small patty of meat to check the seasonings. Adjust if necessary.
Roll the prepared pork into balls about the size of a walnut, 2cm diameter.
Toss the meatball in rice flour to lightly coat then set aside.
In a wide shallow lidded casserole dish, heat the passata and stock, taste and season with sea salt, freshly ground pepper and a little sugar if the tomatoes are acidic. Add the meatballs in a single layer to the sauce, spooning a little sauce over each as you go.
Cover the casserole dish and bake in for 30 minutes. Remove the lid, add the cherry tomato halves and bake uncovered for a further 15 minutes.
Scatter a generous chiffonade of fresh basil over over the meatballs and serve.
Delicious served with rocket (aragula) and Parmesan salad, crusty bread to mop up the sauce, and a decent glass of red wine.
Pingback: Meatballs in an Almond Sauce | Please Pass the Recipe
Pingback: Raining Meatballs with a Chance of Spaghetti | Sharing The Food We Love
Made these today with the nieces and nephew and it was a hit! I went the cheats version (aka closer to Nan’s orginal I think) to save on time with an 11, 5 & 2 y.o. underfoot and cooking in someone else’s kitchen, but I’ll definitely make them again next time following your recipe properly. π xx
LikeLike
Glad you had fun with it!!
LikeLike
This looks delicious! Like the use of stock and fresh tomatoes for the sauce. Interesting that you don’t brown the meatballs first.
LikeLike
Thanks, it’s a really nice dish. Poaching the meatballs is a trick I learned from a Calabrian friend, the meatballs stay soft and juicy and because there is no caramelization, the tomato flavour of the sauce stays fresh and lively.
LikeLike
Glad to know there’s no actual porcupines involved. π
LikeLike
π
LikeLike
I think pork meatballs have so much more flavor than those using any other type of meat, as I’m sure these do. Your use of quinoa here, rather than rice, is a nice substitution and I love your use of fresh cherry tomatoes in the sauce. They’ll add a freshness, as well as a bit of texture, to the dish. We would have devoured these as kids.
LikeLike
Thanks John, and believe me, the big kids devour them too!
LikeLike
I love their name… porcupine meatballs! What child wouldn’t love them? They do look fabulous. And with the addition of quinoa too. Makes them healthy, no?
LikeLike
I guess when they have rice included, it’s supposed to stick out like porcupine quills! Ha, yes healthy AND delicious!
LikeLike
Yum, I remember these π will have to try the updated version when we’re babysitting next weekend x
LikeLike
Thanks. They are quite delicious! Xx
LikeLike
They look delicious! I’ve been wanting to make (chicken) meatballs cooked in tomato sauce. Your recipe is worth a try!
LikeLike
They were delicious. Try making them with chicken, I think it would work really well! Let me know if you do try them π
LikeLike
Yummy, I love your idea of adding quinoa to the meatball mixture (though I occasionally add rice in mine)! Must have been delicious!
LikeLike
The quinoia worked really well in the meatballs! I am always surprised how good this tastes….
LikeLike
I remember these rice filled meatballs from my own childhood in the 60s in the USA. A blast of nostalgia! Yours look delicious! – a must try.
LikeLike
Those are definitely more photogenic than porcupine meatballs. I tried to photo my tried and true porcupine recipe and I thought they were too ugly to post. Putting quinoa in there updates the recipe and make it more photogenic! I didn’t know you made porcupines in Australia…never heard anyone mention them when we were there.
And it took me a while to realize what rissoles were lol.
LikeLike
Thanks! Unfortunately quirky words like rissole are dying out as our language becomes more global, but they taste good whatever you call them!
LikeLike
Really? you think so? All the Aussies I met still spoke like True Blue Aussies π but I know the younger generation is much influenced by American tv and movies…
LikeLike
Fair dinkum cobber , three more you rarely hear. It means I’m serious, friend! π
LikeLike