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Meatball

A meatball is ground meat rolled into a ball, sometimes along with other ingredients, such as bread crumbs, minced onion, eggs, butter, and seasoning.[1] Meatballs are cooked by frying, baking, steaming, or braising in sauce. There are many types of meatballs using different types of meats and spices. The term is sometimes extended to meatless versions based on vegetables or fish; the latter are also commonly known as fishballs.

Hochzeitssuppe, a traditional German wedding soup with meatballs
Raw meatballs
Meatballs being cooked

History

The ancient Roman cookbook Apicius included many meatball-type recipes.[2]

Early recipes included in some of the earliest known Persian cookbooks generally feature seasoned lamb rolled into orange-sized balls and glazed with egg yolk and sometimes saffron. This method was taken to the West and is referred to as gilding. Many regional variations exist, including the unusually large kufte Tabrīzī from Iran's northwestern region, with an average diameter of 20 centimetres (8 in).[3]

Poume d'oranges is a gilded meatball dish from the Middle Ages.[4]

By region

Various recipes of meatballs can be found across Europe and Asia. From Iberia and Sweden to the Indian subcontinent, there is a large variety of meatballs in the kofta family.[5]

Europe

 
Bulgarian big meatball, tatarsko kufte
 
A freshly made batch of Danish meatballs (frikadeller)
 
Klopsy with potato purée from Poland
 
Meatballs served in the Swedish style, with mashed potatoes, brown sauce, lingonberry jam and pickled cucumber
 
İnegöl meatballs from Turkey
  • Albanian fried meatballs (qofte të fërguara) include feta cheese.
  • In Austria, fried meatballs are called Fleischlaibchen or Fleischlaiberl.
  • In Belgium, meatballs are called ballekes or bouletten in Flanders and are usually made of a mixture of beef and pork with bread crumbs and sliced onions. Many other variations exist, including different kinds of meat and chopped vegetables. They are often served in tomato sauce or with sour cherry sauce.
  • In Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, meatballs are called ćufte (from the Turkish word köfte) and are typically made from ground beef or ground lamb, usually served with cooked potatoes and salad on the side.
  • In Britain, faggots are a type of spicy pork meatball. A faggot is traditionally made from pig's heart, liver and a fatty cut of pork (pork belly or back bacon) minced together, with herbs added for flavoring, and sometimes bread crumbs.
  • In Bulgaria, meatballs are called kyufte (from the Turkish word köfte) and are typically made from ground beef or pork, or a mix of the two. They can be shallow fried or grilled and often contain diced onions and soaked bread. They are a very popular dish.
  • In Croatia, meatballs are called polpete in the Dalmatian region or faširani šnicli (faširanci) or ćufte in the continental part. They are typically made with ground beef or a mixture of pork and beef and served with mashed potatoes or rice, often with tomato based sauce.
  • Danish meatballs are known as frikadeller and are typically fried. They are usually made out of ground pork, veal, onions, eggs, salt, and pepper; these are formed into balls and flattened somewhat, so they are pan ready. However, the Danish cuisine also includes other versions, such as boller i karry (meatballs in curry sauce, typically served with rice), and the smaller meatballs used in soup with melboller (Danish dumplings).
  • In Estonia, meatballs are called lihapallid (literally "meatballs") and are similar to those of Finnish or Swedish cuisine.
  • In Finland, meatballs are called lihapullat (literally "meatbuns"). They are made with ground beef or a mix of ground beef and pork, or even with ground reindeer or elk meat, mixed with breadcrumbs soaked in milk or viili, beef stock and finely chopped onions or alternatively, French onion soup readymix. They are seasoned with white pepper and salt. Meatballs are traditionally served with gravy or brown sauce, boiled potatoes (or mashed potatoes), lingonberry jam, and sometimes pickled cucumber or pickled beetroot.
  • In France, meatballs are known as boulettes de viandes or (in Northern France) fricadelles. In Alsace, meatballs are known as Fleischkiechele. They are made of beef, pork, onions, bacon, eggs, and bread. They are served plain or with cream sauce.[citation needed]
  • In Germany, meatballs are mostly known as Frikadelle, Fleischküchle, Fleischpflanzerl, Bulette or Klopse. A very famous variant of meatballs are Königsberger Klopse, which contain anchovy or salted herring, and are eaten with caper sauce.
  • In Greece, fried meatballs are called keftédes (κεφτέδες) (from the Turkish word köfte) and usually include within the mix of bread, onions, parsley and mint leaf.[6] Stewed meatballs are called yuvarlákia (γιουβαρλάκια: (from the Turkish word yuvarlak, which means "round") and usually include small quantities of rice.
  • In Hungary, as well as territories from neighbouring countries where Hungarian is spoken, a meatball is called vagdalt or fasírt [ˈfɒʃiːrt] or fasírozott [ˈfɒʃiːrozott] probably coming from Austrian German faschierte Laibchen. It is a mixture of minced pork, minced onions, garlic, paprika, salt and breadcrumbs, deep fried in oil or pork fat and eaten with potatoes or főzelék. Also, the májgombóc [ˈmaːjɡomboːt͡s] (liver dumpling) is popular in soups.
  • In Italy, meatballs (called polpette [polˈpette], sing. polpetta) are generally eaten either as a main course or in soup. The main ingredients of an Italian meatball are beef and/or pork and sometimes poultry or sausage, salt, black pepper, chopped garlic, olive oil, Romano cheese, eggs, bread crumbs, and parsley, mixed and rolled by hand to a golf ball size. In the Abruzzo region of Italy, especially in the Province of Teramo, the meatballs are typically the size of marbles and are called polpettine [polpetˈtiːne].
  • In the Netherlands, meatballs are called gehaktbal, and are often served with boiled potatoes and vegetables. They are usually made out of mixed beef and pork minced meat, eggs, onion and bread crumbs.
  • In Norway, meatballs are called kjøttkaker (lit. "meatcakes"). They are often served with brown sauce, kålstuing (cabbage in cream sauce), tyttebærsyltetøy (lingonberry jam) and potatoes. Kjøttkaker are similar to kjøttboller, except in form. Kjøttboller are round, like the typical meatball, whereas kjøttkaker or meat cakes are in a patty form, flattened out and a bit oval in shape.
  • In Poland, they are called pulpety [pl] (singular pulpet, from the Italian name) or klopsy (singular klops, from German Klopse), and pulpeciki ("little pulpety"), and are usually served cooked with a variety of sauces (such as tomato or a kind of gravy thickened with flour, as well as forest mushroom sauce) with potatoes, rice or all sorts of kasza. Pulpety or klopsy are usually made from seasoned ground meat with onion and mixed with eggs and either breadcrumbs or wheat rolls soaked in milk or water. Fried pulpety are larger than typical cooked ones. They can be round or flat in shape. The latter, in many countries, would be considered a cross between a meatball and a hamburger. The fried variety is called mielony (short for kotlet mielony, literally "minced cutlet"), and its mass-produced version (as well as the one served in bars, etc.) is the subject of many jokes and urban legends about what is used to produce it.
  • In Portugal, meatballs are called almôndegas [alˈmõdɨɣɐʃ]. These are usually served with a spicy tomato sauce and rice or sometimes pasta.
  • In Romania and Moldova, there are two types of meatballs called chiftele (from the Turkish word köfte) and pârjoale, and are usually deep fried and made with pork or poultry, moistened mashed potatoes and spices. Chiftele are flat and round and contain more meat. A variant mixing rice inside the meatball is used for sour soup, making ciorbă de perişoare.
  • In Russia, they are called kotlety (Russian: котлеты) in flat forms or tefteli (Russian: тефтели) in ball forms. They can be made with chicken, pork, beef or fish. Tefteli have rice, potatoes and other vegetables mixed in as well. Kotlety are only made with meat and spices. They can be served with a side of mashed potatoes or noodles, or in a sauce.
  • In Slovenia, they are called polpeti. They are typically made with ground beef or a mixture of pork and beef and served with mashed potatoes, with tomato-based sauce.
  • In Spain and Hispanic America, meatballs are called albóndigas, derived from the Arabic al-bunduq (meaning hazelnut, or, by extension, a small round object). Albóndigas are thought to have originated as a Berber or Arab dish imported to Spain during the period of Muslim rule. Spanish albóndigas can be served as an appetizer or main course, often in a tomato sauce. Mexican albóndigas are commonly served in a soup with a light broth and vegetables.
  • In Sweden, meatballs are called köttbullar (literally "meat buns"). They are usually made with a mix of ground beef and ground pork, or just with ground beef, which is mixed into a mixture of beaten eggs, breadcrumbs soaked in milk, and grated raw onions or finely chopped and fried onions. Cream is often added for more luxurious versions. The meatball mixture is seasoned with salt and white pepper or a mixture of white pepper and allspice.[7][8] Swedish meatballs are traditionally served with gravy, boiled or mashed potatoes, lingonberry jam, and sometimes pickled cucumber.[8] Traditionally, they are small, around 2–4 centimetres (0.79–1.57 in) in diameter, though larger meatballs are often served at restaurants.[9] In 2018, Sweden's official national Twitter account claimed that Swedish meatballs are based on a Turkish recipe, brought back to Sweden by King Charles XII in 1714, after his five year semi-imprisonment in the Ottoman Empire,[10] which caused comments around the world.[11][12] However, a food and culture expert at Stockholm University claimed that there was no evidence behind this and that the meatballs likely originated in France or Italy instead.[13][14] This caused the original tweeter, Sweden.se, to backtrack a few days later.[15]
  • In Turkey, meatballs are called köfte and are extremely popular; there are many different versions with a variety of shapes – not necessarily round. Meatballs in Turkey are usually made with ground lamb or a mix of ground beef and lamb. Variants are mostly named after their traditional cities; such as İnegöl köfte, İzmir köfte, Akçaabat köfte and Tire köfte. Some of the other popular ones are şiş köfte, kadınbudu köfte [ca; tr] and sulu köfte. There is also a variant called Çiğ köfte that can be vegan.
  • In Ukraine, they are called kotleta (Ukrainian: котлета) when fried and frykadelka (Ukrainian: фрикаделька) when boiled in soup.

Americas

 
A meatball pizza
 
Mexican albóndigas al chipotle

Most meatball recipes found in the Americas are derived from European cuisine influences, notably Italian, Sicily, Iberian (Portuguese-Spanish), and Nordic (Swedish) cuisines.

  • In Brazil, meatballs are called almôndegas, derived from Italian influences. These are usually served with tomato sauce and pasta.
  • In the Canadian province of Quebec, meatballs are the main component of a traditional dish called ragoût de boulettes (meatball stew). The meatballs are made with ground pork, onions, spices like cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg and are simmered in a gravy thickened with toasted flour. The dish is normally served with boiled or mashed potatoes and pickled beets. It is so popular that a factory-processed version of the dish is available canned in most supermarkets throughout the province.
  • In Mexico, albóndigas are commonly served with a light broth and vegetables, or with a mild chipotle sauce.[16]
  • In Puerto Rico, they are called albóndigas and have a strong Italian influence. Puerto Ricans living in New York City brought the recipe back to Puerto Rico, because many Puerto Ricans in New York City lived side by side with Italians. The meatballs are usually seasoned with sofrito, olives, capers, cheese, egg, breadcrums, parsley, carrots, mint, adobo, sazon (annatto, paprika, cumin, and coriander seeds), almonds, and coffee. It is typically eaten in a sandwich with melted cheese on top or stewed in tomato sauce, or with rice, in a dinner called Arroz con albondigas (rice with meatballs)[17]
  • In the United States, meatballs are commonly derived from European cuisines. They are usually served with spaghetti, on pizza, or on a sub (i.e., spaghetti and meatballs, meatball pizza, and meatball sandwiches). In the Southern United States, venison or beef is also often mixed with spices and baked into large meatballs that can be served as an entrée. Another variation, "porcupine meatballs", consists of basic meatballs often with rice in them. Several varieties of meatball pizza exist, such as Tex Mex and Greek-style lamb sweet-and-sour.[18] The meatballs on meatball pizzas may be sliced to reduce their size,[18] sliced in half, or broken up and spread out across the pizza.[19]

Middle East and South Asia

Kofta is a type of meatball or dumpling that is widely distributed in Middle Eastern, South Asian, Mediterranean and Balkan (Central and Eastern Europe) cuisines. The word kofta is derived from Persian kūfta: In Persian, کوفتن (kuftan) means "to beat" or "to grind" or 'meatball'.[20] In the simplest form, koftas consist of balls or fingers of minced or ground meat – usually beef or lamb – mixed with spices and/or onions and other ingredients. The vegetarian variety is popular in India. They can be grilled, fried, steamed, poached, baked or marinated, and may be served with a rich spicy sauce.

  • In Afghanistan, meatballs are used as a traditional dish with homemade soups or are made with a tomato-based sauce that may include some plum seeds to increase tartness and is served with bread or rice which is called Kofta-Chelou. Nowadays meatballs are also grilled on top of pizza.
  • Armenian stewed meatballs/meatball and vegetable stew (kufte rize) is a classic dish often poured over rice for consumption.
  • In Iran, several types of meatballs are consumed. If they are cooked in a stew, they are called kufteh. If they are fried (typically small meatballs), they are called kal-e gonjeshki (literally "sparrow's head"). Both types are consumed with either bread or rice. Typically, herbs are added, and for kufteh, usually the meatball is filled with hard boiled eggs or dried fruits. There are several (at least 10) types; the most famous is "kufte Tabrīzī", traditionally from Tabriz in northwestern Iran.
  • In Israel, meatballs are called ktzitzot basar (Hebrew: קציצות בשר), or sometimes simply ktzitzot (Hebrew: קציצות). Their exact ingredients and preparation vary widely, due to the influence of Jewish immigration from different regions. They are typically made of spiced ground beef, though turkey and chicken versions are also available, and in their common form, they are shaped as slightly flattened balls, pan fried and then cooked in tomato sauce or broth. Other variations also exist, including the gondi, which were brought by the Persian Jews, the albondigas of the Sephardic cuisine, and the kufta that is customary with some Mizrahi Jews.
  • Meatballs are popular in South Asian cuisine. In India, vegetarian versions of koftas are made with paneer, potato, bottle gourd, raw banana or other vegetables. South Asian meatballs are normally cooked in a spicy curry. In Pakistan, they are cooked in a gravy called chorba. Sometimes whole pre-boiled eggs are added, and sometimes the eggs are encased in a layer of the kofta meat to make something resembling a Scotch egg. These kofta dishes are very popular with Indian diaspora and are available in many Indian restaurants.[21]
  • In Syria, meatballs are prepared in numerous ways. They are grilled on charcoal with or without eggplants or cooked in a stew with potato, onion and tomato sauce with a side of rice which is called Dawood Pasha.
  • In West Bengal state of India and Bangladesh, koftas are made with prawns, fish, green bananas, and cabbage, as well as minced goat meat.

East and Southeast Asia

 
A variety of Chinese meatballs and fishballs
  • Chinese meatballs (wanzi) are typically made of pork and can be steamed, boiled or deep fried, sometimes with the addition of soy sauce. Large meatballs, called lion's heads, can range in size from about 5–10 cm (2.0–3.9 in) in diameter. Smaller varieties, called pork balls, are used in soups. A Cantonese variant, the steamed meatball, is made of beef and served as a dim sum dish. Fish and seafood can also used to create different flavors and textures, and vegetarian alternatives to meatballs are served during festivals. In northern China, meatballs made from minced meat and flour, sometimes with the addition of lotus root or water chestnut for texture, are deep-fried and served in a vinegar-based sweet and sour sauce, or in a light broth with chopped coriander.
 
Indonesian bakso noodle soup
  • Indonesian meatballs are called bakso which are usually served in a bowl, served in broth soup, with noodles, rice vermicelli, bean curd (tofu), hard-boiled egg, siomay steamed meat dumpling, and fried wonton. They have a consistent homogeneous texture. Bakso can be found in major Indonesian cities and towns, however, the most popular are bakso Solo and bakso Malang (named after the city of origin). In Malang, bakso bakar (roasted bakso) is also popular. As most Indonesians are Muslim, generally it is made from beef or sometimes chicken.
  • In Japanese cuisine, a popular variant of meatballs is tsukune, minced chicken meatballs on a skewer. The Japanese hamburger steak, hanbāgu, is typically made of ground beef, milk-soaked panko (bread crumbs) and minced, sauteed onions. They are typically eaten with a sauce made from ketchup and Worcestershire sauce. Chinese-style meatballs are also popular. Another kind of meatball called Tsumire is made from ground fish. This is often added to soups or Nabes (stews).
  • In the Philippines, meatballs are called bola-bola or almondigas and are usually served in a misua noodle soup with toasted garlic, squash and pork cracklings. Bola-bola are derived from Hispanic influence on Filipino cuisine and ultimately derived from Moorish influence. Bola-bola are also stewed or pan-fried until golden brown. Bola-bola is also used as a filling for siopao, the local variant of baozi.
  • In Thailand, meatballs (luk chin) are various. The materials can be pork, beef, chicken and fish. The finished meatballs can be incorporated into many dishes. They can be grilled, deep fried, eaten with dipping sauce, or can be used as the component of noodle soups.
  • In Vietnam, meatballs (thịt viên or mọc, bò viên, cá viên) can be used as an ingredient in phở and hủ tiếu. It is also common to cook meatballs in tomato sauce, and finely chopped spring onion and peppers are added before serving. In bún chả (a specialty Vietnamese rice noodle), meatballs are grilled to be chả and served with bún (rice noodles) and dipping sauce (based on fish sauce seasoned with rice vinegar, sugar, garlic, and chili). Xíu Mại is a pork meatball in a tomato sauce often served with a baguette.

See also

References

  1. ^ Esposito, Shaylyn (6 June 2013). "Is Spaghetti and Meatballs Italian?". Sithsonian.com. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
  2. ^ Sally Grainger, Cooking Apicius: Roman Recipes for Today, Prospect Books, 2006, ISBN 1-903018-44-7, p. 17-18
  3. ^ Davidson, Alan (2006). The Oxford companion to Food. Jaine, Tom. (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 448. ISBN 0-19-280681-5. OCLC 70775741.
  4. ^ Adamson, M.W. (2013). Regional Cuisines of Medieval Europe: A Book of Essays. Garland Medieval Casebooks. Taylor & Francis. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-135-30868-1. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  5. ^ Alan Davidson, ed., The Oxford Companion to Food, s.v. kofta
  6. ^ "Κεφτέδες". foodmuseum.cs.ucy.ac.cy (in Greek). Cyprus Food Virtual Museum. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  7. ^ "Swedish meatballs, the perfect recipe". Sweden.se. 1 January 2018.
  8. ^ a b Widenfelt, Sam Swedish Food, Gothenburg, Sweden Esselte 1956.
  9. ^ Herbst, Sharon Tyler Food Lover's Companion Hauppauge, New York: Barron's Educational Series, Inc. 1990.
  10. ^ "Swedish meatballs are actually based on a recipe King Charles XII brought home from Turkey". Twitter. 28 April 2018. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  11. ^ Henley, Jon (3 May 2018). "'My whole life has been a lie': Sweden admits meatballs are Turkish". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  12. ^ Swan, Esan (1 May 2018). "Swedish meatballs are actually Turkish, Sweden says". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12.
  13. ^ Jerdén, Erik (3 May 2018). "Forskare sågar världsnyhet om köttbullar: "Fabricerat"". Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). svd.se. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  14. ^ "'Fake news': Historian denies Swedish meatballs originated in Turkey". SBS News. 7 May 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  15. ^ "There are countless versions of the meatball across the world". Twitter. 4 May 2018. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  16. ^ Randhawa, Jessica (21 December 2018). "Albondigas Soup Recipe". theforkedspoon.com. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  17. ^ "Puerto Rican Style Meatballs/Albóndigas". YouTube.
  18. ^ a b Hernandez, Brian (January 2013). "Jan-Feb 2013 Pizza of the Month: Meatball Pizza". PMQ Pizza Magazine. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  19. ^ Pizza Today, Volume 24, Issues 1-6. Pro Tech Publishing and Communications. 2006. p. 50.
  20. ^ Alan S. Kaye, "Persian loanwords in English", English Today 20:20-24 (2004), doi:10.1017/S0266078404004043.
  21. ^ "Malai Kofta Recipe | Paneer Kofta Curry". Swasthi's Recipes. 2017-08-27. Retrieved 2022-04-23.

External links

  •   Media related to Meatballs at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Cookbook:Meatballs at Wikibooks

meatball, other, uses, disambiguation, meatball, ground, meat, rolled, into, ball, sometimes, along, with, other, ingredients, such, bread, crumbs, minced, onion, eggs, butter, seasoning, cooked, frying, baking, steaming, braising, sauce, there, many, types, m. For other uses see Meatball disambiguation A meatball is ground meat rolled into a ball sometimes along with other ingredients such as bread crumbs minced onion eggs butter and seasoning 1 Meatballs are cooked by frying baking steaming or braising in sauce There are many types of meatballs using different types of meats and spices The term is sometimes extended to meatless versions based on vegetables or fish the latter are also commonly known as fishballs Hochzeitssuppe a traditional German wedding soup with meatballs Raw meatballs Meatballs being cooked Contents 1 History 2 By region 2 1 Europe 2 2 Americas 2 3 Middle East and South Asia 2 4 East and Southeast Asia 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditThe ancient Roman cookbook Apicius included many meatball type recipes 2 Early recipes included in some of the earliest known Persian cookbooks generally feature seasoned lamb rolled into orange sized balls and glazed with egg yolk and sometimes saffron This method was taken to the West and is referred to as gilding Many regional variations exist including the unusually large kufte Tabrizi from Iran s northwestern region with an average diameter of 20 centimetres 8 in 3 Poume d oranges is a gilded meatball dish from the Middle Ages 4 By region EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Meatball news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Various recipes of meatballs can be found across Europe and Asia From Iberia and Sweden to the Indian subcontinent there is a large variety of meatballs in the kofta family 5 Europe Edit Bulgarian big meatball tatarsko kufte A freshly made batch of Danish meatballs frikadeller Klopsy with potato puree from Poland Meatballs served in the Swedish style with mashed potatoes brown sauce lingonberry jam and pickled cucumber Inegol meatballs from Turkey Albanian fried meatballs qofte te ferguara include feta cheese In Austria fried meatballs are called Fleischlaibchen or Fleischlaiberl In Belgium meatballs are called ballekes or bouletten in Flanders and are usually made of a mixture of beef and pork with bread crumbs and sliced onions Many other variations exist including different kinds of meat and chopped vegetables They are often served in tomato sauce or with sour cherry sauce In Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia meatballs are called cufte from the Turkish word kofte and are typically made from ground beef or ground lamb usually served with cooked potatoes and salad on the side In Britain faggots are a type of spicy pork meatball A faggot is traditionally made from pig s heart liver and a fatty cut of pork pork belly or back bacon minced together with herbs added for flavoring and sometimes bread crumbs In Bulgaria meatballs are called kyufte from the Turkish word kofte and are typically made from ground beef or pork or a mix of the two They can be shallow fried or grilled and often contain diced onions and soaked bread They are a very popular dish In Croatia meatballs are called polpete in the Dalmatian region or fasirani snicli fasiranci or cufte in the continental part They are typically made with ground beef or a mixture of pork and beef and served with mashed potatoes or rice often with tomato based sauce Danish meatballs are known as frikadeller and are typically fried They are usually made out of ground pork veal onions eggs salt and pepper these are formed into balls and flattened somewhat so they are pan ready However the Danish cuisine also includes other versions such as boller i karry meatballs in curry sauce typically served with rice and the smaller meatballs used in soup with melboller Danish dumplings In Estonia meatballs are called lihapallid literally meatballs and are similar to those of Finnish or Swedish cuisine In Finland meatballs are called lihapullat literally meatbuns They are made with ground beef or a mix of ground beef and pork or even with ground reindeer or elk meat mixed with breadcrumbs soaked in milk or viili beef stock and finely chopped onions or alternatively French onion soup readymix They are seasoned with white pepper and salt Meatballs are traditionally served with gravy or brown sauce boiled potatoes or mashed potatoes lingonberry jam and sometimes pickled cucumber or pickled beetroot In France meatballs are known as boulettes de viandes or in Northern France fricadelles In Alsace meatballs are known as Fleischkiechele They are made of beef pork onions bacon eggs and bread They are served plain or with cream sauce citation needed In Germany meatballs are mostly known as Frikadelle Fleischkuchle Fleischpflanzerl Bulette or Klopse A very famous variant of meatballs are Konigsberger Klopse which contain anchovy or salted herring and are eaten with caper sauce In Greece fried meatballs are called keftedes keftedes from the Turkish word kofte and usually include within the mix of bread onions parsley and mint leaf 6 Stewed meatballs are called yuvarlakia gioybarlakia from the Turkish word yuvarlak which means round and usually include small quantities of rice In Hungary as well as territories from neighbouring countries where Hungarian is spoken a meatball is called vagdalt or fasirt ˈfɒʃiːrt or fasirozott ˈfɒʃiːrozott probably coming from Austrian German faschierte Laibchen It is a mixture of minced pork minced onions garlic paprika salt and breadcrumbs deep fried in oil or pork fat and eaten with potatoes or fozelek Also the majgomboc ˈmaːjɡomboːt s liver dumpling is popular in soups In Italy meatballs called polpette polˈpette sing polpetta are generally eaten either as a main course or in soup The main ingredients of an Italian meatball are beef and or pork and sometimes poultry or sausage salt black pepper chopped garlic olive oil Romano cheese eggs bread crumbs and parsley mixed and rolled by hand to a golf ball size In the Abruzzo region of Italy especially in the Province of Teramo the meatballs are typically the size of marbles and are called polpettine polpetˈtiːne In the Netherlands meatballs are called gehaktbal and are often served with boiled potatoes and vegetables They are usually made out of mixed beef and pork minced meat eggs onion and bread crumbs In Norway meatballs are called kjottkaker lit meatcakes They are often served with brown sauce kalstuing cabbage in cream sauce tyttebaersyltetoy lingonberry jam and potatoes Kjottkaker are similar to kjottboller except in form Kjottboller are round like the typical meatball whereas kjottkaker or meat cakes are in a patty form flattened out and a bit oval in shape In Poland they are called pulpety pl singular pulpet from the Italian name or klopsy singular klops from German Klopse and pulpeciki little pulpety and are usually served cooked with a variety of sauces such as tomato or a kind of gravy thickened with flour as well as forest mushroom sauce with potatoes rice or all sorts of kasza Pulpety or klopsy are usually made from seasoned ground meat with onion and mixed with eggs and either breadcrumbs or wheat rolls soaked in milk or water Fried pulpety are larger than typical cooked ones They can be round or flat in shape The latter in many countries would be considered a cross between a meatball and a hamburger The fried variety is called mielony short for kotlet mielony literally minced cutlet and its mass produced version as well as the one served in bars etc is the subject of many jokes and urban legends about what is used to produce it In Portugal meatballs are called almondegas alˈmodɨɣɐʃ These are usually served with a spicy tomato sauce and rice or sometimes pasta In Romania and Moldova there are two types of meatballs called chiftele from the Turkish word kofte and parjoale and are usually deep fried and made with pork or poultry moistened mashed potatoes and spices Chiftele are flat and round and contain more meat A variant mixing rice inside the meatball is used for sour soup making ciorbă de perisoare In Russia they are called kotlety Russian kotlety in flat forms or tefteli Russian tefteli in ball forms They can be made with chicken pork beef or fish Tefteli have rice potatoes and other vegetables mixed in as well Kotlety are only made with meat and spices They can be served with a side of mashed potatoes or noodles or in a sauce In Slovenia they are called polpeti They are typically made with ground beef or a mixture of pork and beef and served with mashed potatoes with tomato based sauce In Spain and Hispanic America meatballs are called albondigas derived from the Arabic al bunduq meaning hazelnut or by extension a small round object Albondigas are thought to have originated as a Berber or Arab dish imported to Spain during the period of Muslim rule Spanish albondigas can be served as an appetizer or main course often in a tomato sauce Mexican albondigas are commonly served in a soup with a light broth and vegetables In Sweden meatballs are called kottbullar literally meat buns They are usually made with a mix of ground beef and ground pork or just with ground beef which is mixed into a mixture of beaten eggs breadcrumbs soaked in milk and grated raw onions or finely chopped and fried onions Cream is often added for more luxurious versions The meatball mixture is seasoned with salt and white pepper or a mixture of white pepper and allspice 7 8 Swedish meatballs are traditionally served with gravy boiled or mashed potatoes lingonberry jam and sometimes pickled cucumber 8 Traditionally they are small around 2 4 centimetres 0 79 1 57 in in diameter though larger meatballs are often served at restaurants 9 In 2018 Sweden s official national Twitter account claimed that Swedish meatballs are based on a Turkish recipe brought back to Sweden by King Charles XII in 1714 after his five year semi imprisonment in the Ottoman Empire 10 which caused comments around the world 11 12 However a food and culture expert at Stockholm University claimed that there was no evidence behind this and that the meatballs likely originated in France or Italy instead 13 14 This caused the original tweeter Sweden se to backtrack a few days later 15 In Turkey meatballs are called kofte and are extremely popular there are many different versions with a variety of shapes not necessarily round Meatballs in Turkey are usually made with ground lamb or a mix of ground beef and lamb Variants are mostly named after their traditional cities such as Inegol kofte Izmir kofte Akcaabat kofte and Tire kofte Some of the other popular ones are sis kofte kadinbudu kofte ca tr and sulu kofte There is also a variant called Cig kofte that can be vegan In Ukraine they are called kotleta Ukrainian kotleta when fried and frykadelka Ukrainian frikadelka when boiled in soup Americas Edit A meatball pizza Mexican albondigas al chipotle Most meatball recipes found in the Americas are derived from European cuisine influences notably Italian Sicily Iberian Portuguese Spanish and Nordic Swedish cuisines In Brazil meatballs are called almondegas derived from Italian influences These are usually served with tomato sauce and pasta In the Canadian province of Quebec meatballs are the main component of a traditional dish called ragout de boulettes meatball stew The meatballs are made with ground pork onions spices like cinnamon cloves and nutmeg and are simmered in a gravy thickened with toasted flour The dish is normally served with boiled or mashed potatoes and pickled beets It is so popular that a factory processed version of the dish is available canned in most supermarkets throughout the province In Mexico albondigas are commonly served with a light broth and vegetables or with a mild chipotle sauce 16 In Puerto Rico they are called albondigas and have a strong Italian influence Puerto Ricans living in New York City brought the recipe back to Puerto Rico because many Puerto Ricans in New York City lived side by side with Italians The meatballs are usually seasoned with sofrito olives capers cheese egg breadcrums parsley carrots mint adobo sazon annatto paprika cumin and coriander seeds almonds and coffee It is typically eaten in a sandwich with melted cheese on top or stewed in tomato sauce or with rice in a dinner called Arroz con albondigas rice with meatballs 17 In the United States meatballs are commonly derived from European cuisines They are usually served with spaghetti on pizza or on a sub i e spaghetti and meatballs meatball pizza and meatball sandwiches In the Southern United States venison or beef is also often mixed with spices and baked into large meatballs that can be served as an entree Another variation porcupine meatballs consists of basic meatballs often with rice in them Several varieties of meatball pizza exist such as Tex Mex and Greek style lamb sweet and sour 18 The meatballs on meatball pizzas may be sliced to reduce their size 18 sliced in half or broken up and spread out across the pizza 19 Middle East and South Asia Edit Main article Kofta Kufte Tabrizi Kofta is a type of meatball or dumpling that is widely distributed in Middle Eastern South Asian Mediterranean and Balkan Central and Eastern Europe cuisines The word kofta is derived from Persian kufta In Persian کوفتن kuftan means to beat or to grind or meatball 20 In the simplest form koftas consist of balls or fingers of minced or ground meat usually beef or lamb mixed with spices and or onions and other ingredients The vegetarian variety is popular in India They can be grilled fried steamed poached baked or marinated and may be served with a rich spicy sauce In Afghanistan meatballs are used as a traditional dish with homemade soups or are made with a tomato based sauce that may include some plum seeds to increase tartness and is served with bread or rice which is called Kofta Chelou Nowadays meatballs are also grilled on top of pizza Armenian stewed meatballs meatball and vegetable stew kufte rize is a classic dish often poured over rice for consumption In Iran several types of meatballs are consumed If they are cooked in a stew they are called kufteh If they are fried typically small meatballs they are called kal e gonjeshki literally sparrow s head Both types are consumed with either bread or rice Typically herbs are added and for kufteh usually the meatball is filled with hard boiled eggs or dried fruits There are several at least 10 types the most famous is kufte Tabrizi traditionally from Tabriz in northwestern Iran In Israel meatballs are called ktzitzot basar Hebrew קציצות בשר or sometimes simply ktzitzot Hebrew קציצות Their exact ingredients and preparation vary widely due to the influence of Jewish immigration from different regions They are typically made of spiced ground beef though turkey and chicken versions are also available and in their common form they are shaped as slightly flattened balls pan fried and then cooked in tomato sauce or broth Other variations also exist including the gondi which were brought by the Persian Jews the albondigas of the Sephardic cuisine and the kufta that is customary with some Mizrahi Jews Meatballs are popular in South Asian cuisine In India vegetarian versions of koftas are made with paneer potato bottle gourd raw banana or other vegetables South Asian meatballs are normally cooked in a spicy curry In Pakistan they are cooked in a gravy called chorba Sometimes whole pre boiled eggs are added and sometimes the eggs are encased in a layer of the kofta meat to make something resembling a Scotch egg These kofta dishes are very popular with Indian diaspora and are available in many Indian restaurants 21 In Syria meatballs are prepared in numerous ways They are grilled on charcoal with or without eggplants or cooked in a stew with potato onion and tomato sauce with a side of rice which is called Dawood Pasha In West Bengal state of India and Bangladesh koftas are made with prawns fish green bananas and cabbage as well as minced goat meat East and Southeast Asia Edit A variety of Chinese meatballs and fishballs Chinese meatballs wanzi are typically made of pork and can be steamed boiled or deep fried sometimes with the addition of soy sauce Large meatballs called lion s heads can range in size from about 5 10 cm 2 0 3 9 in in diameter Smaller varieties called pork balls are used in soups A Cantonese variant the steamed meatball is made of beef and served as a dim sum dish Fish and seafood can also used to create different flavors and textures and vegetarian alternatives to meatballs are served during festivals In northern China meatballs made from minced meat and flour sometimes with the addition of lotus root or water chestnut for texture are deep fried and served in a vinegar based sweet and sour sauce or in a light broth with chopped coriander Indonesian bakso noodle soup Indonesian meatballs are called bakso which are usually served in a bowl served in broth soup with noodles rice vermicelli bean curd tofu hard boiled egg siomay steamed meat dumpling and fried wonton They have a consistent homogeneous texture Bakso can be found in major Indonesian cities and towns however the most popular are bakso Solo and bakso Malang named after the city of origin In Malang bakso bakar roasted bakso is also popular As most Indonesians are Muslim generally it is made from beef or sometimes chicken In Japanese cuisine a popular variant of meatballs is tsukune minced chicken meatballs on a skewer The Japanese hamburger steak hanbagu is typically made of ground beef milk soaked panko bread crumbs and minced sauteed onions They are typically eaten with a sauce made from ketchup and Worcestershire sauce Chinese style meatballs are also popular Another kind of meatball called Tsumire is made from ground fish This is often added to soups or Nabes stews In the Philippines meatballs are called bola bola or almondigas and are usually served in a misua noodle soup with toasted garlic squash and pork cracklings Bola bola are derived from Hispanic influence on Filipino cuisine and ultimately derived from Moorish influence Bola bola are also stewed or pan fried until golden brown Bola bola is also used as a filling for siopao the local variant of baozi In Thailand meatballs luk chin are various The materials can be pork beef chicken and fish The finished meatballs can be incorporated into many dishes They can be grilled deep fried eaten with dipping sauce or can be used as the component of noodle soups In Vietnam meatballs thịt vien or mọc bo vien ca vien can be used as an ingredient in phở and hủ tiếu It is also common to cook meatballs in tomato sauce and finely chopped spring onion and peppers are added before serving In bun chả a specialty Vietnamese rice noodle meatballs are grilled to be chả and served with bun rice noodles and dipping sauce based on fish sauce seasoned with rice vinegar sugar garlic and chili Xiu Mại is a pork meatball in a tomato sauce often served with a baguette Japanese Seseri left and Tsukune つくね right Bola bola with misua from the Philippines A bowl of Bun mọc in Vietnam bun is rice vermicelli while mọc means pork ball Fried bola bola from the PhilippinesSee also Edit Food portalFrikandel a Belgian and Dutch snack similar in texture to meatballs but shaped more like a hot dog or sausage than a ball List of meatball dishes Rissole MeatloafReferences Edit Esposito Shaylyn 6 June 2013 Is Spaghetti and Meatballs Italian Sithsonian com Retrieved 14 April 2015 Sally Grainger Cooking Apicius Roman Recipes for Today Prospect Books 2006 ISBN 1 903018 44 7 p 17 18 Davidson Alan 2006 The Oxford companion to Food Jaine Tom 2nd ed Oxford University Press p 448 ISBN 0 19 280681 5 OCLC 70775741 Adamson M W 2013 Regional Cuisines of Medieval Europe A Book of Essays Garland Medieval Casebooks Taylor amp Francis p 27 ISBN 978 1 135 30868 1 Retrieved 15 June 2017 Alan Davidson ed The Oxford Companion to Food s v kofta Keftedes foodmuseum cs ucy ac cy in Greek Cyprus Food Virtual Museum Retrieved 30 November 2015 Swedish meatballs the perfect recipe Sweden se 1 January 2018 a b Widenfelt Sam Swedish Food Gothenburg Sweden Esselte 1956 Herbst Sharon Tyler Food Lover s Companion Hauppauge New York Barron s Educational Series Inc 1990 Swedish meatballs are actually based on a recipe King Charles XII brought home from Turkey Twitter 28 April 2018 Retrieved 2022 11 03 Henley Jon 3 May 2018 My whole life has been a lie Sweden admits meatballs are Turkish The Guardian Retrieved 4 May 2018 Swan Esan 1 May 2018 Swedish meatballs are actually Turkish Sweden says The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Jerden Erik 3 May 2018 Forskare sagar varldsnyhet om kottbullar Fabricerat Svenska Dagbladet in Swedish svd se Retrieved 4 May 2018 Fake news Historian denies Swedish meatballs originated in Turkey SBS News 7 May 2018 Retrieved 28 February 2020 There are countless versions of the meatball across the world Twitter 4 May 2018 Retrieved 2022 11 03 Randhawa Jessica 21 December 2018 Albondigas Soup Recipe theforkedspoon com Retrieved 20 December 2019 Puerto Rican Style Meatballs Albondigas YouTube a b Hernandez Brian January 2013 Jan Feb 2013 Pizza of the Month Meatball Pizza PMQ Pizza Magazine Retrieved 31 August 2014 Pizza Today Volume 24 Issues 1 6 Pro Tech Publishing and Communications 2006 p 50 Alan S Kaye Persian loanwords in English English Today 20 20 24 2004 doi 10 1017 S0266078404004043 Malai Kofta Recipe Paneer Kofta Curry Swasthi s Recipes 2017 08 27 Retrieved 2022 04 23 External links Edit Media related to Meatballs at Wikimedia Commons Cookbook Meatballs at Wikibooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meatball amp oldid 1150667394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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