When I think about where my love of cooking comes I always go back to my Grandma Frasca, and nothing reminds me more of her than Meatballs and Sauce with fresh homemade pasta. My grandmother was an amazing cook and spending hours in the kitchen with her during their annual summer visits is my all-time favorite childhood memory.
I have several different meatball recipes that I like to make, but these are the most influenced by my grandmothers. I like to call these Anyday Meatballs because they are the simplest to execute. The sauce benefits from a few hours of simmering time to develop the flavors, but you decide how long that should be!
I like a light, delicate meatball that is not at all dense. I always use fresh white bread and milk as my binder instead of dry bread crumbs. And, I truly believe that canned whole peeled tomatoes pushed through a food mill is far superior to processing in a food processor or crushed canned tomatoes. I have used all of these options and it’s always so much better when using a food mill. If you like a chunky sauce, leave the tomatoes whole, give them a good smoosh with your hands and let them cook down, that is how my grandmother did it.
Jump to RecipeAnyday Meatballs and Sauce
Course: Anyday DinnerCuisine: ItalianDifficulty: Medium8
servings30
minutes2
hoursThese are my Anyday Meatballs and Sauce. They can cook all day or just until you need to serve dinner. Quantities are suggestions, make changes to suit you and yours.
Ingredients
- Meatballs
2 pieces white bread, crusts removed
1/4 cup whole milk
1 egg
1/4 cup Italian parsley, finely minced
1/2 cup Pecorino Romano, finely grated
2 lbs ground beef, 80/20 preferred
1 lb ground pork
2 tsp kosher salt
3 Tablespoons Olive Oil
- Sauce
1 onion, small dice
1 large clove garlic, finely minced
7 oz tomato paste
2 cups red wine
2 ea – 28 oz cans whole peeled tomatoes, passed through a food mill
1 Tablespoon Diamond Crystal Kosher salt, use less if using another brand
2 Tablespoons Sherry Vinegar or Red Wine Vinegar
1 rind from Pecorino Romano or Parmigiana Reggiano
4 oz fresh basil leaves
Pecorino Romano for serving
Directions
- For meatballs: tear up bread and place in a small mixing bowl with the milk. Let soak for 10-15 minutes. Squeeze out excess milk and place moistened bread in another mixing bowl.
- To the bread and milk mixture add the egg, parsley, and Romano. Mix until completely combined. Add the ground beef and pork and gently mix until there are no more large pieces of bread mixture showing. Careful not to over mix.
- Using the scoop size of your choice, scoop, level, and roll meatballs. Depending on the size scoop you use you will get 12-32 meatballs.
- Heat a heavy bottom dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add 1 Tablespoon olive oil. When the oil is rippling in the bottom of the pan and just about to start smoking, add in the meatballs. Working in batches, making sure not to crowd the pan (I like a good 1-2 inches between each) brown on all sides. Remove meatballs to a plate and reserve.
- Reduce heat to medium and add diced onion and garlic. Saute until the onion starts to “melt” and develops a deep brown coloring. Add in the tomato paste and continue cooking for 15-20 minutes.
- When the onion, garlic, and tomato paste reaches the color of mahogany deglaze with red wine. Cook until the red wine reduces by half.
- Add in the milled tomatoes, salt, vinegar, and Romano rind. Bring to a simmer and the reserved meatballs and reduce the heat to medium-low. Cover with a lid slightly cracked, and simmer for 1 1/2-3 hours, stirring occasionally.
- Taste for seasoning, more salt? Maybe a dash more vinegar? Add torn basil leaves to serve.