Wednesday, 10 June 2026

Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs

Sometimes my Mum would serve a can of meatballs for tea along with mashed potato. When I was first married, I cooked Mary Berry's frikadeller recipe from Home&Freezer Digest, using a mix of pork and beef. IKEA arrived in the 80s and I was hooked on their Swedish meatballs. Now they sell meatballs, chicken balls, veggie balls and plant based balls. A useful freezer standby - I posted about how to serve your 'Swedish' meatballs in a variety of different ways back in 2015
Recently I rustled up some home made meatballs - this time with a middle eastern twist, using my Ottolenghi Simple Cookbook which Julian gave me for my birthday last year.

I had some leftover lamb and I flicked through this book and found this. It was very easy and very tasty. I had enough lamb to make enough for four portions - so we ate half and put the rest away for later in the week. 


500g minced lamb
100g feta, crumbled into roughly 1cm pieces
2 tbsp picked thyme leaves
2 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
10g parsley leaves, finely chopped
1 slice white bread, blitzed
½ tsp ground cinnamon
Salt and black pepper
1 tbsp olive oil
2 tsp pomegranate molasses, plus 1 tbsp extra to serve (optional)

Heat the oven to 200C. Put all the ingredients apart from the oil and pomegranate molasses in a large bowl, add three-quarters of a teaspoon of salt and plenty of pepper, and mix with your hands to combine. Still using your hands, divide the meatball mix into 18 roughly 35g portions and form each into 4cm-wide balls. Heat the oil in a large frying pan on a medium-high flame, then fry the meatballs (cook them in batches, if need be), for five to six minutes in total, gently turning them throughout, until golden brown all over. Transfer the meatballs to an oven tray lined with baking paper, drizzle pomegranate molasses over the top, if using, and bake for five minutes, to cook through. Serve hot, with a final tablespoon of pomegranate molasses spooned on top. [I baked mine in the air fryer]

I forgot to take a picture of mine - but they did look exactly like Yotam's, and we liked the flavour. It was the end of my bottle of pomegranate molasses, I shall have to get some more at Oli's when I am next in London with Liz. It does give a lovely sweet-sharp flavour. I served the meatballs with plain boiled rice, and a quick salad made with grated carrot. 

This is such a fun children's book. We have had hot weather, cool weather, dry weather, rain, thunder and lightning in the past fortnight. But no meatballs!

How do you eat yours?


34 comments:

  1. They look delicious! (Your blog has actually appeared on my feed this morning, first time in ages.)

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    1. Yours has been very hit&miss on mine too

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  2. I am not a !over of meatballs, in fact I eat hardly any meat. My two sons love meatballs, and especially served in a rich tomato sauce with pasta. I am sure they they would like your recipe. Regards Sue H

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  3. We used to use those tins of meatballs when we were camping- along with tins of potatoes and tins of carrots. Cooking for 5 on 2 gas rings of a picnic stove was fun!

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    1. I remember them from self catering holidays too

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  4. I don't think I've ever seen a can of meatballs over here! I haven't made meatballs in ages, but, my favorite way to prepare meatballs is in a curry, served with rice and vegetables. :)

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    1. We had the first ones with rice. Last night I got the second batch out of the freezer, and served them in my hone made pita bread with salad and a yogurt and mint dressing.

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  5. The meatballs sound lovely and I like the idea of them in pitta with yoghurt and mint.Quite yummy!

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  6. Tinned meatballs are a great store cupboard standby, yours look a cut above the rest.
    Alison in Devon x

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    1. They are completely unlike canned ones

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  7. I've never really liked meatballs, either meaty ones or plant based ones. The few times I have made them I have simply divided a burger of a sort I do like, into three or four parts and rolled them into balls.

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    1. Deconstructing burgers is a good way to go. In the past, when I have had 5 to feed and only 4 burgers, I've made them into meatballs!!

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    2. I always did the same for sausages to make 6 sausages serve 4 people

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  8. We only seem to eat meatballs when Iris is coming for tea. She loves the Ikea ones but says that Morrisons ones are ok. I normally serve them in a tomatoey sauce with pasta. Xx

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    1. I'm with Iris. IKEA balls are more tasty than Morrisons!! 🧆

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  9. Thank you for this great meal suggestion and for the reminder to look at my copy of “Simple” which was a present a while ago. Nicky K

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    Replies
    1. His recipes always seem best in summer 🌞🌞

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  10. We don't eat meatballs at our house. Many, many years ago, DH turned to me with a pained look and said, "Don't ever serve meatballs again!" I can't remember what was wrong with them but obviously they were not particularly appealing. 🥹

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  11. Tinned meatballs were one of my guilty pleasures. I loved them, but these days I can't have gluten.
    IKEA meatballs are gluten free and I love their veggie meatballs, though I can't walk well enough to get them these days. I used to think it worth a trip to IKEA just for those.

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    1. I didn't realise ikea meatballs are GF. That's a useful fact!

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  12. I make a homemade sweet and sour sauce and warm the cooked meatballs in it. I bake my meatballs to cook them.

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  13. I rarely eat them and they weren't in my childhood really either

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  14. Homemade are best... I've m and s frozen ones in the freezer and they were like rocks when I air fryied them. I'll casserole them next time and see how that goes.

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    1. Air frying meatballs from frozen isn't ever successful in my experience.

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  15. I use my dearest departed mother-in-law's Sicilian recipe for meatballs and now my two sons have taught their wives the recipe (never be as good as mine but don't tell anyone I said that!). I recently bought a bag of frozen Slimming World ones but they were inedible!

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    1. I ate Sicilian meatballs in Sicily. Fantastic!!

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  16. Homemade meatballs are delicious and your recipe looks like a good one to try out on the family. Thank you Angela.

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