Site icon Adrienne Katz Kennedy

Sneaky little meatballs

On most days, ‘sneaky little meatballs’ is how I lovingly describe my children. Today however I’m discussing the actual thing you eat. We eat this type of meatball so often in such a wide variety, it suddenly dawned on me it’s a damn good party trick when it comes to adding in extra veg, taking the edge off of the ‘what’s for dinner’ conundrum and reducing food waste.

Having gone through it ourselves with our children, I’m all too aware of how easy it is to give fear and hesitation a seat at the table when it comes to trying new foods, and most especially at dinner time. Parents have no energy left for protest. Kids are worn out from school or nursery or just being two years old (it’s exhausting!).

It’s not just children either. Anyone living on their own likely has little desire to start fussing over a new type of dish or a well balanced meal for one by the end of the day. Real life example: when I met my husband he lived on protein shakes and cereal. When it comes to weeknight dinner, we are all in need of maximising any and all ways available to make life a bit easier and happier on ourselves WITHOUT sacraficing things like our health or variety. Variety, in all aspects of life (and especially when it comes to food), is what makes it fun.

May I suggest, a sneaky meatball. Rather than the standard beef, breadcrumbs, egg-and-done, this little trick adds a protein, a vegetable and whatever spices you have kicking around the cupboard or herbs that need using up. It bulks out the meal, adds extra vitamins and fibre, uses up wilting veg or dust-fighting spices AND the combinations are endless. Plus it helps set the tone for trying new foods, by making them look familiar, while still slowly introducing new flavours and textures. Here are a few options to consider when you next make meatballs:

Peppers, garlic & parsley with beef

Carrot, cumin and smoked paprika with lamb

Spinach, shallots, coriander and pomegranate molassas with turkey

Spring greens, ginger and Chinese five spice with pork

Mushrooms and chives with smashed white beans for a vegan adaptation

A few rules of thumb on how to make this work with whatever you have:

I’d love to hear your thoughts on what flavour combinations you’d consider trying or what’s been successful for you!

Exit mobile version