I was craving meatballs the other day, but looking to do
something different. That’s when I came across this recipe on food.com for
Danish Meatballs with Creamy Dill Sauce. It had been ages since I last had
Danish meatballs, and had never had them with dill sauce. Having bought much
more fresh dill than I ended up needing, this worked out beautifully. Whether
you want to make your own meatballs, or prefer to buy to those frozen from the
market, I won’t judge. I would, however, encourage you to make this delicious
sauce, and be certain to use fresh dill. Both meatball and sauce recipe can be
halved or doubled to suit your needs.
Danish Meatballs with Creamy Dill Sauce
Slightly adapted from food.com
Meatballs:
1 ½ lb. ground beef
½ lb. ground pork
2 t. salt
½ t. freshly ground black pepper
2 large eggs
1/3 c. finely chopped onion
½ c. heavy cream
2 c. dry bread
crumbs
½ c. melted butter
Sauce:
½ c. butter
1/3 c. flour
2 c. chicken
broth
2 c. sour cream
2 - 3 T. chopped fresh dill
½ t. ground
allspice
Salt and pepper to taste
Paprika
In a large bowl mix the meat, salt, pepper, eggs, onion, and cream. With moist
hands (mixture will be sticky), shape into 1 inch balls (as you can see,
because I was having this as a main dish, I made large meatballs). Roll the
meatballs in breadcrumbs until well coated.
Arrange in a single layer on shallow baking pan. Drizzle melted butter over the
meatballs. Bake at 375°, turning three or four times, until evenly browned,
about 35 minutes
Meanwhile, make the sauce:
Melt butter in a large saucepan over low heat. Whisk in the flour until smooth.
Gradually stir in the chicken broth. Continue stirring until thickened and
bubbly, and then blend in sour cream, dill, and seasonings.
Place meatballs in a serving dish and cover with sauce. Serve over mashed
potatoes, egg noodles, or rice.
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I've not had Danish meatballs, but they look delicious, and that sauce looks wonderful. What makes them Danish?
ReplyDeleteDanish meatballs contain beef and pork and are served in a rich creamy sauce.
ReplyDeleteI will try these for sure.
ReplyDeleteLinda, the difference is the pork. That makes the meatballs fluffier. Swedish meatballs may contain pork, but by definition, do not necessarily have to.
ReplyDeleteAw, man...this sounds deliciously rich and wonderful! I've never eaten any kind of dill sauce that I can recall, but I know I would like it!!! I like that you made the meatball a decent size, too. No fooling around with those little baby things! Remember that old commercial where the guy quipped, "Now THAT'S a meatball!"?😁
ReplyDelete