Boiling meatballs, how long?
I would like to make some meatballs to go with a generic pasta dish. I am thinking about 10 balls from a pound of raw ground pork or beef. I have been searching for how to safely do this. Some say to boil the meatballs for about 30 min, others claim that 10 min is enough. I imagine just boiling them in a large pot in broth or water with spices added.
How can one safely boil meatballs?
Best Answer
Getting meatballs done is a matter of raising them to the correct internal temperature. 30 minutes seems like a long time even for large meatballs, but it depends on many factors. The best way is to pull the biggest one out and test it, first see if it's firm or squishy - firm means it's getting close to done. If it's firm stick an instant read thermometer into the very center of it, if the temperature is at or above 160F (70C) then they are all done. If you test a medium size one the larger ones may need a little longer.
Incidentally, boiling meatballs is not the only way to do it, and my least favorite because some of the flavor is lost to the water. You can bake them, fry them, or cook them in a sauce as well. Cooking them in a sauce imparts flavor to the sauce, you'll get the fat from the meat too, though.
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Quick Answer about "Boiling meatballs, how long?"
Gently place meatballs one at a time into the boiling water. Stir gently once or twice so they will cook evenly. Boil over med-high heat for 13-15 min. or until it is cooked through. Remove meatballs with a slotted spoon.Is it better to boil meatballs?
Boiling would set the shape of the meatballs and cook them more thoroughly, but you would lose a lot of the flavor! Baking would be a better way to cook them through.Can you boil frozen meatballs in water?
Place desired amount of frozen meatballs in a pan with 1/4-inch water. Bring to a boil and reduce heat. Simmer 20 minutes or until thoroughly heated.Darlene's Concoctions - Easy Boiled Meatballs!
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Answer 2
If you only boil the meatballs, food safety shouldn't be your primary concern, making something tasteless is :-). Please brown them first! That will take a few minutes. Then you can finish cooking them by simmering in the sauce, but also impart some flavor to the sauce in the process.
Hardly any flavor will go from something in the water to boiled meatballs, you'll just leech all the flavor out. The herbs should go in the meatballs. I usually find that if I put the water on when I put the meatballs in the sauce, the desired degree of doneness/flavor melding will be achieved by the time the pasta is done (although mind that I usually make whole wheat pasta, so maybe add 5mn simmering if you don't).
Answer 3
Sous Vide them for an hour or so at 65c. You can seal them first or get some colour on them after. Get all the juice that comes out of them and then stick it in your pasta sauce - mad flavour!
Or just seal them off in a pan for flavour, then finish them in the pasta sauce for 10 mins most.
Answer 4
Frying makes rubber balls. Boiling makes British food. I don't understand why almost no one does this, but put meatballs under the broiler [spread out on the sheet(tray) to start] to get the Mallard {quack, quack} reaction.
After browning the first side, it's easy to flip them over and lean them against each other in the center of the sheet to brown the other side. I don't even use Tongs.
After browning meatballs, simmer them in sauce or stock to bring internal temperature up to "cooked".
If you hate tender, tasty meatballs that have no hint of rubberiness, then please do not follow this suggestion.
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Images: Castorly Stock, Pixabay, Gary Barnes, Castorly Stock