Swedish Meatballs
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Nothing beats homemade meatballs smothered in a creamy gravy sauce, and yes, they taste so much better than the IKEA version!
Remember those trips to Ikea where the budget-friendly furniture finds are the last things on your mind but all you can think about are those amazing swedish meatballs? Well, that was always me. But since we’ve moved to the Bay Area, our nearest Ikea is in the middle of the most trafficked area in the entire city so it’s really hard to get my swedish meatball fix when needed. Thankfully, I’ve found a homemade version that tastes even better than the original.
These Swedish meatballs have been on my bucket list for nearly 3 years, and I’m so glad to finally cross this off my list. I don’t know why it took me so long to make it – it’s so easy to make, and it really tastes a million times better than the Ikea version. Plus, you can always make a huge batch of meatballs (by either doubling or tripling the recipe) and storing the uncooked meatballs in the freezer. When you have that Swedish meatball craving, you can just defrost these babies overnight. So simple and easy, right?
And the sauce – you can’t forget about that creamy, heavenly gravy sauce that these meatballs are smothered in with the browned up meatball bits. Those meatball bits stuck to the bottom of the pan really make the gravy what it is. I could practically drink it! Just be sure to make a little bit extra if you serve these over a bed of egg noodles – you’ll really want a portion to slurp down!
Swedish Meatballs
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons olive oil, divided
- 1 onion, diced
- 1 pound ground beef
- 1 pound ground pork
- ½ cup Panko*
- 2 large egg yolks
- ¼ teaspoon ground allspice
- ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
- Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
For the gravy
- ¼ cup unsalted butter
- ⅓ cup all-purpose flour
- 4 cups beef broth
- ¾ cup sour cream
- Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley leaves
Instructions
- Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a large cast iron skillet over medium heat. Add onion, and cook, stirring frequently, until onions have become translucent, about 2-3 minutes.
- In a large bowl, combine ground beef, ground pork, Panko, egg yolks, allspice, nutmeg and cooked onion; season with salt and pepper, to taste. Using a wooden spoon or clean hands, stir until well combined. Roll the mixture into 1 1/4-to-1 1/2-inch meatballs, forming about 24 meatballs.
- Add remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil to the skillet. Add meatballs, in batches, and cook until all sides are browned, about 4-5 minutes. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate.
- To make the gravy, melt butter in the skillet. Whisk in flour until lightly browned, about 1 minute. Gradually whisk in beef broth and cook, whisking constantly, until slightly thickened, about 1-2 minutes. Stir in sour cream; season with salt and pepper, to taste.
- Stir in meatballs and cook, stirring occasionally, until heated through and thickened, about 8-10 minutes.
- Serve immediately, garnished with parsley, if desired.
Notes
Did you make this recipe?
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Gonna try these tonight – they look great!
Holly http://www.authorhollyryan.com
Thanks for a great recipe. I made a double batch and froze half. I’m happy I found your site.
I made these tonight and they were really great! It was a hit with my teenaged boys, I like that the recipe yields a lot (I’m usually doubling and tripling recipes). I’ve never had time on my trips to Ikea to try the meatballs, my exposure to Swedish meatballs is courtesy of Lean Cuisine (embarrassing to admit!). Nice to have a reliable recipe to make them (better) at home. Thanks for posting.
Wow. Looks like there was all kinds of drama when this recipe was first posted regarding substituting the ground pork. Whatever. People like to be difficult,I guess. I found this recipe because I needed something easy for a throw together,spur of the moment, last minute dinner. All I had on hand was 1 1/2 pounds of ground beef, so that’s what I used. I also halved the gravy recipe. (I was only feeding 4 not very hungry people). I served these with Hasselback potatoes. Perfect. Tons of compliments. Next time I will make this exactly as written. I’m sure it will be that much better. If you have ground pork, use it – if you don’t, or don’t want to use it- then don’t- just understand that the meatballs will taste a little different,thats all.
Thank you for sharing this! Looks amazing! I am going to try this tonight! Not everyone in my family eats pork (health reasons) so, I will be using all beef. I know it will turn out amazing… Again, thank you! You should get your own cooking show! I have tried another recipe from you and it was amazing! You also seem to be very sweet and respectful! (I made that deduction by reading the comments…)
Wow this comment section is like “Hi, yeah, I’m allergic to onion, beef, pork, egg, nutmeg, and all forms of dairy but I’ve decided to make this anyway so I’m going to need you to personally provide me substitutions for each of those ingredients. Also, my personal assistant/unpaid intern Peter isn’t around to read me the recipe so could you do me a solid and make step-by-step audio instructions (with a soft voice, please, I find loud voices to be abrasive) as my eyes get ever so tired when I am forced to read something for more than 8 seconds and your instructions aren’t clear enough :(”
Seriously though, I tried these meatballs last night and they were delicious. Thanks so much for the awesome recipe.
Had to scroll waaay far down to get past the snotty comments and leave my own not snotty comment saying I made these per the easy to read recipe and they were lovely. I hope your other recipes (which I’m sure are just as lovely) don’t result in similar snotty comment-leaving by ignorant or entitled people. Thanks for posting.
I just stumbled on this recipe and I have to comment – this is the most insane comments section I’ve ever seen for a recipe. Chungah, you should be applauded for your polite responses to everybody. Who knew posting recipes online could lead to such abuse. I’ll try the recipe tonight – I’m sure it’s wonderful.
I found this recipe because I was looking for something to do with some thawed ground turkey I had. Maybe it would taste better with the beef and pork called for I don’t know. All I know is that I will be making these again and again and again. They were SO good! Thank you for a wonderful recipe!
I made these the other night. I get “Try the World’ every other month and the most recent delivery was Sweden and I decided I wanted to make Swedish meatballs to eat with some of the other things in the box. My wife was a bit surprised since I’m not really a fan of having meat, gravy, and potatoes (yeah, I know, I’m weird) but I was inspired to do something Swedish!
We absolutely loved the outcome. The gravy went so well over our smashed potatoes and it really did taste great. Our meatballs were a mix of beef, pork and veal. We served them with lingonberry preserves which I highly recommend since they really added a dimension to the meal. It was like Swedish thanksgiving! 8)
I’ve probably made hundreds of recipes online in the past years but have only left a review once or twice. I wanted to let you know I LOVE this recipe. The first time I made it a few years ago, I remember thinking it was one of the best things I ever made/ate. I’ve made it many times since and still love it (as do all those I make it for), so I wanted to thank you for sharing it. I was picking up ingredients at the store last week and saw the comments at the top for the first time and was in shock! What a bunch of crazy, delusional, entitled wackos. I know you must work very hard on this site and you share it with us for free, who do these people think they are? I am a teacher and deal with a lot of parents with exactly the same attitude, luckily they are not all like that and I love the kids, but I know it can be gut-wrenching to have people crap all over something you pour your heart and soul into. So, thank you for your contribution, this recipe has made many people happy over the years!
I made these exactly as posted. Fantastic!!!!!!! AND, btw made them gluten free by using gluten free panko and brown rice flour.
I have made Swedish meatballs for several decades. They can tolerate some variation. In my opinion the importance of fatty meat in the ball is that it renders out when you fry it leaving caves and holes for the sauce to fill. Turkey meatballs will probably just have a surface covering.
Fat is also key to thickening the sauce. Flour cooked in fat and then thinned with a water base liquid makes gravy. If you just add flour to a fat free environment you will get flour and water paste. Fat is good for you if you aren’t ridiculous about the amounts.
My friends and family keep telling me I should do a cooking blog. The rude people on here are exactly why I don’t. Geez people, most bloggers aren’t professional chefs. Just cooks having fun. If you can’t figure out how to change a recipe to suit your needs, then don’t use that recipe. You don’t have to drag the poor blogger thru the mud! Maybe you shouldn’t even be cooking if you can’t figure it out for yourself. Start buying the pre made crap at the grocery store.
Made these Swedish meatballs today and fell in love with them! They are SO GOOD! I used ground chicken and turkey instead of beef and pork and salted butter instead of unsalte and I can’t stop eating these things!
I will DEFINITELY make these again in the future. Thanks Chungah!
HI there,
we have difficulties finding sour cream here, what can you advise as a subtitutes? heavy dream or full cream milk?
Thank you
Greek yogurt would be a great substitute.
I made these tonight, and everyone in my family loved them-thank you!
Made these for a party and they were delicious. I usually don’t fry my meatballs but I am glad I followed the recipe because without frying them you don’t get all of that beautiful fond left in the bottom of the pan and that’s what makes the gravy so delicious. I added a pinch of the allspice and the nutmeg to the gravy to marry the spice flavor in the meat to the flavor of the gravy.
I must have made my meatballs a little smaller because I got 35 from the recipe, but that was ok, more to go around. There were none left by the end of the night. I’ll be making these again!
And as to all the back and forth about substitutions, really. We are on these sights because we all love to cook and eat good food. If you sub something out a fat the recipe doesn’t come out well, that’s on you, not on the recipe. Let’s keep it civil, there’s too much snarkiness from both sides of this issue.
On the day I was planning to make this, there was no ground pork at the grocery store. On a whim, I subbed ground Italian sausage for the ground pork and left out the nutmeg and allspice (because the Italian sausage is already spiced). It was (damn) delicious! I have made it a couple of times since then the same way. Definitely a fave!
Made this last night. Delicious and easy!