Dee-li-cious, ChryZ!
Awesome recipe and phenomenal presentation. Thank you for this. This is a nice alternative to a clam chowder. Have you tried that dish with Blue Mussels? would be adding a good hint of Euro touch to the soup and they are cheaper to come by, too.
So, let's cook.
I returned yesterday afternoon from a 2-day lecture and had no idea about what to cook. Fortunately, the wife had done some shopping for "Königsberger Klopse" (with rice.
The "Königsberger Klopse" (literal translation "meatballs Koenigsberg/Kaliningrad style") are a traditional German dish wich is said to have its origins in the east prussian cuisine. The dish consists of poached meatballs made from mixed ground beef and pork, and a white sauce with capers. Only a few places make them by hand nowadays, this is a classic example of a frozen/canned dish over here. It's a shame since the preparation is simple, yet a bit time-consuming. The dish took me about 90 minutes from first to last photo.
The ingredients for a wife and a really hungry Onkel are:
For the meatballs:
- 500 grams (1 good lb) of mixed mincemeat,
- 1 onion,
- 1 dry, day-old bread roll or 1/4cup of breadcrumbs,
- 1 whole egg,
- 2 tbs chopped parsley (not pictured, I had to resort to frozen parsley),
- salt and pepper (not pictured).
For the sauce
- 1 litre (a good 1/4 gallon) of hot broth,
- 3 bay leaves,
- 2 tbs or 1 small glass of cured/pickled capers,
- 2-3 tbs butter,
- 3-4 tbs wheat flour,
- 3-4tbs double cream,
- juice of 1/2 lemon,
- salt and pepper (not pictured).
Side dish of choice (we had rice, but potatoes are common as well)
First, soak the bread in 1/4 of the broth. When it is soaked and spongy (this should take between 15 and 30 minutes, depending on the bread roll), pour it into a hairnet sieve and squeeze it until it stops dripping, then add it with the mincemeat into a mixing bowl:
Now cube the onion and add the cubes along with the whole egg and the chopped parsley to the bowl.
Add a good amount of salt and pepper, then mix until you get a solid and homogenous dough. This is done the easiest when you squeeze the dough with your hands, like pressing an orange:
Let the dough rest for a few minutes, then make 12-16 meatballs from it:
In the meanwhile, pour the remaining 3/4 of the broth into a wide pot, add the bay leaves and get it cooking:
When the broth is cooking, reduce the heat to 1/3 and add the meatballs and pouch them with the lid on for about 15 minutes. It is
vital that the broth is only slightly simmering over the pouching process, as heavy boiling broth (aka cooking) will cause the meatballs to fall apart. If the broth starts cooking heavily after adding the meatballs, better remove the pot from the stove until the stove has cooled down a bit:
After about 15 minutes, remove the meatballs from the broth and set them aside.
Get the side dish going:
Pour the broth through a hairnet sieve and clean the pot with a kitchen cloth. Put the pot back on the stove and turn the heat up to 2/3. Add the butter to the pot and melt it until it starts to foam a bit, then add the flour and stir it in with an egg whip (This process is called "creating a roux", thanks to bovo for the explanation). Keep stirring until the roux gets a golden brown colour:
Now add the broth to the roux under constant stirring until the roux and broth have blended completely into the white sauce base. reduce the heat again to 1/3 and let the sauce cook lightly for about 10 minutes or until the side dish is ready:
Finish Line:
Refine the sauce with the cream, the drained capers, the lemon juice and some salt and pepper:
Now add the meatballs to the finished sauce and let them heat up for 2 minutes:
DONE!
Serve them on a plate with a good helping of the sauce. As the dish itself is rather pale, a decoration with the remaining chopped parsley is recommended:
I had a bottle of "
Malzbier" from a local brewery as the accompanying drink, but beer or a dry white wine would also work out fine:
Enjoy!
I planned on baking a chocolate cake today, but due to heavy liquids' coverage of that base (and a heavy case of sunday procrastination), I declare my actions as postponed!
Tonights dish will be a rump steak on red oak leaf and lollo bianco / frisee lettuce.
Stay tuned and keep them coming!