Nigel Slater's Pork Meatballs in Broth

Meatballs! Oh, meatballs. Is there a more wonderful food? More pleasing to shriek out loud whilst walking your child, more lovely to mix and roll, more delicious to eat? I usually make meatballs in sauce, like the good Italian I am, and forget how many other ways there are to eat meatballs. But when Katie reminded me the other day, I practically tripped over myself getting to the store to buy ground pork.

I mean, ground pork flavored with mint and chiles and garlic and scallions, rolled into little balls and then suspended in broth? Hello? Was there ever any chance that I would hear about this recipe and not make it? No, I tell you. NO. (They're like skinless wontons in soup! In fact, next time I might actually wrap them in wonton skins.)

The recipe comes from Nigel Slater's Tender, his book on growing and cooking with vegetables, and it makes me giggle to no end that the original title for this recipe is Chicken Broth with Pork and Kale.

What?

Why, if you are given the opportunity to use the word meatball, would you ever shy away from using it? Doesn't Nigel know MEATBALL! is how you sell a recipe? Chicken Broth with Pork and Kale, I mean, I wouldn't even bother reading the recipe after seeing that title. I'd just flip on by. Tell me you wouldn't. GO AHEAD. (Yeesh! I'm worked up or something!)

Anyway, I am herewith rebranding the recipe as Nigel Slater's Pork Meatballs in Broth, because meatballs deserve all the love and attention they command, every last drop of it. Loud and proud, meatballs, loud and proud.

Now, onto the recipe. It is so easy a child could do it. You simply flavor ground pork with chiles and herbs and garlic and scallions, then roll it into little balls. Emphasis on little! You want these to be one-bite meatballs, maximum two-bite. Then you lower them into simmering broth for a few minutes. The original recipe has you fry them first, but we all know how I feel about that. The meatballs taste just as delicious and you get to skip a whole, messy, pan-dirtying step. Boom!

Of course it'd be best if you made this with your own, lovingly prepared chicken broth. Of course! Of course. However, I am here to tell you that I made these with Better Than Bouillon vegetable stock (I should be getting stock options in the company at this point, shouldn't I?) (and yes, I know that it is most definitely not Whole30-approved, but life is full of tragic decisions and this was never going to be one of them) and it was sublime. Seriously! Totally delectable.

Finally, the original recipe tells you to blanch kale leaves and then float them in the broth (which is what Katie did, if you'd like photographic support). But kale has cleared out of stores here (and thank goodness is all I can say to that), so instead I used a very firm, very fresh zucchini sliced paper-thin and just threw the slices in at the very end of the cooking time. Why the zucchini? Because it's all I had in terms of green vegetables. Honest! No other reason. I imagine that a few spinach leaves would be nice here, too.

Meatballs! The best.

Nigel Slater's Pork Meatballs in Broth
Serves 3 or 4

500 grams (1 pound) ground pork
2 small hot chiles
4 scallions
2 cloves garlic
6 sprigs mint
6 springs cilantro or parsley
1.5 liters (6 cups) vegetable or chicken broth
1 fresh, firm zucchini, sliced paper-thin

1. Put the pork in a mixing bowl. Finely chop the chiles and add them with their seeds to the pork. Slice the scallions, discarding the roots and the very darkest tips of the leaves. Peel and mince the garlic, and add with the scallions to the pork. Pull the parsley or cilantro and mint leaves from their stems and chop coarsely, then add them to the pork with the salt. Mix everything thoroughly with your hands and form into about sixteen balls, about 1 1/4 inches in diameter.

2. Bring the stock to a boil in and season with salt and pepper. Lower in the pork balls and then decrease the heat and simmer for 5-7 minutes, until they are cooked through. Add the zucchini slices to the soup and serve one or two minutes later.

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30 responses to “Nigel Slater’s Pork Meatballs in Broth”

  1. Eileen Avatar

    Nigel’s meatballs are the best! I usually use lamb instead of pork in mine, but any way you cut it, they’re divine. 🙂

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  2. Sheena Avatar

    I’ve shied away from meatballs precisely because of hot splattering fat, but now I have no excuse to avoid them anymore. Also, chilis and mint+pork sounds like an absolute winner.
    p.s. I made your chicken with lemon and oregano last night! You have such a knack for finding gems. 🙂

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  3. sarainamerica Avatar
    sarainamerica

    This looks delicious! But more importantly: I just love your tone and spirit here. Wonderful.

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  4. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    These sound absolutely delicious. Curious as to why they wouldn’t be Whole 30 approved (assuming you used homemade chicken or veggie broth…)
    I’ve been flirting with the idea of trying out the Whole 30, and then I went and managed to get pregnant. So these days, if the idea of it doesn’t make me nauseated, I eat it. 🙂

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  5. Luisa Avatar

    I was referring to the Better Than Bouillon! Congrats on your pregnancy.

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  6. Brittany Avatar
    Brittany

    Meatballs, glorious meatballs!! Oh, Luisa, now I won’t be able to stop thinking about them! I think I’ll have to rearrange my meal plan for this week.
    Ah well, I guess it’s just grilled vegetable paninis for me tonight… with wet mozzarella CHEESE, and fresh baked BREAD.
    Sorry, had to rub it in a bit. I’d never survive even a day of The Whole 30 😛

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  7. Verena Avatar
    Verena

    In Nigel’s book appetite he actually calls them meatballs and has you add pancetta, lemon grass and ginger to the mix (but no mint). So nice. Particularly with lime in the broth. And also I hope you have a better week with Hugo. It’s only human to feel exhausted and at the end of ones tether. But everything is a phase – the bad ones and the good ones.

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  8. Victoria Avatar

    Wait. I mean WAIT A MINUTE. Meatballs, Nigel, and Luisa all in the same breath. This has got to be fabulous!!!!!

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  9. Stephanie Avatar

    Oh, this looks wonderful! (I must say that I love how you managed to convey light and beauty in a meatball soup.) Will definitely be making this soon . . .

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  10. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Dear Luisa, Love your blog and the delicious recipes you come up with. Also, I adore Hugo! He is the cutest, most adorable young man. I love seeing every picture of him and hearing about his progress.
    I am writing to chime in with others on the Whole30, but from a different viewpoint. I totally appreciate wanting to “reboot” one’s eating habits, dramatically decrease inflammation, and change one’s digestion to a body system that burns fat instead of stores it. Dr. Ron Rosedale, a metabolic specialist, claims in his book that these conditions are all diseases of communication. Our body’s hormones are not communicating properly with our brain, so the body’s normal appetite monitoring messages are out of balance. I believe the “whole30” program is designed to address this issue.
    My concern is that what they propose eating is no healthier than what they admonish one to eliminate. No sugar, no dairy, no refined flours, fine. But recent research demonstrates that eating meats, even those that are organic, grass-fed, no hormone/antibiotic animals has serious consequences for heart disease promotion.
    http://nyti.ms/12u0mmi
    Ditto for eggs:
    http://nyti.ms/11CcRsx
    Meat is highly inflammatory. Check out the scientific research via these 3-minute videos summarizing latest research on meat and cancer, on autoimmune diseases, or IGF-1 (insulin growth factor 1)as it affects children:
    http://www.nutritionfacts.org
    I know you plan to see this through for 30 days because you are evaluating the results and giving it the recommended testing period. When you get a chance, I highly recommend viewing the documentary Forks Over Knives if you have not already seen it. It explains the connection between diet/nutrition and freedom from chronic diseases of diabetes, heart disease, even cancer. For Hugo’s sake, I hope you will be curious to investigate the latest scientific research on how to insure the optimal health.
    Everybody has to decide what is best to eat for themselves and their family. Good luck on your journey and may you continue to nurture yourself and your family with excellent health and delicious food!
    With love and affection,
    Karen

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  11. Vera Avatar

    I have been craving meatballs… it’s the kind of craving that hangs on and doesn’t leave you alone until you eat the thing. (This is also how I feel about dumplings.) Thank you for the glorious, meatball-exclamatory post. Beautiful and inspiring as always.

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  12. CM Avatar

    Sounds good! And it sounds like something the kids might actually eat.
    Your opening lines reminded me of “Bread and Jam for Frances” by Russell Hoban, where Frances’ dad said, “Ah! What is there nicer on the plate and tastier to eat than veal cutlet!”

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  13. Tom Gilligan Avatar

    This sound delicious, spring greens have just come into season for me so I think I’ll swap out the kale for these.

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  14. Julie Conason Avatar

    Hi Luisa — it’s me, Julie, from the sorta defunct A Finger in Every Pie.
    So — you were my inspiration for the Whole30. I saw how yummy that turkishy meat and eggplant looked on your instagram, decided I needed a “nutritional re-set” too, since the sweets, dairy, and especially refined white-flour-ish carbs have been a leetle bit out-of-control on my end lately, and with a day or so of preparation I plunged right in.
    I started the Whole30 on May 4th, and looped my long-suffering husband, G, into it as well. I fully expected that my experience was going to be like “the Clean diet” which I did a couple of years ago, and which had me hanging on by my fingernails for the 3 weeks to be over. When I did that, which was also a very stringent elimination diet, the cravings were intense.
    Not so with this. I’m on Day 11 of the Whole30, and honestly I feel fantastic. I have great energy, my mood is wonderful, I’ve dropped a couple of pounds, skin has cleared up, and I’m thinking seriously about letting go of my identity as a baker and as “the person who makes all the birthday cakes and the desserts for book group and office celebration and everything else,” and becoming known for my remarkable fruit salads instead.
    I’ve been pretty stringent about most of it (I did use some Better than Bouillon the other day myself, BTW) but I’m not getting crazy about miniscule trace elements of sugar in foods. I won’t use barbecue sauce or ketchup, for example; however, if my bacon is cured with sugar but on the nutritional information in the back it reads “0 carbohydrates” I’m assuming that either the sugar dissipates in the curing process (which is what a butcher told me as well) or that the amount that remains is negligible.
    I wish you too were having a grand experience with this. I puzzle to think why, but maybe it’s just true that different eating plans work differently for different people, and I’ve finally discovered that I’m meant to be eating high-protein, low-carb, & lots of veg and fruit. I’m not even tired of eggs, but I’ve been doing them lots of different ways, with different vegetables — with a piperade, in a casserole with masses of greens and sausage, things that I can make sort of like a giant frittata and cut up pieces to take to work with me in the a.m. all week long.
    Anyway, I’m very interested to hear more about how you get along with it as you keep going…
    And I’m definitely planning to make this soup of adorable tiny meatballs!

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  15. Sarah T Avatar
    Sarah T

    You are so completely right about that recipe title. As soon as I saw the picture (and in my head screamed MEATBALLS!) I’ve wanted to make these. The broth and kale title, never would have crossed my mind.

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  16. Garage Door Phoenix AZ Avatar

    This recipe is delicious!!! the things i changed was i done 1# of ground pork and i didnt have the parsley flakes. also i made my beef broth from beef bouillon granules cuz i didnt have canned broth. we love love love it!! lol

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  17. Anna Avatar

    Danke schön! Lovely- and a lil reminiscent of Tyrolean dumplings- I’m sure you’d love them!

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  18. Ada Avatar

    I made these last summer when we had a glut of garden kale. So good! Who doesn’t love a meatball?! I fully approve of your renaming of the recipe!

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  19. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    Hi Luisa. Made these meatballs tonight with some ground pork I’d frozen away and homemade chicken broth. The sliced zucchini is a great addition. Absolutely rocked. Served it with some Alta Valle Natale. Wonderfully satisfying supper. Thanks so much!

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  20. Nuts about food Avatar

    I don’t know what it is about Nigel Slater and meatballs, but it is magic. One of my favorite meatball recipes is his pork, anchovie and lemon meatballs… to die for. I am not the kind of person to link to a recipe in my blog, but if you are curious you will find it there. Anyhow, I am trying these for sure. Ciao!

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  21. Nuts about food Avatar

    Not sure what just happened to my comment. Anyhow, the gist is that there seems to be magic when Nigel Slater and meatballs are involved. One of my favorite meatball recipes are his pork, anchovie and lemon meatballs. I think you would like them. I do not like leaving links to my recipes in comments, but it is on my blog if you do get curious. I am definitely trying these!

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  22. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    Oh, those look good! Thanks for the tip. I’ll be making these soon.

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  23. AlyssaLione Avatar

    Made this for dinner tonight – The recipe is awesome, delicious and quick! Thanks. 🙂

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  24. Katie Avatar

    Luisa, I’m so glad that you liked these meatballs! I think you’re right on both counts–enough with the kale already (it is May, after all) and yes, dear Nigel should have used the word “meatball.” I will have to try the meatballs your way (no browning) with some more seasonal greens, hopefully soon. The only thing that’s stopping me is the ground pork–one of the quirks of my neighbourhood is that I can never find any around here. Crazy, right?

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  25. Nuts about food Avatar

    Hi Peter, let me know how you liked them.

    Like

  26. Claire Avatar
    Claire

    I replaced the zucchini with fresh spinach leaves finelly choped, and a bit of lime juice before serving… It was DE-LI-CIOUS, comfy, healthy, different… Ahhh, thanks a lot!

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  27. Kristine in Santa Barbara Avatar
    Kristine in Santa Barbara

    I made this last night and we ate the leftovers for breakfast. Just delicious. And so easy. I wouldn’t have made it if it required browning the meatballs first, so thank for figuring out it’s not necessary. (PS Did you leave the salt out of the ingredient list for the meatballs? I added a 1/2 teaspoon, just guessing that would be about right.)

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  28. Luisa Avatar

    My favorite book! 🙂

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  29. Luisa Avatar

    I’m so happy to hear it!! xx

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  30. Luisa Avatar

    Oops, I think I might have?

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