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Egg-Stuffed Mexican Meatballs with Salsa Roja
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Like the ones we were taught to make in Mexico, these meatballs, or albóndigas, hide a sliver of hard-cooked egg at the center. For best flavor and texture, we use a combination of ground beef and pork. The tomato-onion-garlic puree that becomes the salsa roja doubles as a seasoning for the meat mixture. As you shape the meatballs, if you find the mixture is to be too tacky for easy handling, moisten your hands with water. These meatballs typically are garnished with crumbled chicharrones (fried pork rinds); we’ve made them optional but they are delicious served this way. Serve with rice and/or warm tortillas.
4
Servings
Don’t allow sauce to come to a full boil when cooking the meatballs, or they will end up dry and tough. Gentle simmering will keep their texture tender and light.
50 minutes
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1
tablespoon grapeseed or other neutral oil
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1
pound plum tomatoes, whole
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½
medium white onion, halved
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2
medium garlic cloves, peeled
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1-2
chipotle chilies in adobo sauce, plus the sauce clinging to them
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1½
teaspoons chili powder
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1
teaspoon dried mexican oregano
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Kosher salt and ground black pepper
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⅓
cup (¾ ounce) panko breadcrumbs
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1
large egg yolk
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12
ounces 85 percent lean ground beef
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12
ounces ground pork
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3
hard-cooked large eggs, peeled, each cut into 4 wedges
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Fresh cilantro, to serve
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Chicharrón, crumbled, to serve (optional)
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01In a 12-inch skillet over medium-high, heat the oil until barely smoking. Add the tomatoes, onion and garlic, then cook, occasionally turning the vegetables, until deeply charred in spots, about 5 minutes; if the garlic is done before the tomatoes and onion, remove the cloves from the skillet.
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02Add the charred vegetables to a blender along with the chipotle chilies, chili powder, oregano and ½ teaspoon salt; set the skillet aside. Blend until the mixture is smooth, about 1 minute, scraping the blender jar as needed. Measure ⅓ cup of the puree into a medium bowl, mix in the panko and let stand until fully softened, about 5 minutes. Pour the remaining puree into the reserved skillet and set aside.
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03Line a rimmed baking sheet with kitchen parchment. To the panko mixture, add the egg yolk, both ground meats, ¾ teaspoons salt and ¾ teaspoon pepper. Using your hands, mix until homogenous. Divide into 12 portions (about ¼ cup each) and place on the prepared baking sheet. One portion at a time, in the palm of your hand, flatten into a 3- to 4-inch disk. Place a wedge of hard-cooked egg in the center, then enclose meat around the egg and roll between your palms to form a smooth ball. Set the meatball on the prepared baking sheet and repeat with remaining ingredients. Refrigerate uncovered for 10 minutes.
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04Meanwhile, set the skillet over medium and bring the sauce to a simmer. Reduce to medium-low and cook, stirring occasionally, until slightly thickened and darkened, about 10 minutes. Place the meatballs in the skillet, then cover and cook at a gentle simmer until the centers reach 160°F, 15 to 20 minutes; turn the meatballs once about halfway through. Serve sprinkled with cilantro and chicharrón (if using).
So incredibly good! This was the best albóndigas recipe I've found. The sauce was sweet with just a little heat. Perfect served on basmati rice.