To My Irish Friends Out There
Bev had bought a large package of ground beef for me to
make deconstructed cabbage rolls and decided that she wanted to make meatloaf
from the rest of the meat. Now I may not
be the sharpest pencil in the box, but it didn’t take me long to realize that
her announcement meant no cooking for me.
Bev had selected a different-from-our-normal recipe to try and I think
it’s because it had the soffritto in it – she likes the veggies in her meatloaf. The recipe for My Dad’s Favorite Meatloaf came from Simply Recipes. I show the
original recipe below, but I scaled up the one Bev used for our 2½ lbs of meat.
My Dad’s Favorite Meatloaf
Ingredients:
2 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 cup finely chopped onion – Note 1
1 rib celery, finely chopped – Note 1
1 carrot, finely chopped – Note 1
½ cup finely chopped green onion – Note 1
3 cloves garlic, minced (about 1 tablespoon)
1½ tsp. salt
½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
2/3 cup ketchup, divided
1½ lbs. ground beef chuck
¾ lb. sweet ground Italian sausage, or a mix of
sweet and hot Italian sausage if you are using links
2 large eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
1/3 cup minced fresh parsley
Note 1:
My understanding is that while Mirepoix (French) and Soffritto (Italian)
may contain the same ingredients, the difference is that the ingredients are
chopped for Mirepoix and minced for Soffritto so Bev used the food processor
for these. The smaller size is supposed
to help the meatloaf stay together better.
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Position a rack in the middle of the oven.
Melt the butter in a large, thick-bottomed
skillet, on medium heat. When the butter starts to foam, add the finely chopped
onions, celery, carrot, green onions and garlic to the pan and cook for 5
minutes, stirring occasionally.
Cover the pan and cook for another 5 minutes,
until the carrots are tender, stirring every so often.
Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Add the
Worcestershire sauce and 1/3 cup ketchup. Cook for another minute and remove
from heat to cool.
Make the meatloaf mixture:
Once the vegetables have cooled to the touch,
place them in a large bowl with the ground beef, Italian sausage, eggs,
breadcrumbs and parsley. Use your (very clean) hands to mix them together until
everything is evenly distributed.
Place the meatloaf mixture into a prepared dish loaf pan
(either 4-x 8-inch or 5- x 9-inch) and press to make compact in the pan. Or you
can form a free-standing loaf onto a rimmed baking pan. Cover the meatloaf mixture
with the rest of the ketchup.
Bake for 1 hour at 350°F, or until a meat
thermometer inserted into the center of the meatloaf reads 155°F.
Remove from oven and let sit for 10 minutes.
Then use a metal spatula to gently lift the meatloaf out of the loaf pan to a
serving plate.
Cut into thick slices to serve.
We normally make meatloaf in a bread loaf pan but this was
too big so we used an 12x12 pottery dish and we cooked it at 350F for about 30
minutes then 400F until it reached an internal temperature of 155F – about 30
more minutes.
We blotted the grease on top with paper towels.
We didn’t have a side dish so we could just enjoy the meatloaf – my plate pic is above.
The Verdict:
I thought this was
a very good recipe with flavors and texture that both appealed to me - soft yet it held together. I
would definitely use it again except I thought it was a little too salty so don’t know if
the recipe is wrong or if we over salted.
Supper the next
evening – the real reason we make meatloaf - bread, mayo, meatloaf, nothing else needed.
Most of the
meatloaf recipes I see call for a tomato-based sauce on top and that’s what I
grew up on and it’s Bev’s strong preference, therefore it’s the standard around
here. However, I prefer to leave off the
tomato stuff and add brown gravy to my slice of meatloaf and the mashed
potatoes with it. What’s your
preference?
My Restaurant
Over the years, especially when I had my little BBQ
hobby/business, folks would say you should open a restaurant, but I was
confident I didn’t want a job – I was retired.
Son, Rhett, recently sent me a copy of Anthony Bourdain’s “Kitchen
Confidential” which I read – first book in many years. The book chronicles his life in the
restaurant business with his successes and failures. After reading it, there is not a snowballs
chance in hell I would want to be a chef in a restaurant and I can’t understand
why anyone but the most passionate of cook’s would want to. I might want to own a restaurant if I always
had an excellent manager, an excellent chef, and an excellent staff so that all
I had to do was schmooze with the customers – probably only one in a million are this way.
Photos can be
enlarged by clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Have a great day
and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
3/13/24 meal date
I always made meatloaf for my kids who would really had loved this version years ago when they still lived here, but I really will never taste meatloaf not sure if its because of growing up poor and forced to try it but it's not one I will eat ever again. I am sure for those who love it the flavors are super delicious in yours and if I had this 40 years ago I would have made it for them :).
ReplyDeleteI like meatloaf with the glaze and never thought about gravy. Sounds really good. And I like this version with the addition of Italian Sausage. I've read Kitchen Confidentials. Thought it was a pretty good book, but a bit repetitive here and there. And even before going to Culinary School and before reading that book, I knew I didn't want to work in that business. Our son Mark was a chef and I heard too many stories over the years.
ReplyDeleteLarry, what a delicious looking meatloaf it can be fun to cook in many ways
ReplyDeleteI'm a tomato sauce on top of my meatloaf kind of gal. And that means it's made with ketchup. Jim loved my meatloaf but it's a pain to make for one person. Even though the sandwiches are the best.
ReplyDeleteI have never cared for brown gravy --so I guess I would choose tomato... BUT--I love Meatloaf anyway I can get it. YUM... I would never want to be a 'chef' or even own a restaurant. People up here are SO SO SO picky and can drive away chefs quickly.
ReplyDeleteHugs,
Betsy
Kitchen Confidential is a great book. The restaurant business is a tough one but boy I'm glad there are people out there willing to do it! Your meatloaf and sandwich have me drooling. Yum! I grew up with a ketchup/brown sugar glaze on meatloaf and I still love it that way but I also love it smothered in gravy with mashed potatoes.
ReplyDelete