Sometimes Mike and I will go to Ikea just for the meatballs. The furniture shopping is pretty much secondary. I also have a thing for Ikea’s mac and cheese (it’s sacrilege, I know) but that’s a story for another time. Ikea meatballs appeal to me not because they’re the tastiest meatballs I’ve ever eaten (they’re not) but because they bring me back to a time when food made everything alright.
It was right after I graduated from university. I was feeling pretty confused about life and where I was heading. I was living in my pajamas and not really eating or getting out of the house much. One day my brother asked me to tag along on an Ikea run. He and my sister-in-law were in the middle of moving houses and he needed to pick up some random organizational stuff.
I didn’t really want to get dressed and go, but Kevin insisted. “We’ll have meatballs,” he said. “You haven’t eaten yet, right?” It was true, I hadn’t eaten yet and I wasn’t really planning to. Food didn’t have the same allure for me as it did when I was happy. Nonetheless, I got dressed and we drove to Ikea, mostly in silence. My fault really – it’s hard to hold a conversation with someone when they only grunt or reply with one word answers.
I wasn’t hungry, but I got a kid’s size plate of meatballs and the mac and cheese too (love that stuff!). Before we started eating, Kev said, “don’t worry, everything has a way of working itself out in the end.” He gave me a big hug and of course I teared up. I concentrated on eating while he concentrated on trying to ignore the fact that I was about to have a breakdown.
The combination of trying not to cry and eating at the same time really made me taste the flavours of the meatballs. And for the first time in the past few days, food actually tasted good. The meatballs were delicious! With some food in my tummy and my brother at my side, I felt just a bit better about life.
From that day forward Ikea meatballs have been one my many guilty pleasures. They just make me feel good when I eat them! I admit, even today I have a bag of frozen Ikea meatballs in the freezer. So, when I saw a recipe for meatballs on the Ikea website, I decided to make them.
It’s a pretty standard meatball recipe: ground meat, breadcrumbs and seasoning. For me, the surprise ingredients were the potatoes and ground pork. I had no idea that the meatballs weren’t all-beef. Also, the recipe calls for the balls to be pan-fried in butter. I always thought they were baked, but frying gives them that great texture contrast between the crispy outsides and the soft potato-y insides.
We did a little taste test and the homemade meatballs ended up tasting quite similar to Ikea’s, but the Ikea version was a touch more dry, perhaps due to the fact that they’re cooked, frozen and re-heated. This homemade version would be easy to whip up, bake-off and freeze. Maybe I won’t be buying bags of meatballs anymore after all!
i am swedish, i am balled meat: i am swedish meatball!
Ikea Swedish Meatball Recipe slightly adapted from ikea-friends.com
yield: 16 large meatballs
- 1/2 pound ground beef
- 1/2 pound ground pork
- 1 egg
- 2.5 tablespoons finely chopped onion
- 1/2 cup breadcrumbs (I used panko)
- 2 small potatoes
- 3 tablespoons butter
- salt and white pepper
- 1/4 teaspoon all spice
Peel and cut the potatoes into chunks. Place in a small pot, cover with water and bring to a boil. Cook the potatoes until fork tender and drain well. You can mash the potatoes at this point, or if you have a potato ricer, use the potato ricer for fluffy potato grains. Set aside until completely cool.
In a frying pan, melt a tablespoon of butter over medium heat and brown the onions. Remove and set aside.
Mix all the ingredients until homogenous and flavour generously with salt, white pepper and the all spice. Shape the meat into balls.
In a large, non-stick frying pan, heat up the remaining butter over medium heat. Fry the meatballs slowly, turning when needed, until a golden-brown crust forms and the meatball is cooked throughout.
This website certainly has all of the info I wanted about this subject and didn’t know who to ask.
I absolutley LOVE Ikea meatballs and have bought their frozen ones before but now that I have run out I can still eat them without going to the city! This blog is one of the most helpful food blogs I have ever used mainly because of the photo instructions. Being a visual learner this really helped me.
I love these meatballs! I have never had the Ikea version, but this recipe is very similar to my grandmothers. They are definitely comfort food. We make a version with sweet potato and sage that tastes just like thanksgiving =)
Gorgeous photos!
The meatballs that all my Swedish friends taught me to make many decades ago are half beef and half pork. You add whatever seasoning you wish, make the ball, dip in plain flour and fry in butter. When they are cooked remove the meatballs from the pan. Add a little more butter and saute some finely chopped onion and garlic until soft – sometimes they would add sliced mushrooms. Add enough cream to make a sauce and then soy sauce – enough to make the sauce light brown. Do not add salt to the sauce. Heat until hot, you need enough sauce to cover the meatballs on each plate. Serve with boiled potatoes sprinkled with fresh dill and a few teaspoons of lingonberry jam next to the meatballs. If you cannot get lingonberry jam from Sweden cranberry sauce with whole cranberries in is a very good substitute.
My mouth is salivating…off to IKEA first thing tomorrow morning; first the huge $1.00 breakfast, then over to the food section to pick up a few bags of frozen meatballs.
Having a crowd over tomorrow & due to time constraints, cannot make my own at this time (but I sure will)!
i love food
Nearly every time I am at IKEA I eat those meatballs because they taste so delicious. We also have the frozen meatballs at home, but it is much better that IKEA published the original receipt because fresh-made food is always better :) Thank you for posting this receipt, as soon as I have time I will try it out!
Thanks so much for the recipe! I’m going to make this for my mom when I go to Florida.^w^
I work at ikea food. Never eat at ikea food.