How To

Silvia Colloca's failsafe family-friendly dish

How to eat like Silvia Colloca?
How to eat like Silvia Colloca?

Fast, fresh and perfect for little hands to roll up.

The humble meatball hardly needs an introduction. Call them rissoles or, as we do in Italy, polpette, the name doesn’t matter – they encapsulate all that is good and comforting about honest home cooking. Simply combine everyday, inexpensive ingredients and you’ll soon have a tasty bite-sized morsel that the whole family will enjoy.

Their versatility is rather impressive, too. There are mini ones (perfect as finger food served at a cocktail party), and the larger variety, which can be cooked in a white wine sauce and enjoyed with rich potato mash or soft polenta.

Alternatively, you can also cook polpette by roasting them with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil until a crunchy crust forms on top, trapping a soft moist interior, or by flattening them with a fork and grilling them as Italian-style burgers. With this dish, you can really unleash your creativity. One thing is certain, though: when I make polpette, it’s always in a double batch!

Once you’ve rolled them into walnut-sized balls, you can even place them on an oven tray lined with baking paper and freeze them. Once frozen, keep them in a zip-lock bag for easy storage. That way, you can add a few straight from the freezer to a simple vegetable soup for an extra protein boost, or simmer them in a pot of tomato sugo to create that much-loved Italian-American classic, spaghetti meatballs.

Making polpette is also perfectly suited to little fingers (the skills required to roll them are similar to shaping Play-Doh creations). So, why not gather the kids around the kitchen bench, don your aprons and whip up a mega batch of these nuggets? They’ll nourish their little tummies and their souls, too.

Find my recipe for veal and ricotta polpette here.

Silvia Colloca's veal and ricotta polpette

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