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Venison Meat Balls with Braised Butterbeans - Finished Recipe
I have run the international gamut of meatballs. There are the obvious Italian types that are made with beef or veal, and then the Swedish version, served in a slightly strange sour cream sauce (think of Ikea). (Read this other recipe for Scandinavian-style venison meatballs.)
There’s the various Middle Eastern types that are usually studded with bulgar wheat and rolled in flatbread, typically served with a topping of fresh herbs, leaves and yoghurt dressing.
The problem — or suspicion — hanging over meatballs is a suggestion of low-grade meat, and should you buy them ready-made from supermarkets they will be over-seasoned with salty nasties such as onion powder, so do read labels. Home-made, however, brings a very different animal. Rich, pure beef Italian meatballs have become something of a worldwide classic, and are eaten with flat egg noodles like pappardelle and tagliatelle.
But in my early years of researching recipes, I came to know an unusual Spanish version that was made — at the time it seemed incongruous — with fresh mint. Spanish cooks often serve mint with ham or pork. I discovered a recipe similar to this one made using fresh pork mince and smoked ham. This, I have since discovered, works beautifully with venison and so was created this recipe for minced venison meatballs with a Spanish twist.
It is important that the streaky bacon you use is fatty, because venison is not. This makes the meatballs lighter once cooked. Eat as part of a larger meal, along with a loaded board of dry-cured ham and cheese, quince paste and pickles.
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