All hail tender, savory, creamy Swedish Meatballs!
I grew up eating a lot of Swedish meatballs, and I have to say – Swedish meatball recipes are varied and they all kind of have their own personality. But after testing several ingredient combinations and methods, this is the one that I like best:
Cream-soaked bread mixed with ground beef and ground pork with plenty of salt and pepper, baked to golden meatball perfection, and finally rolled around in a rich and savory cream-based gravy. It is mellow, ultra comforting, and deeply flavorful all at the same time.
In This Post: Everything You Need For Swedish Meatballs
- VIDEO for Making This Recipe
- What Are Swedish Meatballs?
- How to Make Swedish Meatballs
- Tips for Making This Recipe
- What to Serve with Swedish Meatballs
- Frequently Asked Questions About This Recipe
- More Meatball Recipes
Prefer To Watch Instead Of Read?
What Are Swedish Meatballs?
Whether it’s from frequent IKEA trips, Christmas dinners at grandma’s, or the generally strong Scandinavian pride of the midwest, Swedish meatballs feel synonymous with Sweden.
Traditionally, Swedish meatballs are made with pork and beef, cream, egg, and onion, and are served alongside mashed potatoes, lingonberries, and tangy pickly cucumbers. It’s the perfect balance of savory, sweet, and tangy.
If you want to REALLY dig deep, back to be beginning of the history of these beautiful little bites, Swedish meatballs are actually based on a dish brought back from Turkey in the early 18th century by King Charles XII of Sweden. Which means… they might actually be Turkish meatballs? Excuse me? Intrigue!
How To Make Swedish Meatballs
Swedish meatballs may or may not be something that you want to make on a random Tuesday night because they’re gonna take a little time to make. You’ve got the rolling, you’ve got the baking, you’ve got the gravy-making…
But they are SPECIAL. And they aren’t hard. They are perfect for holiday meals or dinner club or just a little something extra when you’re looking for a good reason to live your best life.
Here are the basics:
- You’re going to mix up your meatballs (pork, beef, BREAD, butter, onions, garlic, all that’s good).
- Then you’ll roll them and bake them until they’re done.
- Next up you’ll build and whisk the gravy: butter, flour, beef broth, Worcestershire, little bit of nutmeg (and/or allspice if you want), and some heavy cream for that delicious creaminess. (Some recipes will use sour cream, but traditionally the creaminess comes from cream!)
- Pop those meatballs back in the pan with the gravy and stir and…
HELLO SWEDISH MEATBALLS. ❤️
Tips For Making The Best Swedish Meatballs
Like I said, this isn’t exactly a made-for-a-weeknight recipe, so let’s talk about some tips.
- The meatball mixture will be a little wetter than most meatball recipes you’ve probably made, and that’s how it should be! This is what makes for the most tender, delicious, meatballs.
- When baking your meatballs in the oven, make sure they’re not touching. This will ensure the meatballs get crispy instead of steamy!
- SAVE YOUR GREASE! After the meatballs are made, save that grease to make your gravy for the BEST flavor. (Don’t worry, the recipe reminds you to do this!)
- Make the sides. I repeat: MAKE THE SIDES! These meatballs are so delicious and savory and go so well with creamy mashed potatoes, but the balance of it with the tangy/sweet cranberries and zippiness of the cucumbers truly brings this all together.
- If you need a vegetarian option for this recipe, whether for yourself or someone at your table, this Vegetarian Swedish Meatballs recipe is the ticket!
What To Serve with Swedish Meatballs
The meatballs in and of themselves are a world wonder, but let me fill out the plate for you for what to serve with Swedish meatballs.
- Creamy Mashed Potatoes <– I like these, obviously, because they’re very easy and have so much garlic herb flavor. (If you’re not into potatoes or don’t have the time, you’ll often see Swedish meatballs served over egg noodles, though we are VERY much partial to the mashed potatoes.)
- Tangy Cranberry Sauce, for which we use the recipe on the back of the cranberry package.
- Vinegary Cucumber Salad, which seems a little strange at first glance but is so delicious and essential for cutting through everything. It wakes the whole plate up.
May your gravy be creamy and your meatballs be extra-savory and your special dinner be one to remember. ♡
Swedish Meatballs: Frequently Asked Questions
Yes! The flavor combo of the two meats is really good, but I’ve also enjoyed the all-beef versions that I’ve made.
You can use pan drippings to make your gravy, which will have the most flavor (as instructed below)! But if you’d rather, you can just start fresh with butter – and that will make the texture of the gravy a little smoother since you won’t have the browned meatball bits in there.
The meatball mixture is pretty wet! That’s normal, especially because there’s not any dry elements in this, like cheese or breadcrumbs. The wet texture from the cream-soaked bread makes for a very tender meatball once it’s cooked. If you get your hands slightly wet, you’ll have an easier time rolling them.
You can! If you are using thin, plain white sandwich bread, you may want to use 6-8 slices instead to make a thicker bread mixture.
The meatballs in the recipe freeze amazingly well. Just cook them as the recipe states and then freeze in a bag. Keeps for up to two months.
The best way to prep this ahead of time is to make the meatballs! That way, when it comes time to serve, all you need to do is make your sauce and then pop them out of the fridge or freezer and add to the pan.
The mashed potatoes, cranberries, and cucumbers also prep beautifully and will keep in the fridge for a few days!
This recipe, not so much! But we do have a different recipe for Vegetarian Swedish Meatballs that is equally delicious.
The Best Swedish Meatballs
Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Yield: 6 servings 1x
Description
Swedish Meatballs that are perfectly tender and spiced, served with creamy, savory, tangy gravy. Comfort food at its best!
Ingredients
Units
Scale
Swedish Meatballs:
- 4 slices white bread, no crusts
- 1/2 cup heavy cream
- 1/4 cup onion, roughly chopped
- 4 cloves garlic, chopped
- 1 pound ground beef (I like using 85/15)
- 1 pound ground pork
- 1 egg
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar
- 2 teaspoons coarse salt
- a few shakes of black pepper
Gravy:
- 2 tablespoons butter (or drippings from meatballs)
- 2 tablespoons flour
- 1 1/2 cups beef broth
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce (more to taste)
- 1–2 teaspoons brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon coarse salt (to taste – add it last so you can taste and adjust for how much you want)
- Dash of nutmeg
Instructions
- In a small bowl, soak the white bread in the heavy cream for 5-10 minutes. Add the soaked bread and the onion and garlic to the bowl of a food processor. Pulse for 10-15 seconds until mostly smooth. Mix the bread paste in a large bowl with the meat, egg, brown sugar, salt, and pepper. When it’s all well-mixed, roll into smallish meatballs.
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Place meatballs in a casserole dish or baking dish with sides. Bake for 20-25 minutes until cooked through. (You can bake some or all — I often freeze half of the meatballs for later.)
- Gravy time! Drain off and reserve the grease from the meatball pan. Add 2 tablespoons of the grease to a small skillet (alternatively, you can use butter). Over medium heat, whisk in the flour; sauté for 2-3 minutes. Add the beef broth, slowly, stirring after each addition. Gradually a smooth gravy should start to form. Stir in the heavy cream and season with Worcestershire sauce, sugar, salt, and a bit of nutmeg if you want.
- Add meatballs in with the gravy in the skillet and cover to keep warm until you want to serve them. (The meatballs are already great on their own, but the longer they soak in sauce, the more tender and delicious they get.) Serve over mashed potatoes, with a cucumber salad and cranberries or lingonberries.
Notes
You can also use dry onion powder (1 1/2 teaspoons) and garlic powder (1 teaspoon) to make it a little easier eliminate the food processor step!
If you prefer, you can use all ground beef in this recipe instead of half beef, half pork.
The gravy thickens and the meatballs get more tender as you let them rest in the sauce. I like to make this in the afternoon so it has a few hours to settle in before I serve it in the evening – I just keeping it warm if it’s for 2-3 hours, or put in the fridge if it’ll be longer. If you need to serve immediately, that’s fine! It will still be super super yummy.
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Sauté
- Cuisine: Swedish
Keywords: swedish meatballs, meatballs, swedish food, gravy recipe
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