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Nostalgia Night: Porcupine Meatballs

By May 14, 2010March 20th, 201327 Comments

The recipe for these sweet, braised meatballs is written on a notecard with company letterhead from Andyโ€™s first job. Itโ€™s written in shorthand โ€” I can picture him in his beige, cookie-cutter cubicle fifteen years ago, scribbling down the instructions as his mom dictated the exact amounts of peppers, onions, and beef over the phoneโ€ฆ her standing in his childhood kitchen 250 miles away. He claims to have eaten porcupines โ€” so named for the spikey effect of cooked rice inside them โ€” no less than once every three weeks from 1977 to 1989 and they were such a staple in his house that it was one of the half dozen recipes sent to me via snail mail from his mother right after we were married. (Which I subsequently misplaced, hence the call.) Now in our 21st-century home, we seem to be continuing the streak. Though we usually make porcupines with ground turkey instead of ground beef. And afterwards, the kids get to watch a little youtube video on the laptop instead heading down to the rec room for an Asteroid marathon on the Atari.ย But no matter what decade, itโ€™s an awesome Sunday dinner.

Porcupine prep

Porcupine Meatballs, ca. 1977
Unless you are under four feet tall, you will probably need something acidic (a green salad with vinegary dressing) to cut the sweetness of the braising liquid.

1 pound ground beef (or turkey)
1/2 cup rice
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 tablespoons chopped green peppers
1 teaspoon salt
1 clove garlic
2 cups tomato juice
4 cloves
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon Worcestershire

Combine uncooked beef, rice, onion, green peppers, salt, and garlic in a large bowl. Shape into small balls, about 1-inch wide.

Whisk together remaining ingredients in a deep skillet and bring to a simmer. Drop in meatballs and cover tightly. Simmer for 30 minutes, flipping over about half way through.

Remove cloves before serving.

27 Comments

  • Avatar kathryn says:

    I really love your blog!! great post. I might just try this recipe next week. The name alone will thrill the kids.

  • Jan (Family Bites) says:

    I love the addition of cinnamon to this! Someone once told me that I should simmer a cinnamon stick in my bolognese for great flavour. Iโ€™ve done it since and never looked back and I can see here that cinnamon and ground beef have obviously paired together for quite a while (and here I was thinking I was on to something new and inventive!).

  • Camila F. says:

    Looks yummy!!!

  • Avatar Emily says:

    Itโ€™s been a long time since Iโ€™ve made โ€œPorkiesโ€ โ€” I think Iโ€™ll whip up a batch for Papa this week. Thanks for the inspiration.

  • Avatar Kristin says:

    Crazy question: should the rice be cooked first? :0

    • jenny jenny says:

      Kristin โ€“ Not a crazy question. I should have made more clear. Rice should be UNCOOKED when mixed into the meat. It cooks in the braising liquid.

  • Avatar Kristin says:

    you can probably tell that i need a lot of help in the cooking departmentโ€ฆ. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Kristin says:

    oops! I actually cooked it first and it worked out okโ€ฆ..i used brown rice. ๐Ÿ™‚ Thanks for not making me feel silly!!

  • Avatar Kristin says:

    and, btw, it was sooo yummy! (especially the leftovers!)

  • Avatar Kiera says:

    Thanks! We all enjoyed this recipe. I let the 3-year-old help make the meatballs and we had some funny shaped porkupines! But they were all tasty and will be served again soon, Iโ€™m sure.

  • Avatar Carla says:

    Jenny,

    Thank you for being the first person to point this out to me, in like, 1998:

    Food = Love = Happiness

    Truer words were never spoken. DALS reminds us of this every day.

    XO,

    Carla

  • Avatar Juliana says:

    So fun to find! I grew up on similar-looking porcupine meatballs, however the recipe is different than yours (and dates back to my great gโ€™ma, who was born just before 1900 I think). She used home-canned tomato soup (without the milk added) that was flavored with celery and peppers for the cooking sauce. Her recipe has you brown the meatballs in a skillet before adding the sauce, which leaves the end-product sauce sort of like tomato gravy.
    My mom revised the recipe to replace the labor-intensive home-canned soup with one can of Campbellโ€™s (healthy request) and a can of fat free beef gravy, and she broils the meatballs to let as much grease as possible leave the balls (hence why the gravy is needed).
    Being afraid of the fat free beef gravyโ€™s ingredients, and not a big fan of Cambellโ€™s, I plan to try it this week (โ€™tis the season!) with a box of tomato soup from Trader Joeโ€™s and one of their boxes of turkey gravy (seasonal). Iโ€™ll use half ground turkey & half beef for the meatballs.
    And for Kristin โ€“ I use uncooked brown rice, but you do have to cook the meatballs a little longer.

  • Avatar Marie-Josรฉe says:

    Sheesh ! The last line of the recipe, I read โ€œremove CLOTHES before serving.โ€œ That would certainly make for a special dinner! Thanks for posting this recipe. My Granny, who raised me, used to make these as appetizers at parties and they were always a big hit.

  • Avatar Meg says:

    We ate โ€œPorcupinesโ€ quite regularly when I was growing up in teh 1980s and 1990s. My momโ€™s recipe wasnโ€™t sweet, though. It involved tomato sauce and worcestershire sauce and we always at it w/corn and scali bread. Yummy. Then weโ€™d hit up the Nintendo.

  • Avatar cookin mom says:

    My grandmaโ€™s porcupines that have been passed down is way different than most of these. The meatballs are mostly the same with ground beef, onions and riceโ€ฆbut we make our sauce using cream of mushroom soup and sour cream. Then lay the yummy meatballs and creamy sauce on a bed of chow mein noodles! Now thatโ€™s a spiny little porcupine!!! DEEE-LISH!

  • Avatar Jane says:

    I made this recently, but like some others, my recipe is much different. I used a can of cream of mushroom soup with a can of milk and simmered for 30 minutes, and served them over egg noodles. My grandfather used to make them for my mom and her sisters growing up, and I of course grew up on them as well. Comfort food doesnโ€™t get better than this, in my opinion.

  • Kara K says:

    Hi Jenny!
    I just bought your cookbook and I LOVE it. In fact, I mentioned it the other day on my blog and referenced โ€œtiny table terroristsโ€ ๐Ÿ™‚ One question, I made this for supper tonight and had some problems with getting the rice to fully cook. Do you use regular white rice or do you use instant rice? The flavor was great, everyone loved them.

  • Avatar Susana says:

    Iโ€™ve been meaning to try these for a while and just got some kitchen inspiration while preparing food to freeze for upcoming meals. I love having my DALS book nearby for ideas!
    I just prepped some of these and put them in the freezer (raw). Iโ€™m crossing my fingers that theyโ€™ll defrost and be a delicious addition to my dinner repertoire ๐Ÿ™‚ Any tips, just in case?

  • Avatar Deb says:

    Just tried this recipe, and a miracle occured. Three girls ate dinner with no complaints. They all ate! Thank you! Am reading your book now and I love it.

  • Avatar Ari says:

    Got the DALS book out of the library and this is the first recipe I tried. DH and I gave it a B (though we think there may have been implementation errors). The kids (ages 9 & 10) gave it a C, mostly for texture so mainly ate the sides after their โ€œtrying bites.โ€

    What kind of rice do you typically use? We tried these with โ€œconvertedโ€ AKA Uncle Benโ€™s Rice and they took longer to cook and my kids didnโ€™t like because the rice was too hard. Would a softer rice like Jasmine rice work better?

  • Avatar Robin says:

    My mother used to make โ€œporcupinesโ€ all the time growing up. They were a family favorite. I make them about once a month. I use white Minute Rice and spaghetti sauce instead of tomato juice, and I add chopped onion & green pepper as well as Italian seasoning. I donโ€™t use garlic, cinnamon or Worcestershire sauce in mine. Iโ€™m sure there are many variations!

  • Avatar Awads says:

    I made these last night using regular white rice (mahatma brand), but the rice was a bit crunchy. whatโ€™s the trick here? I did get a terrific unintended consequence: my 1st grader, who doesnโ€™t like food in general, picked up a chopped green pepper, bit into and said, โ€œyumโ€. holy porcupine!!! he ate 4 of them, which means this is going into the regular rotation, as soon as i figure out how to uncrunch the rice!

  • Avatar Chris says:

    My kids were totally skeptical when they saw these on their plates, but they ended up really enjoying them. The recipe also doubled nicely. Thanks!

  • Avatar Rita says:

    Do you suppose this could be done in a slow cooker?

  • Avatar Kayla says:

    I am wondering what type of rice to useโ€ฆ normal long grain white? instant?

    I saw that some other people had asked but I didnโ€™t see any replies.

  • Avatar Mariah says:

    Weโ€™ve been making this for close to a decade now, ever since I bought your first book. When I asked my 18-year-old son what he wanted on the menu this week, his answer was โ€œWe havenโ€™t had porcupine meatballs in foreverโ€! So easy and tasty. Plus they are a โ€œfunโ€ food for kids. Thank you for sharing your family favorite with my family, where it is now one of OUR favorites as well!

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