At least it was not a terribly expensive lesson.
Monday morning Emily unearthed a kid's cookbook we picked up some years ago at a library book sale by the American Heart Association. She found a recipe in it for spaghetti. I wondered if spaghetti was the best choice in the midst of a mini heat wave, but she insisted it was what she wanted. I skimmed the recipe and pointed out it had no meat, knowing she likes meatballs, or, at the very least, meat sauce. She neatly turned a page in the book and found a recipe for broiler meatballs. It is far to warm for the oven or broiler, but I usually make meatballs in a skillet. And so the menu was settled.
I helped her mince an onion (we will have to conquer that soon) while she opened a package of ground bison. She then added bread crumbs, Parmesan cheese, a egg and some milk. The recipe called for Italian seasoning, which we did not have. I measured in a generous pinch of dried oregano and basil and cut some fresh thyme and parsley for her. She added salt, pepper and garlic powder and donned a pair of disposable latex gloves to mix everything together. Once she had it combined I told her to make evenly sized meat balls and place them into the pan where we had a tablespoon or so of oil heating. I told her not to move the balls until they were done on one side or they would fall apart. It was time consuming, but she did well, apart from a few dropped pieces of onion.
Once the meatballs were browned on all sides I had her lift them from the pan into a bowl while she prepared the sauce.
She had me chop another onion to be browned in a little oil. To the browned onion she stirred in a can of diced tomatoes, more dried oregano and basil, as well as garlic powder, salt & pepper. She let this simmer while she put on water for the spaghetti. We took some liberties with the recipe, which called for stewed tomatoes and tomato paste, which I had her omit altogether, simply because we didn't have any. I don't use a recipe when making spaghetti sauce, meatballs or hamburgers either, but following a recipe is still a part of the learning curve.
Once the water was boiling I had her spoon the meatballs back into the sauce while the pasta cooked. I left her to her own devices again, and when I returned she had drained the pasta and stirred it into the sauce as well. I poured a glass of wine and settled in to eat. It smelled wonderful. And it tasted great. Emily added extra Parmesan & grated Cheddar to her plate, I found it didn't need anything extra, except a little more salt & pepper (and a few crushed chilis for good measure!)
Italian Meatballs
1 large onion 1 1/2 teaspoons Italian herb seasoning*
1 pound ground beef 1 teaspoon garlic powder
1/3 cup dry bread crumbs salt & pepper
1/3 cup Parmesan cheese 1/3 cup milk
1 egg
Mince the onion and combine with remaining ingredients. When well blended shape into meatballs 1 1/2-2 inches in diameter. Place in a large skillet and brown thoroughly on all sides. Don't over crowd the pan, you may have to do 2 batches, or use a second pan. Alternately, place meatballs on a broiler pan and broil for 5 minutes before turning and broiling another 5 minutes.
Remove meatballs from pan and set aside to prepare sauce,
*We used a combination of dried oregano, dried basil, fresh thyme and fresh parsley. Dried herbs have a more concentrated flavour, so you will need more fresh herbs than dried. (About a 3:1 ratio)
Spaghetti Sauce
1 large onion 1-6 oz can tomato paste (opt)
2 tablespoons olive oil 2 teaspoons dried basil
1-14 oz can stewed tomatoes* 1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 cup water 1/2 teaspoon pepper
3/4 teaspoon garlic powder
Chop the onion and cook in hot oil (or meatball drippings) until onions are soft & translucent (about 5 minutes). Add remaining ingredients and simmer over medium low heat about 20 minutes.
*We used diced tomatoes (roasted garlic & olive oil this time) instead of stewed tomatoes. Tomato blends change the flavour of the sauce, so you can make it suit your taste
At this stage you can gently return the meatballs to the sauce, or serve them separately, over cooked spaghetti, or stir the pasta into the sauce as well and make it a one dish supper.