Swedish Meatballs & Cream Sauce (Köttbullar Och Gräddsås) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Ground Beef

by: swedishturkey

November17,2018

4

11 Ratings

  • Prep time 30 minutes
  • Cook time 20 minutes
  • Serves 4

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Author Notes

My husband grew up in Sweden, and this was the recipe his great-grandmother used to make Swedish meatballs when he visited her as a young boy. There are three major differences to this recipe compared to Americanized versions. Salt and pepper are the only spices since these spices were not common in recipes except for special occasions. This recipe also uses potato as one of the binding agents, which I have not found in other recipes. Lastly, it only uses ground beef, instead of a mix of ground meats. —swedishturkey

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What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • For the Meatballs
  • 1 medium-sized yellow potato
  • 1 teaspoonsea salt, or to taste
  • 1/2 teaspoonground pepper, white preferred
  • 1 large egg
  • 500 gramslean ground beef
  • 1/2 cupbreadcrumbs, plain
  • 1/2 cupmilk
  • Olive oil nonstick spray
  • For the Cream Sauce and to Serve
  • 1/2 cupwhipping cream
  • 1 cupmilk
  • 2 tablespoonssoy, or to taste
  • 1 teaspoonbeef bouillon, or to taste
  • 1 tablespoonflour
  • Boiled potatoes (to serve)
  • Lingonberry jam (to serve)
Directions
  1. Peel and boil the potato until soft through. Cool. Shred the potato with a grater.
  2. Mix the pepper, salt and egg into the meat.
  3. Microwave milk to slightly warm. Add breadcrumbs to the milk.
  4. Add milk/breadcrumbs and shredded potato to the ground beef. Mix well with hands. Roll into small, tight meatballs.
  5. Heat a non-stick pan on medium-high heat and spray with non-stick olive oil.
  6. Cook meatballs through in batches, allowing space between each meatball. Respray pan with oil spray between batches.
  7. In a separate saucepan, heat the cream and milk to a simmer. Add soy and beef bouillon to taste. Add flour mixed in a little water to the sauce to thicken.
  8. Serve meatballs and cream sauce with boiled potatoes and lingonberry jam.

Tags:

  • Swedish
  • Scandinavian
  • Ground Beef
  • Entree
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14 Reviews

Roxanne October 8, 2021

Have had this recipe in my collection for awhile now and decided to make it tonight because frankly I am sick of all the recipes here that call for “technique” and a number of ingredients that I have either never heard of or don’t want to purchase to use them for one recipe. I had my doubts about this but the meatballs were the tenderest I have ever made and the sauce to my great surprise was delicious. Thank you Swedishturkey. This is a keeper!

Debbie January 20, 2019

No allspice?

swedishturkey January 20, 2019

Correct. No Allspice. Allspice was not a common ingredient back in Sweden when this recipe was created.

Alexandra W. January 9, 2019

Hi there- is soy in this recipe soy sauce?

swedishturkey January 9, 2019

Oops thanks for catching that mistake. Yes, it is soy sauce.

Smaug March 9, 2019

Was soy sauce common in Sweden when the recipe was originated?

swedishturkey March 9, 2019

Soy was not in the meatball recipe itself. It was common once people started making it with that gravy. Nice try though.

Smaug March 9, 2019

So that would be a no? Allspice is pretty common now too, in fact has been well known in Europe since the 17th century.

PaigeBakes March 10, 2019

Smug, it's her recipe FFS.

Smaug March 10, 2019

Really? She said it was her husband's great grandmother's. GFY.

swedishturkey March 10, 2019

Really. I did not say that allspice was not available. I said it was not COMMON. If you go over to Sweden, most meatballs served in restaurants, or that can be bought premade do not contain allspice. My husband and I came up with the cream sauce, based on cream sauces we have had, and soy is readily available for us.

Smaug March 10, 2019

OK, but as a non-Swede don't see anything about the meatballs to make them particularly Swedish, that recipe could have come from anywhere. The grated potato isn't widely used (though it should be), but has plenty of history in other places- I think I first got it from Louis DeGuoy. So, since it's presented as a historical recipe, I would find the history of the sauce to be rather important.

swedishturkey March 10, 2019

It is Swedish because it came from Swedes - not an Americanized version of Swedish meatballs. Swedes tend to eat meatballs as everyday food, rather than for special occasions, where one would be more likely to use simple spices. If you want to believe that the allspice version here in America is more authentic, then that's fine. Move along from my recipe, but you'll miss out.

Smaug March 10, 2019

I have no dog in this fight- I came to this recipe in hopes of finding an answer to the question "what are these Swedish meatballs I hear so much about". Your answer. apparently, is that they're just meatballs like any other. I was hoping for more, but c'est la vie.

Swedish Meatballs & Cream Sauce (Köttbullar Och Gräddsås) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What is the sauce for Swedish meatballs made from? ›

The sauce for Swedish Meatballs is a creamy gravy that is made with butter, beef broth/stock, thickened with flour and made creamy with cream. But the most important flavour for the a really good creamy gravy is the pan drippings after searing the meatballs.

What do Swedish people eat with meatballs? ›

Swedish meatballs are quite small, at most about an inch in diameter. As mentioned above, They are usually served in a creamy gravy with lingonberry jam or Lingonberry Sauce and Fresh Pickled Cucumbers. Swedish meatballs are usually served on top of mashed potatoes or buttered egg noodles. Both are delicious!

What makes Swedish meatballs different from regular meatballs? ›

While both varieties include ingredients such as grated onion and panade (milk-soaked bread) or bread crumbs, plus the usual salt and pepper, Swedish meatballs traditionally use spices like allspice, nutmeg, white pepper, and sometimes ground ginger as flavoring.

Where did the recipe for Swedish meatballs come from? ›

ikea restaurants made them famous all over the world: Köttbullar, or Swedish meatballs. Sweden has now revealed that the recipe for its iconic dish actually came from Turkey. It was brought to the Scandinavian country by King Charles XII, who lived in exile in the Ottoman Empire in the early 18th-century.

What is Ikea meatball gravy made of? ›

Iconic Swedish cream sauce: Melt 40g of butter in a pan. Whisk in 40g of plain flour and stir for 2 mins. Add 300ml of bouillon (or consommé) and continue to stir. Add 150ml double cream, 2 tsp of soy sauce and 1 tsp of (Dijon) mustard.

Does Swedish meatballs contain sour cream? ›

It's All About the Sauce

Flavored with nutmeg and cardamom, these little beef-and-pork meatballs are best served with a Swedish meatball sauce—a rich roux-based and beef stock gravy, spiked with sour cream and a little lingonberry jelly.

What is the Swedish meatball scandal? ›

Czech authorities alerted the discount furniture maker that they had found horsemeat in a sample of meatballs, and Ikea subsequently pulled the product from stores in 14 countries.

How do Swedish people eat Swedish meatballs? ›

Traditional Swedish way: Do not make the cream sauce at all. Serve meatballs over plain or stewed macaroni, plain or mashed potatoes, and lingenberry jam (optional)

Why are my Swedish meatballs falling apart? ›

ANSWER: Usually when meatballs fall apart, it's the binder that is the problem. Most meatball recipes call for using bread crumbs and eggs. But too much bread crumbs make them too loose, and not enough bread crumbs won't help them hold together either.

Are homestyle meatballs the same as Swedish meatballs? ›

Swedish meatballs are typically smaller than the Italian style. Seasonings are different for Swedish meatballs but every recipe for them has variations on spices.

What supermarket sells Swedish meatballs? ›

Smörgåsbord The Original Swedish Meatballs 400g | Sainsbury's.

Do they eat Swedish meatballs in Sweden? ›

Swedish meatballs, or köttbullar, must be prepared, above all, with love. This is why homemade meatballs are a widespread concept in Sweden, and there are many different favourite recipes – with and without meat.

Why are Swedish meatballs Turkish? ›

Are they even Swedish? Swedish meatballs are said to based on a recipe King Charles XII brought home from Turkey in the early 1700's. But most likely meatballs were eaten long before that.

What meat are IKEA Swedish meatballs made of? ›

Steps for the meatballs

Combine beef and pork mince until all lumps are smoothed. Add finely chopped onion, garlic, breadcrumbs, egg and mix. Then add milk and salt and pepper to taste. Grab small handfuls and roll into a ball shape.

Is bolognese sauce the same as meatball sauce? ›

Meatballs are not a sauce, they are balls of meat. A sauce has to be runny, or at least flowing. Done correctly, a bolognese sauce isn't particularly meaty. The meat is meant to be finely ground and incorporated into a standard spaghetti sauce, and the meat so fine it should stick onto the pasta in little specks.

Why is my Swedish meatball sauce not thickening? ›

How to Thicken Swedish Meatball Sauce. The all-purpose flour in this recipe should do the trick to thicken your Swedish meatball sauce to the right consistency. But if it doesn't, you can add a cornstarch slurry (1 tablespoon of cornstarch to 2 tablespoons of water) to thicken it up.

What are IKEA Swedish meatballs made of? ›

The standard meatballs that you might put in a spaghetti sauce or a meatball sub are usually made with ground beef. But, Swedish meatballs from IKEA are made from both pork and beef! And, of course, there is a creamy gravy rather than a red sauce when you serve it.

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