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Chicken and Turkey

Chicken Parm Meatballs

By October 10, 2012June 15th, 2025134 Comments

Unless Iโ€™m out to dinner, or unless thereโ€™s a birthday to celebrate, thereโ€™s not much room in my life right now for high-concept food. I love the idea ofย mashed potato ghosts for Halloween, and the artisanal Mallomars that came with the check at last weekendโ€™s anniversary dinnerย was definitely good for a giggle. Even if it hadnโ€™t been recorded in my dinner diary, the โ€œice cream coneโ€ starter I had at the French Laundry in 1998 โ€” a masterfully tiny homemade wafer cone filled with creme fraiche and topped with salmon tartare โ€œsprinklesโ€ โ€” will stay with me for a long time. But you guys know me by now. You know that, for the most part, my default mode is simple, un-fussy meals that are fresh, can be put together fast, and donโ€™t require any winking when served. (Any one getting flashbacks here of Charles Grodin and his โ€œhonestโ€ dinnerย in The Heartbreak Kid?)ย But every now and then, an idea presents itself that Iโ€™d be crazy not to try. Last week Phoebe reminded me that I had been promisingย meatballs on the family dinner table and had somehow failed to deliver. At the same time, in the same breath, Abby reminded me that I had been promising Chicken Parm on the family dinner table and had somehow failed to deliver. In an attempt to remedy my staggeringly deprived children as well as cut off any sibling tussling at the pass, I decided to please them both with a single high-concept, low-maintenance meatball meal. โ€œItโ€™s like Chicken Parm married Meatballs and had a baby,โ€ I told them, before wondering why on earth I would ever open up such a weird concept with an 8- and 10-year-old. Well, either way, King Solomon wouldโ€™ve been proud.

Chicken Parm Meatballs

This makes 12 large-ish meatballs. My best self wouldโ€™ve let the meatballs freeze as shown here (after initial 15-minute bake), then frozen them for future use, on which day, my best self wouldโ€™ve transferred the frozen meatballs to the fridge in the morning, then heated them up in a 350ยฐF oven for 15 minutes (before proceeding with broiling) upon her return later that night.

1 1/4 pounds ground chicken
1/2 cup breadcrumbs
2 tablespoons chopped onion
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1/2 cup Pecorino (or Parm)
salt to taste
pepper to taste
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
1 egg, whisked
zest of half a lemon
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 14-ounce can storebought pizza sauce (such as Don Pepinoโ€™s)
about 4 ounces fresh mozzarella (a dozen thin slices; to pile on the cheese would be to cancel out the fact that you were virtuous enough to replace fatty beef with lean chicken)

Preheat oven to 400ยฐF, setting rack to upper third part of oven. In a large bowl, using your hands, gently mix together first 11 ingredients. Shape into lacrosse-ball size balls (that would be somewhere between golf and tennis) and place a few inches from each other on a foil-lined baking sheet. In a small bowl, mix one spoonful of your pizza sauce with olive oil. Brush this mixture on top of each meatball. Bake for 15 minutes.

Remove meatballs from oven, spoon some sauce on top of each meatball, and cover each with a slice of cheese. Broil another 3 to 5 minutes until cheese is bubbly and golden. ย Heat remaining sauce in a small saucepan.

Serve meatballs with a dollop of sauce and a raw Tuscan kale salad that has been shredded and tossed with shallots, Pecornio, olive oil, salt, and pepper.

If you liked this recipe, Iโ€™m guessing youโ€™ll also love the 80+ other recipes inย Dinner: The Playbook, from whence those meatballs came.

Meanwhile, how much do I love this review of Dinner: A Love Story from Food52?ย My favorite quote:ย โ€œRosenstrachโ€™s book and blog are something very rare in the genre of family dinner: they inspire neither homicidal nor suicidal impulses.โ€

134 Comments

  • Avatar Lisa says:

    Thank you! This sounds great!

    • Avatar christine corbisello says:

      I made a mistake reading and used a whole zest of lemon. Thats all i taste. But u used 1 1/2 lbs chicken.why would recipe even ave zest of lemon zest in a chicken parm recipe anyway

      • Avatar k.s.mccolley says:

        I used the recipe for the chicken meatballs and it was absolutely deliciousโ€ฆthe little bit of lemon zest (and a squeeze of the fresh lemon juice) brightened up the flavor and made them really, really amazing. I added a bit of herbes de Provence with the fresh parsley and skipped the tomato sauce for a fresh baby spinach salad with tomatoes, fresh mozzarella balls, red onion in rings, a simple dressing (http://www.kindred-kitchen.com/recipes/recipe-redux-herbs-de-provence-salad-dressing/), served with chilled white wine, and crispy bread. Honestly, this is the best recipe for ground chicken that Iโ€™ve ever triedโ€ฆ

    • Avatar marissa says:

      Delucioso

    • Avatar Sandra says:

      My daughter-in-law Heather recommended this recipe. I agree with her, the meatballs are wonderful!

    • Avatar Brenda says:

      Good morning, Could you explain ground chicken? I have bought ground turkey, but Iโ€™ve never seen chicken.

  • Avatar Kendra says:

    Loved this post. And I could so go for some of these meatballs right now. Iโ€™m putting them in the running for the new apartment inaugural dinner that will happen if/when we finally unpack the kitchen.

  • Caroline says:

    I Liked Bodum on Facebook. Do I win the Newsletter Prize? ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Lisa says:

    Genius! Love the concept!

  • Avatar Leslie says:

    I just pinned this to my Pinterest food board and discovered that 40 people have already done the same in the past hour. I guess weโ€™re all having the same thing for dinner tonight!

  • mommylisa says:

    Oh โ€“ those look good. I made some turkey meatballs with leftover french bread and some basil the a few weekends ago โ€“ then made this AWESOME bacon marinara to put over them. There was so much marinara left it is going into my turkey lasagna this Friday night. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    It should be noted that you can probably majorly up the delicious factor by adding a little chopped pork product to the meatball mix (pancetta, prosciutto) but if youโ€™re going to do that, my feeling is that you might as well just make regular old fat-heavy beef/pork/veal meatballs.

  • Avatar Brandy says:

    So, I call my local butcher, tough guy from NYC, and he says grinding up a few chicken breasts for me is against the LAW. Seriously? Apparently yesโ€ฆ USDA says no way Joseโ€ฆ and they need a whole separate facility to do it in.

    Sooo, you grinding at home? Or buying pre packed?

    • Avatar Katrina says:

      In IL we can just buy it ground. I bought a pre-packaged 1 pound of ground chicken for this recipe. Thatโ€™s crazy!!!

    • Avatar Steve says:

      That is wild. Itโ€™s sold everywhere in Ga pre-ground. And if anyone can find a way to Make something illegal, I thought itโ€™d be Ga. They must not have heard of it
      Yet

    • Avatar Suwanna says:

      I always get my at whole food store. My local Whole Food always carry it but if they out of it, I can always grab a pack or two and ask them to make it for next. The only watch out is if you buy organic chicken, it will be contrami aged as the machines is share with non-organic meat as well. If you are ok with slightly contraminate then Whole Foodcan help you. Otherwise, run the food processor in you kitchen would give u the ground chicken.

  • Avatar Melissa@Julia's Bookbag says:

    Itโ€™s like you are INSIDE MY MIND โ€” I got up today and thought, I want chicken parmesan! ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    Brandy โ€“ Very odd. Never heard of that. I bought my ground chicken at Whole Foods. It was already packaged โ€” butcher did not grind it for me.

  • Avatar Stacey says:

    Perfect for Woeful Wednesdays! Also a great idea as a holiday starter.

  • Avatar tina says:

    mmmmโ€ฆingenious idea! My daughter has been asking for chicken parm and Iโ€™ve been in the mood for meatballs and spaghetti. This is perfect!

  • Avatar Emily says:

    I made these tonight. They were perfect little mounds of deliciousness. They will be in my regular recipe repertoire.

  • Avatar Esha says:

    Hi Jenny,
    My one-year-old is allergic to egg. Any substitute for the egg in your chicken parm meatball recipe? By the way, I love reading your blog!
    Thanks,
    Esha

    • Avatar Beth says:

      What about Aquafaba, the liquid that comes inside a can of chickpeas? Google it, but I think three tablespoons is a common substitute for a single egg.

  • kita says:

    Even if these arent high concept food โ€“ they still sound perfect for a cozy evening.

  • Avatar Amy M. says:

    These were a big hit last night. Really great flavor.

  • Avatar Julie C says:

    Made these last night and kids loved them!

  • Avatar Kristen says:

    These were wonderfulโ€“we made them on Fridayโ€“all LOVED them!
    Thanks!

  • Merry says:

    I grind my own chicken. If you cut it into 1 inch cubes (or thereabouts =) and freeze them for about two hours, the chicken becomes firm enough to grind in your food processor. I have the meatballs chilling in my fridge and I canโ€™t wait till I can cook them up for dinner! They smell sooooo nummy <=o)

  • Inthefastlane says:

    Made them tonight. They hit the spot. And even the kid who cried that I was poisoning him when he saw one of these on his plate, tried it and liked it.

  • Avatar Janice says:

    Hi there,
    My friend pinned this and I got it from her. I plan to make these this week. Cool idea!

  • Avatar Jenny says:

    stumbled upon this recipe through pinterest and it just sounds absolutely amazing! Def. will be making this in the near future!

  • Avatar Holly says:

    These would probably freeze well Iโ€™m guessing? Iโ€™m always looking for things I can just defrost, heat up, and eat!

  • Avatar Kendri says:

    My kids both loved these! I will def make them again!

  • Avatar CanadianJane says:

    I made these tonight. Absolutely delicious. Will def make again. Thank you so much!

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