My Grandmother'S Gefteles

  1. In a large pot, make the cooking liquid: drain the liquid from the canned beets directly into pot and reserve beets. Add to that the two bottles of borscht, the lemon zest and lemon slices, the sour salt, and two cups of the honey. Start to bring to a simmer to let the liquid reduce slightly and bring the flavors together.
  2. Finely dice the cooked canned beets (or put into a food processor and pulse a few times for a thick puree), and put the beets into the cooking liquid. Wash, peel the fresh beets. Slice them thin and then halved, and add them to cook inside the cooking liquid.
  3. Saute the onions in a frypan over gentle heat. Do not let the onions brown, but they must cook until very soft. Take them off of the heat when done, and let them cool.
  4. Whip the egg whites until stiff, and in a second bowl, gently beat the yolks until combined. Set both aside.
  5. In a large mixing bowl, combine the ground veal; cooled onions, nutmeg, about 1 tbsp of salt and 1/2 tbsp of pepper, and beaten egg yolks. Gently mix, taking care not to overwork the meat (which will make the meatballs dense). Gently fold in the egg whites until combined. It is important to make sure whites are incorporated so they do not leech out during cooking.
  6. In a large frying pan, heat both peanut and safflower oil together until hot. Just enough oil to cover pan, this is not a deep fry. Using a cutlery teaspoon (not measuring teaspoon), drop uniform size oval meatballs into pan and let cook until brown on one side. Flatten slightly while cooking. Flip over and cook other side. They should be be completely cooked, but browned on both sides to develop flavor to so they stay together while they finishing cooking in the beet mixture.
  7. Remove and let drain on paper towels. Finish frying the meatballs. You will need to change out the oil and wipe the pan down several times during this process. As oil turns brown, change out to a new batch. I do it three times total.
  8. When all the meatballs are browned and drained, taste the simmering beet liquid BEFORE adding the meatballs. Adjust with more honey, pepper and salt (or sour salt) as your taste allows. There should be a rich beet flavor, with an even balance of sweet honey and sour lemon. Gently add the meatballs to the cooking liquid. Simmer for 10-15 minutes to combine flavors. Serve in the liquid, which becomes its sauce.
  9. These are better the next day or that night...let them sit in the liquid to really take on the beet color and flavor. They can easily be refrigerated in the liquid at this point and reheated in a covered dish in a 350 degree oven for 15-20 minutes when needed.

bottles of store bought borscht, beets, fresh red beets, sour salt, lemon, honey, onions, ground veal, egg whites, egg yolks, freshly ground nutmeg, salt, peanut oil, safflower oil

Taken from food52.com/recipes/51698-my-grandmother-s-gefteles (may not work)

Another recipe

Switch theme