(Toaster Oven) Meatloaf With Chili Sauce Recipe
- 1/2 cup milk
- 4 slices white sandwich bread, torn into pieces
- 1 1/2 pounds ground round
- 1 1/2 pounds ground pork
- 2 small onions, finely chopped
- 6 cloves garlic, minced
- 1/4 cup chili sauce, plus 1/4 cup for glaze
- 1/4 cup ketchup, plus 1/4 cup for glaze
- 1 cup chopped fresh parsley
- 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
- 2 large eggs, lightly beaten
- Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
- Preheat toaster oven to 350u0b0F, with rack at bottom. In a large bowl, pour milk over bread and let soak about 30 seconds. Add ground round, pork, onion, garlic, 1/4 cup chili sauce, 1/4 cup ketchup, parsley, Parmesan, eggs, 1 1/2 teaspoons salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Using your hands, mix until combined, but do not overmix or your meatloaf will become dense.
- Divide mixture in half. Gently form each half into a log, placing one log in an 8 1/2-by-4 1/2-inch loaf pan. Do not press down or into corners. For other log, you may refrigerate (for up to 1 day) or freeze for later use.
- Bake 50 minutes. Mix together 1/8 cup of chili sauce and ketchup and the tablespoon of brown sugar. Brush glaze onto top of loaf; continue cooking until juices run clear and an instant-read thermometer inserted into thickest part registers 160u0b0F, about 10 minutes more.
- Remove from oven; let rest 5 minutes. Turn loaf out of pan; slice into 3/4-inch-thick slices.
- Repeat step 3 for second loaf.
- For even more crisp edge surface, you can form meat mixture into a loaf shape and bake directly drip pan.
- I decided to make my National Meatloaf Day meatloaf at the office. I figured, why not? We have a toaster oven. We have a sink. We have more counter space there than I have at my place. Plus, there's a Whole Foods a mere 3 blocks away. So after a quick mid-morning trip to the store and a bit of prep work, I had some of my mis en place
- The ingredients, more or less. Well, less. Less the chili sauce, white bread slices, salt and pepper, brown sugar, ketchup.
- The ingredients, more or less. Well, less. Less the chili sauce, white bread slices, salt and pepper, brown sugar, ketchup.
- I brought in my chef's knife and a loaf pan, but I forgot to bring in my really big mixing bowl. Actually, I left the house with it that morning, but I remembered that we had this *fairly* large bowl at the office. It wasn't big enough, though. I really should have brought in my big bowl. In this bowl are
- the ingredients. Ready to be mixed by hand.
- The recipe makes enough for two loaves. I only had on loaf pan, so I baked the one on the left and placed its less-fortunate, not-to-be-cooked "meathunk" in a Ziplock bag for cooking tomorrow.
- The recipe says to mix by hand but not to overdo it. Overmixing yields a tough meatloaf. I don't think I overmixed it.
- The recipe makes enough for two loaves. I only had on loaf pan, so I baked the one on the left and placed its less-fortunate, not-to-be-cooked "meathunk" in a Ziplock bag for cooking tomorrow.
- One of the biggest struggles I have with meatloaf is keeping it from crumbling. Would mine hold together?
- No! It crumbled. Dagnabbit! I don't think I mixed thoroughly enough to distribute the torn bread and eggs as binder. I also will use finer breadcrumbs in the future. What I used were closer to nibblets you'd feed birds. So this looked good as a *loaf* but disintegrated at the touch of the knife. My failed attempt at meatloaf reminded me of that *other* Meatloaf-the fat singin' dude. Has Weird Al done a parody song sung to the tune of "I Would Do Anything for Love"? ... "I would eat anything for lunch. Yes, I would eat anything for lunch. But I won't eat that" Hmm ... The truth is, I did eat the meatloaf, even crumbly....
- My solution was to use "post-bake binding agents," aka two slices of bread. Which was fine, because I was able to move on to my favorite thing about meatloaf anywaythe Leftover-Meatloaf Sandwich. Bonus: This one was warm, right out of the oven. While this meatloaf made the office smell great, nobody except me seemed to really dig in. Silence told me all I needed to know. This meatloaf was most assuredly not serious eats.
- The following day, I decided to make the second loaf. I had dropped the second ball of meatloaf mixture into a large Ziploc bag and refrigerated it. So, about an hour and a half before lunchtime, I grabbed it, let it sit outside the fridge to warm up a bit and then, remembering the disastrous first attempt, I mixed this loaf a little more. With only half the meat, there was room in the bowl to mix it easily. Anyway. Here's a picture of the toaster oven I've been using. She's a beaut, ain't she?
milk, white sandwich bread, ground round, ground pork, onions, garlic, chili sauce, ketchup, parsley, parmesan cheese, eggs, salt, brown sugar
Taken from www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2007/10/toaster_oven_meatloaf_with_chili_sauce.html?ref=serelated (may not work)