Chestnut and cranberry stuffing balls
Peter Flynn
Stuffing for the turkey is always popular, but it’s trickier
to roast a large bird with stuffing in its body cavity because
the longer time needed will tend to dry the meat. Instead, we
stuff the crop with a traditional bread/herb/sausage-meat
recipe, and make these balls as a stand-alone dish, cooked in a
mini-muffin tin.
Makes 24. Serves 😏. Oven at 180°C (fan). Prep time: 30 minutes. Cooking time: 30 minutes.
The original recipe comes from Hannah Glasse via Delia Smith’s
Christmas book (p.192), so it has an 18th century flavour modified
by 20th century ingredients. Modern turkeys come with neither
neck-skin nor giblets, thanks to some particularly silly marketing
myth foisted on the poor farmers or on the pluckers and trussers
that people ‘don’t know what to do with them’ — this is no
reason for removing them, boys and girls!
So if you don’t have the liver which the original recipe
wants, or like me you’ve used it for turkey-liver pâté, just use
Irish black and white puddings as we do here. Search Mr Google for
images if you’re unfamiliar with these; Spanish morcilla or German
Blutwurst or English black pudding would also do (but not the ones
with large lumps in). White pudding seems to be an Irish or
Scottish thing — like the black variety but without the
blood.
Ingredients
- 30 g butter
- 1 medium onion, finely chopped
- 100 g smoked streaky bacon, cut into small lardons
- 1 small black pudding, chopped
- 1 small white pudding, chopped
- 400 g peeled chestnuts, quartered [I use the French ready-peeled vacuum-packed ones]
- 100 g dried cranberries
- handful fresh cranberries [as many as the number of stuffing balls you make; see below for calculations]
- 100 g dry breadcrumbs
- large handful parsley, finely chopped [curly-head, not flat-blade]
- 1 dsp chopped thyme
- 1 tsp grated nutmeg
- 200 g pork sausage-meat [one with at least 85% pork]
- 1 dsp salt
- 1 dsp white pepper
Method
Melt the butter in a pan and add the onion, frying gently until lightly caramelised. (see tip)
Add the bacon and cook together for 5 minutes.
Put all the remaining ingredients,
including the bacon/onion mix, but
not the fresh cranberry, into the bowl of a
food mixer or processor (not a blender), and mix
on ‘pulse’ for a few seconds at a time. You should aim
for a fairly rough texture, so use the plastic blade if your
food processor has one, rather than the metal blade: it must
not be a purée!
If you don't have a food processor or it only has a small
bowl, chop the puddings and chestnuts smaller, use the biggest
bowl you have, a large spoon, and a lot of muscle, and only
add the sausage-meat at the end
Weigh the mix and work out how much to use per ball: it’s
easiest if you aim to make as many balls as you have
indentations in your muffin tin. I use a mini-muffin tin with
24 holes — this quantity of the recipe makes about 1200 g,
which would be two batches at 25 g each ball. You could also
use an eight-hole mini loaf tin to make stuffing loaves at
150 g per hole.
Weigh (or guess) and roll the mix into balls, inserting a
whole fresh cranberry into the middle of
each one from the stash you kept back above. Put each
completed ball into a hole in the muffin tin. If you’re using
a mini loaf tin, put four fresh cranberry into each one.
Bake for about 30 minutes until golden.
Serving
References
- Smith, Delia. Delia Smith’s
Christmas, BBC Books Ltd, London, 1990