Kangaroo Bitterballen

At a Glance

Cooking Time:

Serves: 16 - 20

Difficulty: 6

  • cold
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • cold
5

0 Comments


About this recipe

A few years ago when my friends Greg and Fran where living in Amsterdam, I’d often drop in and stay with them for a couple of days when I was in Europe on business. On countless occasions, we’d all go out for Bitterballen and Hoegaarden.

Nearly everyone knows Hoegaarden, but not many people know about Bitterballen. Bitterballen is a Dutch fried meatball often served in cafes and pubs and is typically served with Dijon mustard. On the outside they are crumbed with breadcrumbs and on the inside have a creamy, meaty and somewhat cheesy centre. Very morish. 

Since visiting Holland I’ve created an Australian recipe for Bitterballen which is flavoured with red desert dust opposed the traditionally flavour of curry powder. However this recipe uses kangaroo mince instead of veal for a real Australian version of bitterballen. The mix is flavoured with wildfire spice and served with bush tomato chutney as well.

Ingredients

250g (9 oz.) butter
200g (7 oz.) kangaroo mince
50g (1 ½ oz.) onion, finely chopped
15g (1 tablespoon) wildfire spice
7ml (1 teaspoon) lemon juice
1 sprig parsley, finely chopped
200g (7 oz.) flour
100ml (½ cup) milk
100ml (½ cup) beef stock
150g (5 oz.) dried bread crumbs
2 egg, beaten with 15ml (1 tablespoon) water
salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
60g (4 tablespoons) bush tomato chutney
500ml vegetable oil for deep frying

Cooking instruction

Heat just 50g butter in a frying pan and sauté the kangaroo mince and onions until browned. Drain the kangaroo mince in a colander, then place into a mixing bowl. To the kangaroo mince, add the salt, pepper, half the wildfire spice, lemon juice and parsley.

Heat the remaining butter in a saucepan and stir in the flour to make a roux. Cook this for 2 to 3 minutes, then add the beef stock and milk. This is basically a volute, so continue to cook, stirring constantly, until it begins boil and thickens. Add the veal mixture to the beef volute and stir to combine them thoroughly.

Remove the mixture from the heat and allow to cool. Then chill for at least three hours in the refrigerator until solid. When the mixture is solid, begin to roll it into bite sized balls.
With the remaining red desert dust add this to the breadcrumbs mix. Then roll the balls in the bread crumbs, and coat with egg and water mixture and then back into bread crumbs again.

Make a Comment

Rating | What do you think
Use the slider to rate this product
6

Featured Ingredient

Bush Tomato Chutney is robust combination of ground bush tomatoes, regular tomatoes and apples in traditional styled chutney. The ground bush tomatoes are sourced from the arid areas of the Australian outback and provide a sweet and savoury taste of tamarillo, caramel and sun-dried tomatoes. 

Read More

Review

Barons Brewing have produced a stunning Lemon Myrtle Witbier as part of their Native Range of beers.

Read More

Cooking Tip

As kangaroo meat is regarded a very lean meat, if overcooked it can easily dry out and become tough to eat. To prevent this make sure you marinate before cooking, only cook to medium rare and when serving make sure you cut against the grain for maximum tenderness.

My Books

I’ve recently started writing Kitchen Profitability which will be a chef’s guide to food costs and menu engineering.

Kitchen Profitability is aimed at chefs, restaurant owners, restaurant managers and general managers who want to learn how to better manage and control their food costs.

Read More

Tag Cloud