Widening Your World With Taste

Sixteen Meatballs and a Can of Soup

Sixteen Meatballs and a Can of Soup
If you enjoy this post from A Slice of Spice, please share on:

Delicious Memories Rooted in Family Tradition

When I first started laying out the idea for Mamo’s Kitchen I asked family members to share recipes, pictures, stories and treasured memories from their childhood.  When the feedback started coming in from my husband’s family, there seemed to be a recurring theme which made choosing a recipe (or recipes in this case) a simple decision.

Mike is one of six siblings, and when they get together it is Katy bar the door! Laughter abounds and the stories from their childhoods are non-stop…when you have six kids in your family there is plenty of material to go around.  If you hear the phrase “Do you remember…” at a Vadnais gathering, put your keys and your purse down, grab a beverage, and be prepared to stay awhile!  And for some reason, many of those stories seem to revolve around food, which of course works out well for me!

Where It All Began

Mike’s parents, Henry and Pauline, were second-generation Americans whose grandparents immigrated to the United States from Canada.  Both grew up speaking mostly French in their households until they started school.  Even as adults they often spoke French to each other at home (Mike said it was their secret language since none of the kids learned much French).  Henry served in the Korean War, then remained in the reserves until retirement.  He also taught English for a while until he took a job as the Curator of the Navy Museum in Washington, D.C.  As was common for her generation, Pauline was a stay-at-home-mom, which was definitely a full-time job with her crew!

“The kitchen is the heart of every home, for the most part. It evokes memories of your family history.” – Debi Mazar

Mike so vividly remembers their kitchen/dining room…the way it was laid out, the colors, the smells…it is the place he envisions when he talks about childhood.  Dad sitting at the table with the store ads (Henry did the grocery shopping), Mom at the stove with a pot of homemade sauce simmering for hours.  To this day the siblings will tell food stories of strange sandwich concoctions like bread, butter and ketchup for Elaine (mustard for Jackie) or deviled ham and potato sticks (apparently the trick here was to poke the potato sticks into the bread so they stood straight up in the sandwich and try to eat it without damaging the roof of your mouth), and of adventures to Tastee Freeze for a sweet treat and counting train cars.  Occasionally, after the kids had gone to bed, mom would cook a special dinner for “date night”, which would often include heating up French fried onions.  Smelling the onions, the kids would take turns coming down the stairs with an “I can’t sleep”, to be rewarded with a piece of warm, crispy fried onion they would savor like a rare delicacy.

Birthday Traditions

Of course, one of the most anticipated meals for the kids came on their birthdays, which brings me back to that recurring theme.  On their birthday, each kid got to pick what they wanted to have for their birthday dinner.  And while each of the siblings had their favorite, for some reason the one that was mentioned to me repeatedly was Spirelle, Mike’s go-to choice for birthday dinner.  I’ve heard him talk about Spirelle many times over the years, but it wasn’t until his sister Jackie sent me the recipe for the blog that I discovered it wasn’t actually named Spirelle…that was just what the family called it because mom usually served it over spiral shaped pasta!

The other common birthday denominator was the cake the kids almost always asked for…Tomato Soup Cake.  I had never heard of a cake made with tomato soup, but it became apparent it was really a thing after I heard from three of the siblings within two days with the same wonderful memory.  Jackie remembers choosing it “not only because it is a moist, delicious spice cake with raisins and a funny name, but in my case, it was so I could watch her stir the baking soda into the can of tomato soup and it would foam up and bubble over the can…”   It’s so funny how such small things create such a full panorama of memories to pass on.

“Some memories are unforgettable, remaining ever vivid and heartwarming! “ -Joseph B. Wirthlin

As you will see in the recipe below, the dish formerly known as Spirelle is actually called Sauce Pot Meatballs, and they were delicious!  The onion soup mix gave the sauce a beefier flavor profile than a traditional tomato sauce has, and the meatballs themselves were very tender. While we had ours over spiral pasta for the sake of family tradition, you can serve it over any kind of pasta or rice.

As for the Tomato Soup Cake, I have to confess there was a debate/dilemma when I made it in my own kitchen.  The original recipe does not include what size pan to cook the cake in.  Mike swears it was a 9”x13” pan (which is what I used), but the baking time on the recipe is one hour, and mine was done in about 25-30 minutes.  So, I believe Pauline either made hers in a smaller pan (maybe 8×8), or possibly doubled the batch to make a bigger cake.  Either way it was still moist and delicious, full of those spicy flavors and soft raisins, but if you go with the single batch and the 9×13 pan your cook time will be shorter (and so will the cake!).

I hope you will give these family favorites a try and let me know how you loved them!  And always remember to add A Slice of Spice to your every day!

Michele
Print

Sauce Pot Meatballs

Tender meatballs simmered in a beefy tomato sauce.

Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 4

Ingredients

  • 1 pkg dry onion soup mix
  • 1 1/4 cups water
  • 2 8 oz cans tomato sauce
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1/2 tsp garlic salt or more to taste
  • 1/2 tsp thyme
  • 1 tbsp chopped parsley
  • 1 box cooked pasta can use rice instead

Instructions

  1. In a deep, thick saucepan bring to a boil quickly the onion soup mix, water, and 1 1/2 cans of tomato sauce.  Simmer, covered, for 10 minutes.

  2. Gently mix ground beef, seasonings, parsley, and remaining tomato sauce. Shape into 16 meatballs and place in sauce.

  3. Simmer gently, uncovered, for 25 minutes, turning meatballs occasionally.

  4. Serve over hot noodles or other pasta, or rice.

 

Print

Tomato Soup Cake

A moist spice cake with an unexpected twist.

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 20 minutes
Author Michele

Ingredients

  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 tbsp lard or shortening
  • 1 tbsp butter - softened
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 can tomato soup
  • 2 cups flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp ground cloves
  • 1 cup raisins
  • 2 cups cream cheese frosting

Instructions

  1. Mix together the sugar, lard or shortening, and butter until well mixed.

  2. Stir baking soda into the can of tomato soup until it foams up over the top of the can.  Add this mixture to your sugar mixture and mix well.

  3. Add flour (reserve two tablespoons of flour), baking powder, and spices and mix well.

  4. Add remaining flour to your raisins and gently mix with your hands to coat the raising with flour (this will keep them from settling to the bottom of the cake).  Stir raisins into the cake batter.

  5. Lightly grease and flour a baking pan (8x8 for a thicker cake, 9x13 for a thinner cake).  Spread batter into pan.  Cook in a 350 degree oven for 25-30 minutes for 9x13 and 1 hour for 8x8 - or until cake springs back when touched and toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean.

  6. Cool cake on a rack, then top with your favorite cream cheese frosting.



46 thoughts on “Sixteen Meatballs and a Can of Soup”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Recipe Rating