Angels Spanish Meatloaf is a flavorful and hearty dish that is sure to please the whole family. This classic recipe is made with a combination of ground beef, ground pork, and veal, seasoned with a blend of spices and herbs. It is then topped with a tangy tomato sauce and baked until golden brown. Served with a side of mashed potatoes or rice, Angels Spanish Meatloaf is a comforting and satisfying meal that is perfect for any occasion.
Let's cook with our recipes!
SPANISH-STYLE MEATLOAF
Whip up this deeply flavored main dish that's filled with grated Manchego cheese, diced green pepper, and smoked paprika. Made with ground turkey, it's a lean, flavorful meatloaf recipe.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Food & Cooking Ingredients Meat & Poultry Pork Recipes Ground Pork Recipes
Time 1h
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a medium skillet, heat oil over medium-high. Add onion, garlic, potatoes, and bell pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is soft and vegetables begin to brown, 5 minutes. Add paprika and thyme, season with salt and pepper, and cook, stirring, 1 minute.
- In a large bowl, combine pork, cheese, bread, and egg. Add vegetable mixture and season with 2 teaspoons salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Using your hands, mix until ingredients are combined. Transfer to a parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet; form into a 4-by-10-inch loaf. Bake until meatloaf is cooked through, 40 minutes, rotating sheet halfway through. Let rest 15 minutes before slicing.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 451 g, Fat 33 g, Fiber 1 g, Protein 26 g
1770 HOUSE MEATLOAF
Provided by Ina Garten
Time 1h30m
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
- Heat the olive oil in a large (12-inch) saute pan over medium heat. Add the onion and celery and cook for 5 to 7 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the onion is translucent but not browned. Set aside to cool slightly.
- Place the beef, veal, pork, parsley, thyme, chives, eggs, milk, salt and pepper in a large mixing bowl. Put the panko in a food processor fitted with the steel blade and process until the panko is finely ground.
- Add the onion mixture and the panko to the meat mixture. With clean hands, gently toss the mixture together, making sure it's combined but not compacted.
- Place a piece of parchment paper on a sheet pan. Pat the meat into a flat rectangle and then press the sides in until it forms a cylinder down the middle of the pan (this will ensure no air pockets). Bake for 40 to 50 minutes, until a thermometer inserted in the middle reads 155 degrees F to 160 degrees F. Remove from the oven and allow to rest for 10 minutes. Slice and serve hot with the Garlic Sauce.
- Combine the oil and garlic in a small saucepan and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer for 10 to 15 minutes, until lightly browned. Be careful not to burn the garlic or it will be bitter. Remove the garlic from the oil and set aside. (I save the oil for vinaigrettes.)
- Combine the chicken stock, butter and cooked garlic in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and cook at a full boil for 35 to 40 minutes, until slightly thickened. Mash the garlic with a fork, whisk in 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon pepper, and taste for seasonings. Spoon the warm sauce over the meatloaf.
ED'S MOTHER'S MEATLOAF
I have a perfectly justifiable weakness for any recipe that comes to me passed on through someone else's family. This is not just sentimentality; I hope not even sentimentality, actually, since I have always been contemptuously convinced that sentimentality is the refuge of those without proper emotions. Yes, I do infer meaning from the food that has been passed down generations and then entrusted to me, but think about it: the recipes that last, do so for a reason. And on top of all that, there is my entrancement with culinary Americana. I just hear the word meatloaf and I feel all old world, European irony and corruption seep from me as I will myself into a Thomas Hart Benton painting. And then I eat it: the dream is dispelled and all I'm left with is a mouthful of compacted, slab-shaped sawdust and major, major disappointment. So now you understand why I am so particularly excited about this recipe. It makes meatloaf taste like I always dreamt it should. Even though this is indeed Ed's Mother's Meatloaf, the recipe as is printed below is my adaptation of it. My father-in-law always used to tell a story about asking his mother for instructions on making pickles. "How much vinegar do I need?" he asked. "Enough", she answered. Ed's mother's recipe takes a similar approach; I have added contemporary touches, such as being precise about measurements. But for all that, cooking can never be truly precise: bacon will weigh more or less, depending on how thickly or thinly it is sliced, for example. And there are many other similar examples: no cookbook could ever be long enough to contain all possible variants for any one recipe. But what follows are reliable guidelines, you can be sure of that. I do implore you, if you can, to get your meat from a butcher. I have made this recipe quite a few times, comparing mincemeat that comes from the butcher and mincemeat that comes from various supermarkets and there is no getting round the fact that freshly minced butcher's meat is what makes the meatloaf melting (that, and the onions, but the onions alone can't do it). The difficulty with supermarket mince is not just the dryness as you eat, but the correlation which is that the meatloaf has a crumblier texture, making it harder to slice. I am happy just to have the juices that drip from the meatloaf as it cooks as far as gravy goes, and not least because the whole point of this meatloaf for me is that I can count on a good half of it to eat cold in sandwiches for the rest of the week. (And you must be aware, it is my duty to make you aware, that a high-sided roasting tin makes for more juices than a shallow one.) But if you wanted to make enough gravy to cover the whole shebang hot, then either make an onion gravy and pour the meat juices in at the end or fashion a quick stovetop BBQ gravy. By that, I mean just get out a saucepan, put in it 1.76 ounces/50g dark muscovado sugar, 4.23 ounces/125ml beef stock, 4 tablespoons each of Dijon mustard, soy sauce, tomato paste or puree and redcurrant jelly and 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar, to taste. Warm and whisk and pour into a jug to serve. Ed instructed me to eat kasha with this, which is I imagine how his mother served it, but I really feel that if you haven't grown up on kasha - a kind of buckwheat polenta - then you will all too easily fail to see its charm. I can't see any argument against mashed potato, save the lazy one, but I don't mind going cross-cultural and making up a panful of polenta; I use the instant kind, but replace the water that the packet instructions advise with chicken stock. And as with the beef stock needed for the gravy suggested above, I am happy for this to be bought rather than homemade.
Provided by Nigella Lawson : Food Network
Time 2h5m
Yield 7-8
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Bring a saucepan of water to a boil and then boil 3 of the eggs for 7 minutes. Refresh them in cold water.
- Peel and chop the onions, and heat the duck fat in a thick-bottomed frying pan. Cook the onions gently sprinkled with the salt, for about 20 to 25 minutes or until the onions are golden and catching in the fat. Remove to a bowl to cool.
- Put the Worcestershire sauce and ground beef into a bowl, and when the onion mixture is not hot to the touch, add to the bowl and work everything together with your hands.
- Add the remaining raw egg and mix again before finally adding the breadcrumbs.
- Divide the mixture into 2, and in the pan, make the bottom half of the meatloaf by patting half the beef mixture into a flattish ovoid shape approximately 9 inches long. Peel and place the 3 hard-boiled eggs in a row down the middle of the meatloaf.
- Shape the remaining mound over the top of the eggs and pat into a solid loaf shape. Compress the meatloaf to get rid of any holes, but don't overwork it.
- Cover the meatloaf with slices of bacon, as if it were a terrine, tucking the bacon ends underneath the meatloaf as best you can to avoid its curling up as it cooks.
- Bake for 1 hour, until the juices run clear and once it's out of the oven let the meatloaf rest for 15 minutes. This should make it easier to slice. When slicing, do it generously, so everyone gets some egg. Pour meat juices over as you serve or do what you will gravy-wise.
ANN'S SISTER'S MEATLOAF RECIPE
This is supposedly Ann Landers' sister's meatloaf recipe.
Provided by Debbie Clark
Categories Main Dish Recipes Meatloaf Recipes Pork Meatloaf Recipes
Time 1h10m
Yield 6
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- In a large bowl combine the beef, eggs, crumbs, ketchup, MSG, water and soup mix. Mix well and spoon mixture into loaf pan. Cover with 2 strips of bacon, then cover with tomato sauce.
- Bake in preheated oven for 1 hour.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 510.4 calories, Carbohydrate 27.1 g, Cholesterol 156.9 mg, Fat 28.3 g, Fiber 2 g, Protein 34.9 g, SaturatedFat 10.5 g, Sodium 1164.3 mg, Sugar 5.8 g
EASY SALSA MEATLOAF
A crowd pleasing meatloaf, may be made with ground beef or ground turkey. Both are yummy.
Provided by TINKERBELL15
Categories Main Dish Recipes Meatloaf Recipes Beef Meatloaf Recipes
Time 1h
Yield 6
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- In a large bowl, mix the ground sirloin, salsa, bread crumbs, cheese, egg, and garlic. Season with parsley, salt, and pepper. Transfer to a 5x9 inch loaf pan.
- Bake 45 minutes in the preheated oven, or to a minimum internal temperature of 160 degrees F (72 degrees C).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 220.7 calories, Carbohydrate 9 g, Cholesterol 83.5 mg, Fat 12.1 g, Fiber 0.9 g, Protein 18.3 g, SaturatedFat 5.6 g, Sodium 417.7 mg, Sugar 1.4 g
SPANISH MEAT LOAF
Make and share this Spanish Meat Loaf recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Chef Roly-Poly
Categories Meat
Time 1h45m
Yield 1 Meatloaf
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Mix thoroughly beef, 1/3 cup of the sauce and the remaining ingredients.
- Spread in ungreased loaf pan, 9x5x3 inch.
- Spread remaining tomato sauce over loaf.
- Bake in 350°F oven for 1 1/4 hours.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 1859.1, Fat 111.3, SaturatedFat 42.2, Cholesterol 674.2, Sodium 4046.8, Carbohydrate 63.1, Fiber 10.6, Sugar 14.8, Protein 145.6
ANGEL'S SPANISH MEATLOAF
As a young girl I would love making this meal for my family as it came my turn to cook. Only one problem, I never made enough. This recipe only serves 6. I always had to double my recipe. I am certain you might enjoy it too.
Provided by Angel_wings
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h35m
Yield 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350°F
- Mix thoroughly beef, 1/3 cup of the tomato sauce and remaining ingredients(excluding catsup).
- Spread in ungreased pan. (I used a small cake pan rather than a loaf pan to allow for even cooking). Spread remaining tomato sauce over loaf. Pour catsup atop the sauce in a decorative manner.
- I recommend dusting lightly with ground cinnamon for added flavor.
- Bake in 350°F oven 1 hour and 15 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 464.8, Fat 28.3, SaturatedFat 10.6, Cholesterol 168.5, Sodium 1255.5, Carbohydrate 16, Fiber 2.3, Sugar 7.2, Protein 35.6
Tips:
- Use ground beef chuck or sirloin for a flavorful meatloaf.
- Add bread crumbs, eggs, and milk to the meat mixture for a moist and tender meatloaf.
- Season the meatloaf with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder for a classic flavor.
- Top the meatloaf with a mixture of ketchup, brown sugar, and Worcestershire sauce for a sweet and tangy glaze.
- Bake the meatloaf at 350°F for 1 hour or until a meat thermometer inserted into the center reads 160°F.
- Let the meatloaf rest for 10 minutes before slicing and serving.
Conclusion:
Spanish meatloaf is a delicious and easy-to-make dish that is perfect for a weeknight dinner. With its flavorful combination of ground beef, bread crumbs, eggs, milk, and spices, this meatloaf is sure to please everyone at the table. The sweet and tangy glaze adds a finishing touch that makes this dish truly special. Serve Spanish meatloaf with your favorite sides, such as mashed potatoes, roasted vegetables, or a salad.
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love