Spaghetti and meatballs
Spaghetti and meatballs or spaghetti with meatballs is an Italian-American dish consisting of spaghetti, tomato sauce and meatballs.[1]
![]() Spaghetti and meatballs | |
Course | Main course |
---|---|
Place of origin | United States |
Region or state | New York City |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredients | Spaghetti, tomato sauce, meatballs |
![](../I/m/SpaghettiandMeatballs.jpg)
History
Spaghetti and meatballs was an innovation of Italian immigrants in New York City, who had access to a more plentiful meat supply than in Italy.[2][3]
- In 1888, Juliet Corson of New York published a recipe for pasta with meatballs and tomato sauce.[4]
- In 1909 a recipe for "Beef Balls with Spaghetti" appeared in American Cookery, Volume 13.[5]
- The National Pasta Association (originally named the National Macaroni Manufacturers Association) published a recipe for spaghetti with meatballs in the 1920s.[6]
- In 1931 Venice Maid in New Jersey was selling canned "spaghetti with meatballs in sauce".[7]
- In 1938 the exact phrase "spaghetti and meatballs" appeared in a list of canned foods produced by Ettore Boiardi, later known as Chef Boyardee, in Milton, Pa.[8]
Italian writers and chefs often mock the dish as pseudo-Italian or non-Italian,[9] because in Italy meatballs are smaller and are only served with egg-based, baked pasta.[10] However, various kinds of pasta with meat are part of the culinary tradition of the Abruzzo, Apulia, Sicily, and other parts of southern Italy. A recipe for rigatoni with meatballs is in Il cucchiaio d'argento (The Silver Spoon), a comprehensive Italian cookbook known as the "bible" of Italian cooking.
In fact, in Abruzzo, chitarra alla teramana is a long spaghetti-like pasta served with small meatballs (polpettine).[11] It is a traditional made-in-Abruzzo recipe. It is generally a first course (primo piatto) prepared with chitarra pasta, pasta cut with a traditional tool called a chitarra (guitar) with cutting wires which resemble guitar strings. The pasta is seasoned with meat or vegetable ragù and served with pallottine ("little balls").
![](../I/m/Spaghetti_alla_chitarra_con_pallottine_(Teramo).jpg)
Other dishes that have similarities to spaghetti and meatballs include pasta seduta (seated pasta) and maccaroni azzese in Apulia.[12][13][14]
Some baked pasta dishes from Apulia combine pasta and meat where meatballs, mortadella, or salami are baked with rigatoni, tomato sauce, and mozzarella, then covered with a pastry top.[15]
Other pasta recipes include slices of meat rolled up with cheese, cured meats and herbs (involtini in Italian) and braciole ("bra'zhul" in Italian-American and Italian-Australian slang) that are cooked within sauce but pulled out to be served as a second course.
- Spaghetti and spicy meatballs, homemade
- Restaurant presentation of spaghetti and meatballs with Parmesan cheese.
See also
References
- Dickie, John (2008). Delizia!: The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food. Simon and Schuster. pp. 225–226. ISBN 1416554009. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
- Frankie Celenza (2018-07-03). "Italian-American Food Never Claimed To Be Italian, So You Can Stop Hating On It". HuffPost.
- Allie Lembo (2018-10-11). "7 'Italian' foods Americans eat that you typically won't find in Italy". insider.
- Corson, Juliet (1888). Family Living on $500 a Year: A Daily Reference-book for Young and Inexperienced Housewives. Harper & Brothers. p. 43.
- American Cookery. 13. Whitney Publications. 1909.
- America’s Favorite Recipes: The Melting Pot Cuisine, Part 2. 2009. p. 157.
- "Venice Maid". Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office. Vol. 633. United States Patent Office. 1950. p. 712.
- https://books.google.ca/books?id=0t1HAAAAYAA. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Piva, Filippo (29 July 2014). "Gli spaghetti con le polpette e gli altri falsi miti della cucina italiana all'estero". Wired Italy.
- "Pasta". The Atlantic. July 1986.
- Winke, Rebecca (March 30, 2017). "Abruzzo's Traditional Foods From Mountain to Sea". ITALY Magazine.
- Oretta Zanini de Vita (2009). Encyclopedia of Pasta. p. 315. ISBN 0520944712.
- "Maccaroni Azzese". Accademia Italiana della Cucina.
- "Ricetta Spaghetti con le polpettine - Le ricette di Paciulina". Le Ricette di Paciulina.it. 4 September 2012. Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- "Pasta asciutta alla pugliese", in Touring Club of Italy, La cucina del Bel Paese, p. 292
Further reading
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spaghetti and meatballs. |
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Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on |