cook logo

German Meatballs & Potatoes In Creamy Caper Sauce - Königsberger Klopse

Let's address the name first. Say it out loud. Königsberger Klopse. Roll the K, commit to the berg, stick the landing. If anyone looked up from their phone just now, you're already winning dinner. This is a dish that has outlasted an entire geopolitical era — Königsberg no longer exists as such, yet here we are, eating its meatballs on a Wednesday in Monbulk. Respect. Tender pork and beef meatballs, poached (not fried — the Germans were very serious about this and so am I), served in a velvety caper sauce alongside potatoes that have absorbed everything good in their vicinity and are quietly smug about it. The capers are doing something in this sauce that I've been trying to describe for three years. Bright. Briny. Brilliant. Like a small ingredient that knew exactly what it was doing the whole time. No added gluten. Made entirely from scratch. Worth saying the full name at least once before you eat it.

ContainsFish, Milk

x11 Serve

$19.50

Dietaries

No added gluten

Ingredients

Potato, Bone Broth [Water, Chicken - Whole, Carrots, Onion, Celery, Garlic, Black pepper, Bay leaves], Pork mince, Grass-fed Beef Mince, Onion, Bread (GF) *with soy, Cream - Thickened (Milk), Flour (GF), Anchovy (Fish), Mustard, Butter (Milk), Apple cider vinegar, Raw Sugar, Capers, Nutmeg

CONTAINS: Fish, Milk.

Preparation and storage notes

Stovetop in a small pan on medium-low, lid on, 6–8 mins — the sauce will loosen slightly and everything will smell like a Prussian grandmother is watching approvingly from somewhere nearby. Microwave: 2 x 2 minute blasts, stir gently halfway so the meatballs heat evenly and the caper sauce gets properly reacquainted with the potatoes. Do not boil it. The Germans did not survive multiple centuries of geopolitical upheaval for you to boil their meatballs. Be better. Guten Appetit. 🥩

1