Polpettone With Spinach and Provolone

- Total Time
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup cubed day-old bread, crusts removed
- 1cup heavy cream
- 1pound ground beef
- 1pound ground pork
- 1pound ground veal or turkey
- 1tablespoon kosher salt
- ½teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
- Pinch of cayenne
- ¼teaspoon grated nutmeg
- 1teaspoon chopped rosemary
- 1teaspoon chopped thyme
- 2teaspoons chopped sage
- 1tablespoon chopped parsley
- 3ounces grated Parmesan, about ½ cup
- 2eggs, lightly beaten, plus 3 (8-minute) hard-boiled eggs, peeled, for filling
- ¼pound thinly sliced mortadella or prosciutto
- 1pound spinach, briefly blanched, roughly chopped and squeezed dry
- 3ounces provolone or caciocavallo, sliced ⅛-inch thick
- 1cup fine dry bread crumbs, preferably homemade
Preparation
- Step 1
Put bread cubes in a small bowl, cover with cream and set aside to soak until softened, about 10 minutes.
- Step 2
Put beef, pork and veal in a mixing bowl. Season with salt, pepper, cayenne, nutmeg, rosemary, thyme, sage and parsley. Add Parmesan and, using hands, knead seasoning into meat. Combine soaked bread (and any remaining cream) with beaten eggs, then pour mixture over seasoned meat and knead until well combined.
- Step 3
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line a 12-by-18-inch baking sheet with parchment or foil. Press ground meat mixture evenly over parchment to make a flat rectangle slightly smaller than the baking sheet. Top with slices of mortadella. Scatter cooked spinach evenly over mortadella. Break provolone slices into rough pieces and distribute over surface. Finish with hard-cooked egg chopped into chunks.
- Step 4
Using parchment to help, roll the meat into a long cylinder with filling on the inside. With the long side facing you, first lift parchment and use it to roll meat to the center, pressing down to keep it in place. Then lift parchment on the opposite long side, bringing meat just past the center to overlap itself slightly. Pinch the “seam” of the meat together to keep filling in place. Sprinkle with half the dry crumbs. You will now have a cylinder approximately 15 inches long. Twist ends of parchment to firm the mixture, then transfer to a deep-sided baking dish or roasting pan, and place it seam-side down. Carefully remove and discard parchment. With hands, press firmly to form cylinder into a long loaf with rounded ends. Dust top and sides with remaining bread crumbs. (The polpettone may be prepared to this point several hours, or up to 24 hours, in advance; keep refrigerated and bring to room temperature before baking.)
- Step 5
Bake for 40 to 45 minutes, until internal temperature is 140 degrees. Let rest for 10 minutes and cut into 1-inch-thick slices and serve. (Alternatively, cool to room temperature and refrigerate for up to 3 days. If serving cold, cut thinner slices.)
Private Notes
Comments
Easy & impressive-looking, and delicious. Agree it's a great rustic party dish, and leftovers are great. I formed it the night before I baked it & just did the bread crumbs at the last minute so they wouldn't get soggy. It's definitely a rich dish but I wouldn't substitute milk for the cream; it gives the meat a wonderful texture.
This is so good -- and freezes so well -- that I have decided to make it again. This time, for the filling, I'm using broccoli rabe and mushrooms sauteed with garlic, mixed with cubes of roasted kabocha squash. One change I'd make to the original recipe? Slice the mortadella/prosciutto into strips, rather than using whole slices. The loaf will then slice more easily and neatly, and will be easier to eat, without a big ole' piece of mortadella dangling off your fork.
Used pecorino instead of provolone: interesting texture! Great dish to start the new year with friends.
Made this last night following the recipe exactly. Delicious and novel. Had to cook the polpettone 10 minutes longer than directed. Next time I would add more seasoning, including salt. It's big and didn't fit in my fancier baking dish, so I used my largest Pyrex dish. It didn't release a lot of liquid, so maybe a baking sheet would have been fine, then I could have transferred it to a serving dish after it rested.
Wow! My husband and I took this on together and got it prepped in about 45 minutes. Maybe we are slow. But it turned out perfectly, cooking at 360 for about 50 minutes. Beautiful! We made half the recipe and used gluten free bread cubes (3/4 cup), double the sage (by accident), and panko bread crumbs on the outside. I would not change a thing. Surprised that meatloaf could be this good with no garlic or onion. Beautiful presentation and tasted even better.
Made it again for a dinner party, the full recipe. Made it the night before up to baking. The next day, left it on counter to come to room temp for about an hour, rubbed it with olive oil so panko would stick. It looked mammoth, but took about an hour to cook. Meat thermometer helpful. Guests raved. I know leftovers will make great bahn mi sandwiches. Great recipe.
Made this as directed. It was amazing. I hate meatloaf. My spouse thought I was nuts to make it after all her attempts to make me like meatloaf. But this dish takes meatloaf to another level.
Me too! Always hated meatloaf, then I tried this and loved it. Now I make it with ground turkey and change the filling to spinach, mushroom, tomato, onion and cheese (sometimes provolone, sometimes pecorino). It's delicious.
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