Serves 3-4
Preparation time 10 Minutes
Cooking time 20 Minutes
Ingredients
1 pound bulk Italian sausage
1/4 cup sundried tomatoes finely diced
8 Butterly round crackers or Saltines crushed
2 eggs
1 pound button or crime mushrooms cleaned and stems removed
2 ounces provolone cheese sliced
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp dijon mustard
3 garlic cloves minced
1/3 cup fresh parsley chopped
1/3 cup fresh parsley chopped
1/3 cup fresh parsley chopped
1/3 cup fresh parsley chopped
Method
1. In a medium bowl, combine the sausage, tomatoes, crackers, and eggs. Mix well. The mixture should be moist, but firm enough to form small meatballs that will hold its shape. If the mixture is too loose, add more crushed crackers
2. Form the prepared meat into small meatballs that will fit into the mushroom caps
3. Heat your sauté pan on medium heat. Add the sausage meatballs, leaving a little space between them so you can turn them easily. You might need to cook in 2 batches. Brown them on all sides, and continue cooking until they’re cooked all the way through
4. Meanwhile, use a small spoon or small melon baller to hollow out the mushroom caps a little more, to make more room for the meatballs to nestle into the caps
5. When all the sausage meatballs are cooked, remove them from the pan and pour out the excess sausage grease, leaving whatever clings to the pan
6. Add the mushroom caps to the pan, open-side down, and cook for two or three minutes, until the rims of the caps are nicely browned
7. Remove the caps from the pan. NOTE: You can make these ahead up to this point and finish cooking right before serving
8. Place a meatball onto each upturned cap and place as many of them as will fit back into the same pan. Cut the cheese into squares that will fit on top of each mushroom
9. Heat the pan on medium, cover the pan, and cook just long enough to melt the cheese
10. Serve hot, warm, or at room temperature
Hing aur Dhaniya ke Chatpate Aloo
The must-have for every party menu; it's your companion on all busy occasions due to its ease of preparation and approved flavour that appeals to almost every palate.
ViewRisotto with Mushroom
You don’t have to use the dried mushrooms but they will add a rich and earthy flavour to your risotto. Dried Porcini mushrooms are authentically Italian but are expensive – you may be able to buy dried mixed mushrooms which are a little less pricey
View