These sheet-pan meatballs are a delightful one- or two-bite appetizer on their own, with a bowl of sweet chili sauce or warm marinara on the side for dipping. All this said—don’t sleep on the slow-cooker grape jelly sauce in the recipe. It may sound strange, but fruit and meat are actually a classic combination (think: pork and apple or turkey and cranberry). Here, the sweet jelly is blended with tomato-based chili sauce (the Heinz variety is a solid bet) or barbecue sauce to replicate a recipe that’s been a favorite American appetizer since the 1960s. —Rebecca Firkser
Grape jelly meatballs may be a go-to appetizer on your holiday or Super Bowl table, but did you know they’ve actually been popular since the 1960s? Though it’s nearly impossible to know who was the first to plunk cocktail meatballs in a sticky-sweet mixture of grape jelly and chili sauce (or ketchup, or barbecue sauce!), we know there was a recipe in Marian Burros and Lois Levine’s 1967 Elegant But Easy Cookbook, as well as the 1978 edition of Betty Crocker’s Cookbook, not to mention countless community cookbooks compiled during these decades. At this time, the meatballs and sauce were typically made on the stove and served in a chafing dish.
Grape jelly meatballs really took off in the 1970s, thanks to the popularization of the slow-cooker, specifically the Crock-Pot. Home cooks realized the device could act similarly to a chafing dish, but they didn’t have to worry about a live flame on the buffet table. More people began serving grape jelly meatballs at parties—and they still do today.
Though you could simply toss frozen, pre-cooked cocktail meatballs into your slow-cooked sauce and defrost, we developed a recipe to make them from scratch. These simple beef and shallot meatballs are mild enough to pair well with the grape jelly sauce, but go just as well with warm marinara or a gochujang-based cocktail sauce should you want to go in another flavor-direction. You do have to cook the meatballs in the oven before transferring them to the slow-cooker, but we promise it’s worth the extra effort. —The Editors
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