Jeni from Jeni Eats and myself enjoying our Iowa Ham Balls earlier this week |
Iowa Ham Balls
2.5# Ham Loaf
2 Eggs
1 1/2 cups Graham Cracker Crumbs (one sleeve of graham crackers that has been grinded in food processor or placed in large ziploc bag and use a rolling pin to crush them)
1 cup Milk
1 can Tomato Soup
3/4 cup Brown Sugar
1/4 cup Vinegar
1 tsp Ground Mustard
Ham Loaf is a mixture of ground ham and ground pork that can be found in most Iowa grocery stores. If you can't find Ham Loaf mix at your meat counter, use a food processor to grind leftover ham or a boneless ham into small chopped pieces and combine 1.5# of your ground ham with 1# of ground pork.
Add the eggs, graham cracker crumbs and milk. Mix together with your hands and form fist-sized ham balls. (If the mixture seems a little dry, you can add 1/4 cup of milk at a time, up to 1 1/2 cups of milk total.) Place ham balls in a 9"x13" pan. They fit nicely three across and five down.
Then mix the soup, brown sugar, vinegar and mustard till smooth. Drizzle the glaze over the ham balls for the classic ham ball sauce. (Or, if you're in a rush like I was this past summer - drizzle your favorite bbq sauce over them!)
Bake at 350F for 1 hour.
Yield: 13-15 ham balls
To check out a video of these Iowa Ham Balls being made, check out Jeni Eats!
These ham balls freeze well and can be warmed up in a crock pot if desired. Ham balls are the perfect Iowa potluck treat! Our family loves pairing Ham Balls with Cheesy Hashbrown Casserole!
Have you ever heard of ham balls? How do you make yours? When you think of classic foods for your home state what comes to mind? Remember to Comment for a Cause!
Then mix the soup, brown sugar, vinegar and mustard till smooth. Drizzle the glaze over the ham balls for the classic ham ball sauce. (Or, if you're in a rush like I was this past summer - drizzle your favorite bbq sauce over them!)
Bake at 350F for 1 hour.
Yield: 13-15 ham balls
To check out a video of these Iowa Ham Balls being made, check out Jeni Eats!
These ham balls freeze well and can be warmed up in a crock pot if desired. Ham balls are the perfect Iowa potluck treat! Our family loves pairing Ham Balls with Cheesy Hashbrown Casserole!
Have you ever heard of ham balls? How do you make yours? When you think of classic foods for your home state what comes to mind? Remember to Comment for a Cause!
What a fun day you two had! You gotta love Iowa ham balls and thanks for sharing your famous recipe.
ReplyDeleteWe had a great time!
DeleteThanks for the tutorial. This was one of my favorite adventures living in Iowa.
ReplyDeleteNo problem. I had a great time!
DeleteJust made them for tonight Yummy
DeleteThank you for sharing! Ham balls are new for me too, and I always look forward to having them at potlucks. Now I can try my hand at them!
ReplyDeleteThey are very easy! I hope you make them for your next potluck.
DeleteHi- Saw your recipe on Tales Of A Kansas Farm Mom. It's always a good day when you learn something new.
ReplyDeleteI must be a real "city" girl cause I never heard of Ham Loaf. I had to go over to Pinterest and find our what it was!!!
Pinned your recipe to my board and also added to a group favorite..
Thanks for sharing the recipe
http://bestoflongislandandcentralflorida.blogspot.com/2015/04/simon-and-garfunkel-chicken.html
I'm glad I could introduce you to the wonderful world of Ham Balls. They must be a regional food. I just figured they were a potluck staple everything until Jeni mentioned I gave her, her first ham ball.
DeleteI've never had ham balls before (another one from Minnesota), and if like to make some. Can you please explain what the "ham loaf" in the recipe is? Is it just ground-up ham? If so, I can probably get that from a butcher, right? Thanks for your help! I'm enjoying your blog. :)
ReplyDeleteYes, it is ground up ham or some butchers sell it as a ground ham/pork mix.
Deleteoffiically making this for my freezer, for a great "crockpot dump" meal later this summer! Love it! (and you!) thanks for linking it up on our link up party! ( Country Fair Blog Party!)
ReplyDeleteJan
It is a perfect crockpot dump meal and perfect for potlucks. I actually kind of like them from the freezer because they are "firmer".
DeleteLove your Ham Balls! I grew up in north Dakota (home of knoephla soup) , but lived in Iowa for 18 years... now I am in North Carolina and no one here knew about these little gems. I introduced them to a neighbor and he fell in love. This dish puts grits and orka to shame! Thank you for your great website. I sure do miss the sweet corn in August.
ReplyDeleteFound your blog, as my daughter and family moved to Iowa several years ago, from Niagara Falls, NY. We were recently chatting about our Christmas menu and she said she was getting the ingredients to make "ham balls" and that my granddaughters loved them. Never heard of them, so here I am. Will be making these soon, if I can find the ham loaf.
ReplyDeleteHow did the ham balls go? Our grocery store also sells a ham loaf mix (similar to how you'd buy ground pork or hamburger from your meat counter).
DeleteHow interesting! I have never heard of ham balls but now I am interested too. I need to give them a try!
ReplyDeleteYes, I had no idea they were a regional food until I met Jeni! I hope you enjoy this Iowa staple as much as we do.
DeleteI've never even had ham balls on the meal radar, Val. I might have to try this... :D
ReplyDeleteIt is a great potluck dish. I love to make a double batch and then freeze the extras so I can pull them out as needed.
DeleteI’m pretty sure I’ve never heard of ham loaf. Graham crackers- I’m intrigued
ReplyDeleteJust use ground ham or a small ham to make the Ham Balls with then. Now you understand Jeni's interest in this local favorite ;)
DeleteWe should have plenty of ham left after Easter, so these will be on the table soon!
ReplyDeleteA great idea for ham leftovers!
DeleteI grew up in Iowa, and I’ve never ever heard of ham balls or ham loaf..lol Maybe Northwest Iowa is out of the loop, but I’m definitely going to try them!! I do make a similar concept sauce for my meatloaf instead of plain ketchup, which is red wine vinegar, ketchup, and brown sugar. I also do meatballs, smokies, and kielbasa sausage for appetizers, with a jar of grape jelly, sliced onion, and chili sauce. (You can find it by the ketchup and bbq sauce in store) We call them, Purple Meatballs & Sausage. But they’re really good too. All have the same sweat and sour concept. I did see the video, as well. Thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm going to have to try your Purple Meatballs & Sausage!
DeleteI’m wondering if you cover them while baking?
ReplyDeleteThere is no need to cover them while baking.
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