slow cooker italian meatballs
These Slow Cooker Italian Meatballs are one of my favorite go-to recipes for basically anything. They taste great on their own as an appetizer, but also work well with pasta or on sub sandwiches with melty cheese. They’re freezer-friendly, too — meaning you can make a double-batch now and save some for later.
I realllllly wanted to title this post “slow cooker Italian meat-a-balls” because that’s how I always say it in my head. But we’re trying to keep it profesh around here, so the traditional spelling wins out (though you’ll totally say “meat-a-balls” in your head now, too. You’re welcome).
This is one of the recipes I made pre-baby for our freezer stash, and I made a royal mistake with them — I froze all eleventy billion (or, like, 40) of them in one container. Do you know where I’m going with this? It means I had to thaw all 40 meatballs for me, my husband and my mom (who was staying with us at the time) at once. I was shaking in my boots that some of these delicious meat-a-balls would end up going to waste.
How to Make Slow Cooker Italian Meatballs
Well it turns out I completely underestimated my husband’s love for the meatball, because they were all gone — GONE — in two days. Down the hatch in meatball sub form, on top of pasta, cold and sliced and placed atop whole-grain toast (YUM, really), etc. OK, OK — my mom and I helped, too.
Needless to say, this recipe is one of those low-effort, high-result recipes that you’re going to want to make again and again (just maybe freeze them in batches if you do, unless you love eating meatballs for two days straight like my husband).
The slow cooker is my friend in so many ways, and if you have one, you probably agree. It’s so helpful for those hustle-bustle days when dinner is the last thing you want to/have time to make. It also comes in handy when it’s 100 degrees outside and you want to avoid that oven at all costs (except maybe to bake chocolate chip cookies. No amount of heat will keep me from my cookies). And I love using it to make big ol’ batches of easy-peasy foods like these here meatballs, which I intended to use for at least three to four separate meals over the course of, like, a month (see above how that did not go as planned, but all is well).
Making meatballs in the slow cooker is especially delicious because I feel like slow-cooked meat and tomatoes are some of the best things to exist in life. But with a slow cooker, you have to do very little prep work. So the end result is something that tastes like you slaved over it for hours and hours when in reality, you spent about 15 minutes making it happen. WINNER.
How to Serve Slow Cooker Italian Meatballs
Like I mentioned before, we enjoyed these meatballs as cheesy meatball subs, on top of spaghetti with classic Italian bread, cold for lunch on toasted, crusty, whole wheat sourdough bread and just by themselves with a big Italian salad on the side. Finish that easy Italian-themed dinner with panna cotta, one bowl olive oil cake, or moist blueberry ricotta cake.
Slow Cooker Italian Meatballs
- Prep Time: 15 mins
- Cook Time: 4 hours 15 mins
- Total Time: 4 hours 30 mins
- Yield: About 40 meatballs 1x
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Slow Cooker
- Cuisine: Italian
Description
Deliciously easy slow cooker Italian meatballs — perfect as an appetizer, with pasta or on a sub sandwich with melty cheese. Freezer-friendly, too!
Ingredients
- ½ cup milk
- 4 eggs
- 2 lbs ground beef
- 12 ounces bulk mild Italian sausage
- 1 ¼ cups Italian seasoned breadcrumbs
- 1/4 cup shredded Parmesan cheese
- 2 teaspoons salt
- ½ teaspoon pepper
- ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
- 2 (24 oz) jars marinara pasta sauce (or make your own & use 6 cups)
Instructions
- In a large bowl, whisk together milk and eggs until combined. Add ground beef, Italian sausage, breadcrumbs, Parmesan cheese, salt, pepper and garlic powder; stir with a wooden spoon or mix with your fingers until well combined.
- Heat broiler to high; place an oven rack about 4 to 5 inches from the broiler. Lightly grease 2 baking sheets with cooking spray or oil. Using your hands, shape (about 40) 1 to 2-inch meatballs from the mixture; place on prepared baking sheets.
- Broil meatballs 6 to 8 minutes, flipping halfway through, until browned. Transfer to a 6-quart slow cooker.
- Top meatballs evenly with sauce. Cover and cook on low 4 to 5 hours in the slow cooker until meatballs are cooked through to an internal temperature of at least 160 degrees F.
- Serve on top of pasta, on split hoagie rolls with melty cheese for meatball sub sandwiches, alongside buttery mashed potatoes or on their own as an appetizer.
- TO FREEZE: Let meatballs and sauce cool completely. Place in a resealable plastic bag and freeze in a single layer; or, freeze in a Tupperware container. Thaw in the refrigerator overnight, then heat the thawed mixture (meatballs and sauce) together until heated through.
Notes
- This recipe makes a lot of meatballs, so if you don’t plan to freeze any I’d suggest halving the recipe.
Can’t beat the slow cooker for a recipe like this! They look perfect!
love how hearty this is.. perfect for this winter weather. definitely a recipe i will be recreating for my household. thanks!
I love that you type meat-a-ball. That’s exactly how I say it too… in and out of mah head 😉 I want a whole bowl of these saucy stunners right now please!
I love recipes like this that I can throw in the slow cooker and have enough to freeze! These look wonderful!
I so want to make these today but all I have are panko bread crumbs. Do you think that would work with the addition of a little Italian seasoning??
Jeanne R — That would probably work! Or you can make your own breadcrumbs by toasting some sandwich bread and giving it a whir in the food processor (and then adding Italian seasoning). Hope you enjoy the recipe!
These meatballs sound delicious but I’m making 3lbs of meatballs for a very large group of people, and I just want to know if I should use the same amount of ingredients as you used for 2lbs.
Rebecca — If you’re making 3 lbs, I suggest you increase all of the ingredients to 1 1/2. So for example, instead of 1/2 cup milk, you’ll use 3/4 cup; instead of 4 eggs, you’ll use 6; and so forth. Let me know if you have any more questions… and enjoy! 🙂
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Great recipe, but quick question: When do you freeze them?
Duckie — I froze them with the sauce after they were fully cooked. Just remember to freeze in batches, unless you want to eat them all at once! 🙂
Made these last night and they turned out great! Only issue was that when I baked them, they kind of flattened out instead of staying round. Is it possible that there was too much milk? I had literally just halved everything on the recipe. I even increased the breadcrumbs to try to dry it out a little so they would stay round.
Mehnaz — Hmm, I’ve never had that happen before (even with halving the ingredients)! My only suggestion is to decrease the milk and increase the breadcrumbs even more than you did, or maybe add more meat. Sorry I can’t be more helpful — still, I’m glad you enjoyed them! 🙂
At what point would you freeze them? After being in the broiler? After cooked completely? or would you freeze them raw?
Margaret — I froze mine after everything was cooked and mixed together — sauce and all. You could also probably freeze them right after broiling, and then thaw them before adding them to the slow cooker with the sauce!