Most children hide in the pantry when they hear that tonight’s main course is going to be meatloaf. The idea of creating a loaf of meat just seems wrong to begin with. The average meatloaf is as bland and disgusting as the name sounds. The average meatloaf is tough and ugly, not unlike the musician with the same name. The average meatloaf seems to lack any redeeming qualities.
The average meatloaf is just a loaf of beef with ketchup crust. If it was supposed to be this way it would be called beef loaf. Ground beef on its own has virtually no flavor without additional seasoning. This is no secret, yet people still insist on baking enormous beef turds void of flavor. These nasty beef loafs need to be put “Out of the Frying Pan (And into the Fire).”
My mother’s meatloaf, however, utilizes the meat that oftentimes is overlooked, ground pork. This addition is no secret, but it is the redeeming quality that is missing in the average meatloaf. The 2-1 ratio of ground beef to ground pork is my mother’s secret to making the flavor burst like a “Bat Out of Hell.”
Her sauce is a combination of ketchup, mustard, Worcestershire sauce and brown sugar. The brown sugar is her secret to creating the right consistency in her condiment crust. It caramelizes just enough to thicken it up to a jelly-like, sweet and tangy sauce. The end result is “Paradise by the Dashboard Light.”
My mom’s meatloaf is famous in our family for its delicious take on an otherwise disgusting dish. The mysterious meat ratio and the “secret sauce” is what sets her meatloaf apart from the rest. When the family savors a slice of this delicious loaf, my brother always says, “MMM…meatloaf.” Well Brian, “You Took the Words Right Out of my Mouth.”