Pita Sandwiches: An Easy Leftover Ground Beef Recipe
Have more ground beef than you knew what to do with after burning through taco and/or hamburger night(s) this week? The answer to your (lunch or dinner) problems is simpler than you might have anticipated: do the same thing, just slightly different. Spice it. Meatball it. Sandwich it. The result: the same kofta/kefta kabob classic you’d find all over the Middle East or Pakistan–or your local Mediterranean grill–in a package fit for a child. Jazz it up with hummus and/or yogurt sauces (see “Instructions” section below), or dress it down with ketchup; smash some vegetables–cucumbers and/or tomatoes are good choices–or leave as plain as day if your child is skeptical of sauced or stuffed foods. No matter how you put it together, you’ve got the recipe turn the usual into something brilliant, with no more time or effort required than it took to make those burgers or tacos.
A saucy and sandwiched take on kofta, the spiced ground beef kabobs you'll find all across Asia, the Middle East, and the Indian subcontinent. Our toddler-friendly version ups the warming spices and removes the spicy spices, leaving a soft and supple sandwich that's as comforting as a burger but feels like its own thing.
what ends up on our kid’s plate is this: we smear some hummus–red pepper in the case of the photo–on the walls of a pita, followed by stuffing two patties into the left and and right sides of the bread; a bit of yogurt sauce is drizzled over the top of the meat chunks. We then fold over the edges of the pita corner–if you put two small meat patties in near the center of the pita, there should be some empty space at the bottom corners of the pita–to enable a small child to easily hold and bite into the pita. But feel free to ditch the pita and just serve these meatballs.
These will cook on your grill just as burgers would; you can also turn them into kabob skewers by very gently mixing the ingredients–i.e., not tossing them around–with some bulgur wheat (or flaxseed or whatever grains you have) and refrigerating for 30-40 minutes, then threading on a skewer. Lamb subs in for beef with no changes to the cooking instructions, but if you want to use white meat then you’ll need to add more fat to the grind, such as by adding a bit of mayo and breadcrumbs to the mix.