Lion's Head Meatballs
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Gentle, savory, and comforting. Like the best meatball you've ever had — tender, mildly sweet, with deep porky richness and no aggressive spice.
- Texture
- Extraordinarily soft and loosely packed, almost falling apart at the touch of chopsticks, surrounded by silky braised cabbage
- Spice Level
- Not spicy
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
The Story
The name sounds fierce, but the dish is pure comfort. These oversized meatballs — each one roughly the size of a tennis ball — supposedly resemble a lion’s head, with the surrounding braised cabbage leaves forming the mane. The dish has been a banquet staple in the Jiangsu region since the Tang Dynasty, and it remains a centerpiece of family celebrations and holiday meals.
In Suzhou, the emphasis is on the meatball’s impossibly tender texture, achieved by hand-chopping the pork (never machine grinding) and maintaining a high ratio of fat to lean meat. This is not a dish that apologizes for its richness.
What to Expect
Two to four enormous meatballs arrive nestled in a bed of gently braised Napa cabbage, swimming in a clear, golden broth. The meatballs are so soft they wobble when the plate is set down. Break one open with your chopsticks and you will find a loose, almost custard-like interior — nothing like the dense, compact meatballs you might know from Italian cooking.
The flavor is clean and savory with a subtle sweetness from the slow-braised cabbage. The broth is light but deeply flavorful, having absorbed all the pork fat and aromatics during the long braising process.
Tips
Eat the meatball over a bowl of white rice and spoon the broth over everything — the broth is half the experience. Do not try to pick up a whole meatball with chopsticks; it will likely fall apart. Instead, break off pieces in the bowl. This dish is often ordered for the whole table to share.