These easy Whole30 Turkey Paleo Meatballs taste like orange chicken in meatball form! They’re a gluten/grain/dairy/sugar free weeknight meal, that’s under 300 calories, and the whole family will love!
PIN Whole30 Turkey Paleo Meatballs
Lemme introduce you to your newest favorite weeknight dinner:
T-H-E-S-E easy paleo meatballs.
You might have thought your favorite was some easy paleo Italian meatballs in the instant pot or whole30 sweet and sour paleo meatballs. Maybe you even like a little spice so you thought low carb buffalo chicken meatballs! Maybe you’re team Asian turkey meatballs. But, not to be super harsh and mean or anything…
YOU WERE WRONG.
This paleo turkey meatballs recipe is:
- Simple to make. <– Busy-after-work-you likes this VRY VRY much
- SPEEDY on-the-table-in-30-mins kinda goodness. The sauce happens while the meatballs cook and then – MAGIC – everything is ready at the same time for starving-hungry-feed-me-now-you-and-family.
- TASTES LIKE YOUR FAVORITE TAKEOUT FOOD.
But in healthy, weeknight dinner, no-frying-but-still-SO-DELICIOUS form.
Yep. These orange whole30 turkey paleo meatballs are here to STAY.
Liiike, make-them-every-week-kind STAY.
This saucy little skillet of protein-packed, sweet and tangy, vibrantly-orange gluten free whole30 paleo turkey meatballs goodness is the love child of my chicken meatballs and paleo orange chicken. When the orange chicken recipe came into the world, you guys basically flipped out and it broke the internet.
I hear you. I understand your need for healthy orange chicken because I HAVE THE NEED TOO.
The crispy, golden-brown CRUNCH of fried chicken that ends in juicy-tenderness and a wave of orangey-sticky-sweet (thanks tapioca flour!) sensations riding along your taste buds and into your hungry belly, is just one that needs to happen on a regular basis.
Internet friends. Orange chicken recipe numero uno was easy, but these gluten free turkey meatballs are SUPER EASY.
Sidenote: I realize that we are using turkey to make orange “chicken.” But, it gives ALL the same flavory goodness that you expect when you hear “orange + chicken” together. However, you could use ground chicken if you wish.
Sidenote, the sequel: that is really just me pretending that I meant to use ground turkey and that it doesn’t just really come down to the fact that I just had ground turkey in the freezer and was too lazy to go buy chicken . #REALLIFE.
You guys. These meatballs are SRSLY juicy like WHOA.
If you’ve eaten a meatball or two in your life (which I feel like you are meatball connoisseurs, so you HAVE) then you’ve probably had some PRETTY bad turkey ones. I am usually a meatball elitist, and typically think that juicy, tender ground beef is used to create the MECCA of meatballs recipes.
Until leftover ground turkey entered my life and changed EVERYTHING I THOUGHT I KNEW.
Which might be an exaggeration since we’re just talking about meatballs here. But, really, IT’S NOT.
And then the SAUCE. OH, the glorious, THICK, glossy and sticky-sweet perfectly orange sauce that coats your mouth with takeout-vibes and general-happy-food-bliss.
But, SPOILER ALERT, these are WHOLE30 MEATBALLS which means that sticky-sweet-glossy-sauce that tastes exactly like your favorite Asian restaurants down the street?
Sugar free! Gluten free! Grain free! Dairy free! NO WEIRD FLAVORINGS OR COLORS.
Just PURE, real-life oranges and tangy, zesty yumminess for your orange-chicken-loving face.
Before you ask, you won’t even MISS the deep fried-ness in these whole30 paleo orange turkey meatballs recipe. <– Even Mr. FFF said he didn’t miss it and that this might have been in his top 3 favorite recipes of ALL TIME.
3 cheers for takeout Friday that doesn’t end in real-life-you being stomach-ache-sad on the couch!
Ingredients
For the Meatballs:
- 1 pound Ground Turkey I used 97% lean
- 1 large Egg
- 1/4 cup Green Onion diced plus additional for garnish
- 1/2 teaspoon Sea Salt
- 2 tablespoons Coconut Flour
For the Sauce:
- 1 tablespoon Avocado Oil
- 1 tablespoon Fresh Ginger minced
- 2 teaspoons Minced Fresh Garlic
- 1 1/2 cups Fresh Orange Juice not from concentrate
- zest of one Orange large
- 2 tablespoons Coconut Aminos
- 2 teaspoons Rice Vinegar
- pinch of Crushed Red Pepper Flakes
- Salt and Pepper
- 2 teaspoons Tapioca Starch
For Serving:
- Orange Segments from the orange you zested
- Sesame Seeds
- Cauliflower Rice or cooked rice
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 400°F and rub a cookie sheet with avocado oil.
- In a large bowl, stir together the turkey, egg, green onion and salt until well mixed. Add in the coconut flour and stir until well mixed – I find it easiest to use your hands.
- Drop by heaping 1 Tbsp balls onto the prepared cookie sheet – you should get about 20 meatballs.
- Bake until no longer pink inside, about 15 minutes.
- While the meatballs bake, heat the avocado oil up in a medium pot on medium/high heat. Add in the garlic and onion and cook, stirring frequently, until browned, or about 2 minutes.
- While the ginger/garlic cook, whisk together the orange juice, orange zest, coconut aminos, rice vinegar, red pepper flakes and a pinch of salt and pepper into a bowl.
- Add the orange juice mixture into the garlic/ginger mixture. Turn the heat up to high and bring to a boil. Additionally, place the tapioca starch in a medium bowl.
- Once the mixture boils, add 4 tsp of the hot liquid into the tapioca starch bowl and whisk until smooth. While constantly whisking, pour the tapioca starch mixture back into the pot of sauce and whisk until smooth and combined. Boil, stirring frequently, until the sauce begins to thicken and reduce, about 5 minutes.
- Reduce the heat to medium/low and continue cooking the sauce, stirring occasionally, until thick, glossy and reduced by about 1/3 – about 7-8 minutes. Remove from heat and let stand for 5 minutes to thicken up a little bit more.
- Toss the cooked meatballs into the sauce and stir to coat.
- Serve over rice of choice, garnish with more green onions and sesame seeds, as well as the orange segments.
- DEVOUR!
Nutrition Info:
Recipes written and produced on Food Faith Fitness are for informational purposes only.
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