Monday, May 26, 2014

Dumplings





I was cooking with a close girlfriend the other night and we both came to a very interesting conclusion about international food.  It can seem at times that certain cultures just won't agree on anything and never will. War is war, culture is culture, and there is no middle ground. But that notion is so wrong, especially when it comes to our food. There is a middle ground indeed. The dumpling. Also known as ravioli, the klobb, fufu, the pierogi, the empanada, the kreplach, potsticker, gyoza, mandu, pasteles,the samosa, the Chinese dumpling. Call it what you will, but these little things are what bring familes together. Can you imagine a table of these served up at a meeting of the United Nations. I am positive they would be gone! Want to end a war? Share a dumpling with your greatest enemy.

My friend and I decided to go along with some Chinese style steamed dumplings. Yum. Using store bought wonton wrappers and filling from scratch, we created some pretty amazing pillows of goodness. A pork dumpling and a chicken dumpling, steamed in an aromatic bamboo steamer and dipped in glorious sauce. Sounding good? You bet. Lets take a look some recipes:

For whichever filling you decide to make- 
*Get 1 packet of wonton wrappers
*Get 1 bamboo steamer basket
*Prepare a small bowl of water on the side
*Get some wax paper
*Get some cooking spray

Pork dumpling 

1 lb ground pork
1/3 cup chicken stock
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp soy sauce
2 tsp fresh ginger, ground
1 1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp chili paste
some chopped scallions or chives
(some sesame seeds, optional)

Chicken dumpling 

1 lb ground chicken
1 1/2 tsp fresh ground ginger
3-4cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoon soy sauce
1- 1 1/2 tablespoon Chinese rice wine
some chopped chive or scallion (be generous)
some chopped spinach
(sprinkle of sesame seeds optional)


The procedure:
1) Pick a dumpling filling recipe above and mix ingredients thoroughly  in a bowl
2) On a cutting board or flat surface place one wonton wrapper down flat
3) Place about 1- 1 1/2 tsp dumpling filling in the middle of the wrapper
4) Dunk your finger in the bowl of water you have set a side, and run them along the edges of the wonton. This will allow the edges to stick when you fold them.
5) Take one edge of the wonton and fold in half over the filling. Press the edges down. Crimp them, fold into the shape you like. 
6) You now have your dumpling.
7) Time to prepare the steamer basket. Take your wax paper and tear a sheet into small squares
8) On each tier of the bamboo basket, place 4-5 small squares of wax paper
9) Spray each paper with cooking spray
10) Place a dumpling on each piece of paper
11) In a large frying pan or wok, put a good amount of water in the bottom, but don't let the water touch the bottom tier of the bamboo steamer when placed inside. 
12) Heat the water to high heat until boiling.
13) Place the steamer basket in the pan, and steam for 7 minutes or until dumplings are cooked through

OHHH You didn't think I'd forgot the dipping sauce, did you?

For dipping sauce, mix together

1/4 water
1/4 soy sauce
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp chili paste
2 1/2 tsp fresh ginger, ground

( similar to PF Changs)


Enjoy friends!









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