I just discovered a
neat new cookbook that focuses on dumplings (mostly Chinese and Japanese, but there are a few other flavor profiles in there as well). We figured we might as well try some of the recipes now while we have easy access to practically any Chinese or Japanese cooking ingredient; plus, each recipe makes more than one meal's worth of dumplings, so we thought it'd be an economical choice as well. Chinese New Year provided the perfect opportunity to test the book's pork and shrimp dumplings.
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| We made our dumplings the day before New Year, and got 39 versus the recipe's yield of 45. Perhaps we put too much filling in each one? So far we haven't had any problems with broken wrappers or anything. These are ready to be frozen, then put into a plastic bag to be cooked as needed. Easy! |
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| These cook pretty quickly with an almost set-it-and-forget-it method. We are still working out just how long to cook our dumplings though, since we tend to cook fewer at a time than the cookbook author does. He's usually hosting dumpling parties. We are lame and thus do not tend to host dumpling parties. |
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| I made a dipping sauce out of hoisin sauce and soy sauce (about a 2:1 ratio), along with a dash of rice wine vinegar. Kind of a Chinese barbecue sauce of sorts. |
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| The fillings weren't dense, dry, or falling apart. I might add some cilantro leaves next time for flavor and color contrast, but that's another recipe! |
Hey there, dumpling!: 100 recipes for dumplings, buns, noodles, and other Asian treats (2015), p. 41
Writeup background music: Dido, No angel (1999)
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