The Daring Cooks June 2009 challenge was hosted by Jen from use real butter, who chose Chinese Dumplings/Potstickers.
Such a fun challenge, involving yet another dish that I’ve sort of always wanted to try making. First, Jen instructed, you need to chose a filling.
I went for pork:
pork filling:
1 lb (450g) ground pork
4 large napa cabbage leaves, minced
3 stalks green onions, minced
7 shitake mushrooms, minced (if dried – rehydrated and rinsed carefully)
1/2 cup (75g) bamboo shoots, minced
1/4 (55g) cup ginger root, minced
3 tbsp (40g) soy sauce
2 tbsp (28g) sesame oil
2 tbsp (16g) corn starchCombine all filling ingredients in a large mixing bowl and mix thoroughly (I mix by clean hand). Cover and refrigerate until ready to use (up to a day, but preferably within an hour or two).
Then a dough. As we don’t have any gluten intolerance in the family, I went with the standard one.
dough: (double this for the amount of filling, but easier to make it in 2 batches – or just halve the filling recipe)
2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour
1/2 cup (113g) warm water
flour for worksurfaceMake the dough, Method 1: Place the flour in the work bowl of a food processor with the dough blade. Run the processor and pour the warm water in until incorporated. Pour the contents into a sturdy bowl or onto a work surface and knead until uniform and smooth. The dough should be firm and silky to the touch and not sticky.
I have to admit, I never hand kneaded at all. I let the Bosch do the job for me. But then, it did it beautifully, so I guess it’s ok.
Knead the dough about twenty strokes then cover with a damp towel for 15 minutes. Take the dough and form a flattened dome. Cut into strips about 1 1/2 to 2 inches wide. Shape the strips into rounded long cylinders. On a floured surface, cut the strips into 3/4 inch pieces. Press palm down on each piece to form a flat circle (you can shape the corners in with your fingers). With a rolling pin, roll out a circular wrapper from each flat disc. Take care not to roll out too thin or the dumplings will break during cooking – about 1/16th inch. Leave the centers slightly thicker than the edges. Place a tablespoon of filling in the center of each wrapper and fold the dough in half, pleating the edges along one side (see images in post for how to fold pleats). Keep all unused dough under damp cloth.
This all took a while. I wouldn’t exactly call my circles even and uniform, but they worked. The pleating was a bit random, too, but all my dumplings had the required crescent shape, so I’m not complaining. And then for the cooking.
To steam: Place dumplings on a single layer of napa cabbage leaves or on a well-greased surface in a steamer basket with lid. Steam covered for about 6 minutes.
To pan fry (potstickers): Place dumplings in a frying pan with 2-3 tbsp of vegetable oil. Heat on high and fry for a few minutes until bottoms are golden. Add 1/2 cup water and cover. Cook until the water has boiled away and then uncover and reduce heat to medium or medium low. Let the dumplings cook for another 2 minutes then remove from heat and serve.
We tried both. And both worked out well. I think I prefer the potstickers over the steamed dumplings, though, the fried bottom provided the requisite “something extra”. And then we ate:
dipping sauce:
2 parts soy sauce
1 part vinegar (red wine or black)
a few drops of sesame oil
chili garlic paste (optional)
minced ginger (optional)
minced garlic (optional)
minced green onion (optional)
sugar (optional)
We actually made rice to go with them, which worked well for me. And the dumplings were quite filling, I’d have thought you could eat three or four at least, but I was actually quite satisfied after just two. On the other hand, they were quite delicious eaten cold for lunch the next day, too.
My only complaint is I’d have preferred the filling to be somewhat more spicy. But then I can always change that next time I try.











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