Showing posts with label Fried Wontons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fried Wontons. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

The Hawthornes Prepare Stuffed Wontons.

The Hawthornes have been doing a bit of entertaining lately.
 We're terribly popular, you know.
My stuffed and fried wontons have been consumed with gusto.
Here's what the little dumplings looked like
 before going into the fry pot.
 The dumplings were filled
with a delicately seasoned pork and shrimp mixture.
And here's what they looked like after a fry bath.
Serve with a dipping sauce and some hot mustard.
 Dipping sauce:
2 TB soy sauce
 1 TB rice vinegar
1 TB sriracha sauce
 minced pickled ginger
 minced cilantro, to taste
My ingredients for the filling:
6 ounces ground pork
 6 ounces shrimp
 2-3 TB minced water chestnuts
 2-3 TB minced celery
1-2 TB cilantro
minced ginger and juice (1-inch cube)
freshly ground salt & pepper
 a few drops of sesame oil
Mix all ingredients until well combined.
Always remember, these amounts are not etched in stone.
 I give you my permission to adjust for your own tastes.
 First, let's prepare the shrimp.
Peel and devein the shrimp. Make a shallow slit down the back and ...
... remove the vein.
Lots of times, I use a paper towel to pull out the vein.
The vein will stick to the paper towel and it's easier to pull out.

You want to make a shrimp paste,
 so take your cleaver and smash with the heel of your hand,
 then spread the shrimp.
Thusly.
Chop chop chop.
Mr. Hawthorne prepares the shrimp.
Chopchopchop the pork.
Basically, equal amounts pork and shrimp.
Maybe a little more pork than shrimp.
Mix well.
I took a one-inch cube of frozen ginger
and nuked it about 20 seconds.
 That way you can squeeze all the juice out.
 That little puddle above is all ginger juice.
Chopchopchop the ginger and ...
... add it to the mix.
I minced a little celery, some water chestnuts, and cilantro.
Add that to the pork and shrimp mix.
1 teaspoon each soy sauce, rice vinegar, and corn starch.
A few drops sesame oil.
Corn starch in.
A teaspoon soy sauce.
A teaspoon of rice wine.
Few drops of sesame oil.
Mix well.
Place a teaspoon of filling in center of wonton and wet the edges.
 Do not overstuff.
Pull corners up and press and seal into a triangle.
The only way I can show you how this takes shape ...

... is to show you the video of Mr. Hawthorne's folding technique.
Aren't these cute?
Little sailor hats.

Looks like little butt cracks to me.
Fry 3-4 minutes in 350-375 degree oil until crisp and golden.
Almost ready.
Drain on paper towels.
Stay tuned for Rosie's pot stickers.
Same ingredients.
 Different preparation/method.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Thursday Night Dinner. Part Two. Crispy Rice Soup.

Years ago, when Mr. Hawthorne and I lived in Danville, Virginia, my favorite place to eat was Mei Long Tui's Long River Restaurant. Whenever we went there, I never bothered looking at a menu. I just told the waitperson to tell Mei Long that Rosie was here and just fix me something. And I was never disappointed. A friend of ours used to have his birthday parties there. And tray after tray of unbelievably delicious dishes would be paraded out of the kitchen. Most of these dishes weren't even on the menu. It was a banquet like I've never had before or since. Sadly, Mei Long sold the restaurant a few years back and I haven't been to it since then. One of my all time favorite dishes there was his Crispy Rice Soup. The soup tasted phenomenal, and his presentation was impressive. The soup would be brought to the table in a silver tureen with a lid on it. Then they'd have a plate with a silver dome which housed the crispy rice. With great flourish, the hot rice would be added to the hot soup and there would be much crackling, spitting, and steam everywhere. Then our waitperson would ladle the soup into our bowls. Like I said, the presentation was impressive. I've never even seen it on the menus of other Chinese restaurants but, thanks to the powers of Google, I found a recipe yesterday for Crispy Rice Soup. So here I go, with apologies to Mei Long.
First the rice. I cooked 1 cup of Uncle Ben's long grain rice. Then got out the leftover sticky rice for sushi I'd cooked the other night. I spread both rices out on a baking sheet and baked for about 60 minutes at 300 degrees. The lighter sticky rice is on the left. The darker Uncle Ben's is on the right.
I had this pork tenderloin hiding in the freezer, which I took out and let thaw just a bit.
I scraped thin slices from the outside of the tenderloin, then wrapped the rest of the frozen loin back up and returned it to the freezer.
My last 2 quarts of chicken consomme go into the pan. Now, I'm going to have to search through my cluttered freezer to find chicken carcasses to make some more. I know they're in there somewhere.
Mr. Hawthorne sliced some bamboo shoots.
I had a few egg roll sheets left over from my potstickers so I decided to slice and fry them.
These are looking good.
Drain on paper towels.
My mise en place: On the cutting boards: Sliced bamboo shoots Frozen green peas Sliced pork Dried straw mushrooms soaking in water Button mushrooms Sliced green onions Sliced celery Shrimp 2 little pieces of ginger Some sad little snow peas out of my garden And in the back:
salt and pepper
Sesame oil Sherry Soy sauce
Here are my little shrooms soaking.
I added the mushroom water to the consomme.
Mr. Hawthorne kindly sliced the shrooms.
Then the mushrooms went in the pot.
I let the shrooms cook for a few minutes.
Then I added the bamboo shoots.
Pork, shrimp, and celery waiting for their turn.
First the pork went in.
Action shot!
Then I added the shrimp.
Action shot!
Ginger joos.
A few tablespoons of soy sauce.
Then a few tablespoons of sherry.
A teaspoon or two of sesame oil.
And the celery goes in.
Too bad you can't smell this.
Finally the peas went in, just to heat through.
Now did you forget this was crispy rice soup? The rice goes into hot oil in my wok.
Fry until lightly browned.
Here's a video of my rice crisping up. And whoot! Crispy Rice Soup!
There are my little snow peas from my garden.
Add in a few fried wonton strips for crunch.
Well, I did it. It was delicious. OK, maybe not Mei Long's, but then I didn't have the tableside presentation. I needed the silver tureen and silver dome. That would have been perfection. But this was darn close.