Pork dumplings
Pork dumplings
I don’t know what pork dumplings are, but have an upvote! Not sure why the other guy downvoted you.
Maybe he didn’t want sticky dango all over his pork dumplings…
looks at your username
…is…is it you? Are you the FauxPseudo meat eater?
I don’t know about downvotes, I think people use them for different reasons whether they downvote for disliking something or they just want to see less of it. I also think maybe some people accidentally vote on things when they’re scrolling on their phone, so I don’t think too much of it. :) I’m just here to share food photos and have discussions about food! The imagery of sticky dango on dumplings, though, LOL. Thank you!
Dumplings pretty much comprises of a thin wrapper on the outside and meat and/or vegetable filling on the inside. Pork is the traditional filling, but you can find chicken, prawns, chives, cabbage. I don’t see beef very often.
You can go to a supermarket frozen aisle and find them there, too! Give it a try. :)
That looks awesome!
Favorite dipping sauce: mix of thin-sliced fresh ginger, Hua Tiao cooking wine (or Mirin in a pinch), and Chinkiang vinegar. Throw in red flake pepper to taste.
The worst part of these is that they take so much time to prepare, but only 5 seconds to eat.
This guy does an impressive job with that!
https://img-s1.onedio.com/id-63f157dcb4d77278425bd94b/rev-0/w-1200/h-1634/f-gif/s-d81e8d1958b731a641138be14bb23e70030146e9.gif
I keep them around until my wife decides she is tired of getting attacked. We try not to get them but occasionally they show up when we get new chicks. We over stocked a few years ago and this will be our first year of chicks after that break so we will probably find at least one.
Here is the filling.
1 lb ground or minced chicken.
3 cups shredded cabbage.
2 tablespoon soy sauce.
2 tablespoon sesame oil.
2 tablespoon sake.
1 Tablespoon garlic powder.
1 Tablespoon onion powder.
For rooster I definitely recommend taking the time and a sharp knife to mince. The texture is so much better than ground.
Ohh sake! I haven’t tried using that before. I have some of that lying around, I’ll drop some in next time. Next time you make dumplings, be sure to post them, please!
Re: using minced rooster: Is it because rooster meat is leaner or tougher?
It is most definitely lean and tough. But if I made them with commercial chicken I’d probably still mince because it just makes a higher quality toothiness in that small package.
We stopped by Tractor Supply today but they were out of chicks. We will probably end up with a rooster this year but it will be a year or two before he becomes a menace to society.
I’ve learned something today, thank you! I’ll know what to do if I come across rooster next time. Someone did feed me peacock once, though in battered, deep-fried form. I wonder if it’s the same.
What I do with supermarket mince is that I whip it with a pair of chopsticks until it gets smooth, then I add in the rest of the ingredients. It makes a big difference in the finished product!
Ooh, these look good! I’ve been wanting to try my hand at these myself. As you said they are just so time intensive!
My favorite dipping sauce when I cook up the frozen ones I get from the international grocery is equal parts soy sauce, Chinkiang vinegar, and Lao Gan Ma chili crisp.
I think the most annoying part for me is the chop up the vegetables. I have a crappy food processor that I inherited from someone, but chopping veg for dumplings is all I use it for so I can’t justify buying a better one.
I love wrapping them, but not when I am wrapping for 5 people (back home), so I make smaller batches now just for me and my +1. Once you get the hang of it, you get fast otherwise, you sit there for ages and the filling gets soft and yuck to deal with.
Or you can get one of these: https://www.coles.com.au/product/coles-simply-dumpling-press-2-pack-8421432
Another one for the vinegar! I’ll have to give vinegar a few more tries to see if my tastes will change for the better. Thanks for sharing!
Having trouble finding any good meatfree fillings for gyoza
I tried spinach/soybean as well as tofu fillings, but they were never as good as meat filling
I think there was something like seitan that is good, but I have never worked with it nor seeked it out.
This recipe is similar ingredients I would use for veggie dumplings, but it seems like potato might be a secret ingredient:
https://www.recipetineats.com/vegetable-dumplings-potstickers/
I have used corn starch, but she uses potato (which is also starchy) and who doesn’t love potatoes 🤤
It’s really funny tat in English a lot of food is called dumplings which splits up to a lot in other languages. I’d never call gyoza dumplings.
To be fair in German it’s also the other way around with some words / word groups.