Let's see here-- already 50 and still haven't made dim sum or wonton on my own.
But can only vaguely remember my mother's different pork or chicken wonton soups.
The recipes at this website, look the simplest (to me) and closest to real home cooking. Not the gourmet cooking websites with cooking sherry, sesame oil. Jeesh. Probably delicious but Chinese food cooking doesn't have to be that complicated.
http://www.homemade-chinese-soups.co...n-recipes.html
http://www.homemade-chinese-soups.com/wontons.html As a child, I did help my mother shape the wontons with the real effect as shown on this page, under "storing wontons". It's easy to do.
My tendency to put into the minced/ground pork, finely minced green onion and water chestnut. Or you could use chives. Finely diced, rehydrated shitake mushroom mixed into meat is lovely but probably too complicated for you. (remember you can take pork meat and mince yourself, if you have time to pound the meat for 10-15 min. solid).
I didn't read all the recipe variations but would tend to make a vegetable stock and put into fresh spinch or chopped boy choy, napa cabbage or even watercress. Would boil the wontons separately in its own water and drain starchy water. Then put cooked wontons into soup to serve. The other option is to steam the wontons in their steamer and then add to soup stock-- again, probably too intimidating/time-consuming.
Just make sure the pork meat is cooked through. Or use minced chicken meat.
Last edited by shootingstar; 05-13-2009 at 09:42 PM.
My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.
Thanks for the cool link shootingstar!
crazaycanuk,
I'm assuming u'll need to go to an asian grocer to get the wonton wrappers anyways right?, so use the chance to pick up some other essential chinese cooking ingredients (can be used for multitude of other things, keep forever)
- sesame oil (make sure its pure sesame and not 'sesame flavoured oil)
- light soy sauce (buy a chinese brand, the goya and japanese brands taste different...)
real wontons are very simple. the complicated ones have more ingredients, are larger and called water dumplings.
wonton filling (i'm approximating for you, these are the proportions)
1/2 lb ground pork
2tblsps light soy sauce
1tsp sesame oil
1/2 tsp granulated sugar (can be any kind, white brown raw etc)
2tblsps chopped spring onion (scallions) (Whole thing, white part and green part, waste not want not)
the important part is to make sure when you mix it up stir it vigorously until it looks like a paste and is not lumpy.
then you can wrap a 1/2 tsp of the mixture in each wrapper (thats why u need like... 100 hahha)
place on a tray/sheetpan, cover with cling wrap until ready to cook. (don't pile into a bowl. they will all melt and clump together as the uncooked skins dissolve)
to cook just boil some salted water and drop them in one by one. they are ready when they rise to the top.
For broth, I just use a chicken stock cube with some added mustard greens for crunch and sweetness. 2 drops of sesame oil can't hurt either. oh and some more chopped scallions![]()
maybe because I was eating a hundred a week for a couple weeks but I started adding ginger to the filling and then ginger to the broth. I also like to add green onions and cilantro to the broth.
Thanks TE! You pushed me half way over!
http://pages.teamintraining.org/nca/seagull08/tnguyen
Dee-I found some won ton wrappers on the weekend. I stocked up on sesame oil a few weeks ago so i'm ok there too!
Thanks again for your recipe![]()
What did i do wrong?My wontons fell apart when i boiled them & the soup didn't really taste like much of anything.
?![]()