Like their thicker skinned cousin the egg roll, spring rolls are a popular staple at Chinese-American restaurants. As a kid, I never much cared for either variety because there was often more wrapper than filling and what meager filling they held tasted more like tired fryer oil than anything else.
All that changed while I was living in San Jose, when one of my roommates brought home a bag of King egg rolls. Their crisp oversized rolls are literally bursting with meaty filling and they border on addictive as it's next to impossible to stop at one (or even two or three)
Like many dishes of Chinese origin, spring rolls tell an interesting story of migration and adaptation because they can be found on just about every continent with variations in filling, wrapper and sauce. In the US, spring rolls are usually filled with cabbage, carrots, glass noodles, and pork, and wrapped in either a thin crisp wrapper (spring roll) or a thicker crunchy wrapper (egg roll). While they're adequately seasoned and can be eaten as-is, spring rolls are commonly dipped in a bright red sweet and sour sauce in the US.
For me, the perfect spring roll has a thin, crispy shell holding a trove of textures and flavors, which is why I tend to use the thinner wrappers and stuff them until they're nearly bursting at the seams. Today I filled my rolls with pork, onions, carrot, celery, shiitake mushrooms, napa cabbage, and glass noodes, but I also like adding water chestnuts, bamboo and wood ear for texture. For those of you that don't eat pork, ground chicken or crumbled firm tofu make fine substitutes.
The spring roll also has a Japanese cousin, Harumaki. The differences are subtle, but distinctive. You could always make both and have a taste test, but the real winner will be the person who gets to do the tasting.
📖 Recipe
Units
Ingredients
For filling
- 1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
- 2 teaspoons fresh ginger (minced)
- 170 grams ground pork (ground chicken or turkey is fine)
- 1 small onion (shredded)
- 125 grams carrot (~1 large carrot shredded)
- 70 grams celery (~1 rib shredded)
- 70 grams fresh shiitake mushrooms (2-3 large ones)
- 280 grams napa cabbage (shredded)
- 70 grams glass noodles (rehydrated and chopped)
- 2 tablespoons oyster sauce
- 2 tablespoons Shaoxing wine (or dry sherry)
- 2 teaspoons potato starch (halve if using cornstarch)
- 2 teaspoons soy sauce
- ½ teaspoon ground white pepper
- ¼ teaspoon salt
For spring rolls
- 15 sheets spring roll wrappers
- 3 tablespoons water
- 3 tablespoons flour
- vegetable oil (for deep-frying)
For sauce
- 6 tablespoons water
- ¼ cup rice vinegar
- 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 2 tablespoons ketchup
- 2 teaspoons potato starch (halve if using cornstarch)
- ¼ teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Combine the oyster sauce, Shaoxing, potato starch, soy sauce, white pepper and salt in a small bowl and whisk together.
- Heat a large frying pan over medium high heat. Add the sesame oil and ginger and fry until fragrant. Add the ground pork and stir-fry, using the edge of a spatula to break up the meat into little crumbs.
- When the meat is cooked, add the onion, carrot, celery, and shiitake mushrooms and continue stir-frying until the carrots are mostly cooked. Add the napa cabbage and glass noodles and continue stir-frying until the cabbage is mostly cooked. Add the sauce and stir-fry until there is no liquid left. Let this mixture cool.
- Make some glue by combing 3 tablespoons flour with 3 tablespoons water.
- Peel the wrappers and spread them out as pictured with about ½" of the wrapper below showing. This makes it easy to paint glue on several wrappers at once. Spread the glue with a pastry bush along the top edges of the wrapper.
- Place about ⅓ cup of the room temperature filling about 2 inches above the bottom corner of the wrapper.
- Tightly roll the wrapper and filling half-way.
- Fold the left edge over right up against the edge of the filling, then fold the right edge over. The trick here is to taper your fold slightly so that the open flap is a little narrower than the bottom of the roll as this will create a good seal and prevent flaps of dough that will invite oil into your roll. It should look a bit like an open envelope at this point.
- Finish by continuing to roll until the flap seals itself against the roll.
- To make the sweet and sour sauce, whisk together the water, vinegar, sugar, ketchup, potato starch and salt in a small saucepan until there are no lumps. Bring the mixture to a boil stirring constantly until your sauce has thickened.
- Prepare a paper towel lined rack. Pour about 2" of vegetable oil into a heavy bottomed pot and heat to 320 degrees F.
- Fry the springrolls a few at a time, being careful not to overcrowd the pot. Turn them over frequently so that they brown evenly. When they reach an even tan color, transfer the spring rolls to your rack and allow them to drain. Repeat with the rest of the spring rolls.
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