By: Sally James
A traditional Chinese appetiser or banquet dish, steamed in wonton and filled with flavour.
Serves Makes 18-20
Ingredients
- 8 oz pork loin or boneless chops, trimmed (or ground pork)
- 7 oz raw prawns, peeled, chopped
- 1 green onion, finely sliced
- 2 tbsp grated ginger
- 1 small carrot, finely grated
- 1 tbsp soy sauce
- 1 tbsp lime juice
- 3 tsp rice flour or cornstarch
- Salt and pepper, to taste
- 18-20 wonton wrappers
- 2 tbsp rice wine or sherry
- 2 tbsp soy sauce
- 1 tsp palm sugar or sugar
Directions
- To make the dipping sauce, whisk all ingredients together until sugar is dissolved and set aside.
- Dice the pork and place in a food processor. Press the pulse button until coarsely ground. Add the remaining filling ingredients and pulse a few times just to combine.
- Lay a few wonton wrappers on a clean dry work surface and place a teaspoon of the filling in the centre. Dampen the edges of the wrappers with water and gather the sides of each wrapper around the filling, pinching to form a shape like an open coin purse. Repeat with remaining filling and wontons.
- Lightly oil the base of a bamboo steamer and place the steamer over a pan of boiling stock or water (for extra flavour, add a splash of wine, herbs, lemongrass or other aromatic).
- Cover and steam the dim sum for about 6-8 minutes, or until the filling is cooked and the wrappers are tender. Serve straight away with the dipping sauce.
These delightful and pretty morsels are easier to make than you think. If you don’t have a bamboo steamer, use a stainless steel one, or place a wire rack inside a large wok that has a tight sealing lid. You can also deep fry them in peanut oil, but seal entirely rather than leaving open at top.