Dalian, China. Where I call home. It has been two years
since my last visit.
As the plane descends, the lights of
the city reflects off the dark surface of the sea. My heart beats faster for
the prospect of seeing my parents for the first time in months. Hugs and tears
ensue. People in the crowded waiting hall addressed us with puzzled looks.
Chinese people are not used to this much emotional outpour. I don’t care.
Driving home, I begin to notice
immense changes. The roads are wider and newly paved. An entirely new
high-speed railway has been built in the two years of my absence, connecting
Dalian to the ever-expanding high-speed transportation axis of China.
I wake up
before dawn due to jet-lag. Damn it. Was going to enjoy the sunrise, but the
smog unfortunately covered it. Looking across the sea, I spot entirely new
buildings I did not even realize were being built two years ago. Cranes for
ship building and the new port built across the bay crowd my skyline.
This used
to be a tranquil view. Mountains and forests in the distance, contrasting
sharply with the bright blue-green ocean. The high-rises used to be at the edge
of the visible skyline, now they impose on me, even from my sixth floor
balcony. The smog scrapes as high as the sky, covering everything in a grey,
choking, claustrophobic contour. Home is not like it used to be.
All this,
for what? Economic progress, of course. Chinese people have to eat. They have
to pollute their atmosphere and their lungs full of carcinogens, making minimum
wage (like $300/month minimum), working day and night, to make toys for fat
American kids, or that fifth pair of Nike shoes. All the while, real estate
prices continue to sky-rocket, food prices expand, and clothes, made in China,
are sold at a higher price in China then after being exported to the US. This
is Capitalism.
Anyways. It’s
not all bad, for me at least. It’s all good actually, especially the food. I
really missed the food. A simply bowl of congee with poached egg for breakfast.
Some Korean BBQ for lunch. Dumplings for dinner. Life is good.
About dumplings. It’s comfort food.
Ask an American, and the answer will usually be mac & cheese or grilled
cheese. Ask a Chinese person, and you will probably hear an overwhelming outcry
of dumplings.
This is because, for a lot of
Chinese people, this simple dish of boiled meat stuffed in dough represents
much more than just a delicious food, but cherished memories of home, of
comfort, of family. Even though my home has been demolished by the now
uber-capitalism totalitarian communist government (figuratively and literally,
actually, my childhood home was literally torn down to accommodate an expanded
road), my family remains intact. After a long day of breathing in
cancer-causing air, suffering the crowded streets and dangerous traffic,
bearing the unreasonable prices for food and shelter, at least we can still sit
down together, and enjoy a heart-warming, steaming bowl of delicious, succulent
dumplings with our loved ones.
Some things just don’t change, like
mom’s dumplings. And that’s why its comfort food. Just like I remember.
Ingredients
For the dough
- White
enriched all-purpose flour (DO NOT use brown flour, this will ruin the
dumplings, I will hunt you down)
- Warm water ~
30°C (about half of that of flour in
volume)
Note: Unfortunately, Chinese people
don’t measure things usually by cup, but by eye. I say 2 cups of flour will
make enough dumplings for 3-4 people.
For the filling
- Your
favorite ground meat ( ~ 1 pound)
o
Suggested are pork and lamb, can also use fish
(preferably white, non-oily fish like perch or sole)
o
Pork is most common in China, followed by lamb,
chicken (can also use ground turkey)
- Your
favorite soft leafy vegetable (chop, diced, and minced into extremely fine
pieces, should be same volume as ground meat)
o
Suggested are chives, Napa cabbage. If using lamb,
suggest carrots that have been boiled till soft (my personal favorite)
- Shrimp
(optional, best with pork), diced into rather large pieces
- Mushrooms
(optional, best with chicken or turkey)
- Ginger
- Green onion
- Garlic
(optional)
- VEGETARIAN
OPTION
o
Sautee until soft the following, in finely diced
form
o
Mushrooms, carrots, hard flavored tofu, black
fungus, cabbage, egg (fried first, added last), garlic, ginger, green onion
o
Set aside until cool and proceed as filling
- Season
according to personal taste with salt, pepper, sesame oil, soy sauce,
rice/balsamic/”Lao Chen Cu” vinegar (for details on how much, see below).
Procedure
- Mix the dough. Start
with flour in a bowl, add water very slowly, mixing with the other hand.
Should mix until all the flour becomes tiny pieces of dough, with very
little if no pure dry flour left.
a. Note all of
the dough steps can be skipped if you buy some dumpling skin from the local
Asian supermarket, but this will not lead to optimally delicious dumplings. The
store bought ones are too evenly thick, too thick in general (bad dough to
filling ratio), and also sometimes stale (bad texture) and not chewy enough (no
gluten formation from proper kneading). But this will also save you 90% of
time. Your choice.
- Combine and knead the
dough. Don’t overdo it, just until it’s combined.
- Let sit for at least 30
minutes at room temperature for the gluten to form (will add extra doughy
texture to the dumplings).
- Meanwhile, combine all
the filling. Add seasoning. You will know the filling is at proper level
of seasoning when you can smell a salty mouthwatering aroma when putting
your nose close to the filling. If you are worried, just fry a bit up and
taste it. It should be pretty salty (remember you are filling it in
dough).
- KEY STEP. Add water to the filling
while mixing, until the filling reaches almost a soupy consistency. This
will make the meat juicy and the filling succulent. Most people don’t do
this step and their dumpling ends up tasting quite dry and blend. You’re
welcome.
- Now the dough should be
ready. Split a piece off about the size of your fist. Knead until smooth.
- IMPORTANT: use a large
flat surface for this, preferably with one person doing the dough and one
or more persons making the dumplings.
- Flour the surface. Make
the dough rather flat and round. Make a hole in the middle of the dough
ball. Start working the dough into a thin bagel like shape, turning the
dough while trying to make the dough cylinder thinner and thinner. When
the thickness of the dough is about 1.5 fingers in diameter, split the
circle into one straight long cylinder.
- Keep smoothing out the
dough with your hand until evenly thick throughout. Cut the dough into
bits the size a little larger than your upper dumb, turning the dough
cylinder after every cut (this will help keep the shape of the dough
pieces consistent, if not, it will be hard to roll out the dough into
circles).
- Flour the pieces
extensively, mix until every piece is covered with dry flour. Flatten out
the pieces with your palm into a circle with a single press.
- Roll with a small
rolling pin, one hand on the edge of the dough, turning it, while the
other rolls into the center of the dough circle with even and gentle
pressure throughout. Keeping turning and rolling at the same time until
you get a pretty thin circle. Flour the rolling surface extensively so
that the dough circle doesn’t stick to the table or the rolling pin,
destroying the circle.
a. This is the hardest part of the whole
operation, but needs to be mastered for authentic dumplings. If you cut out
dough circles with a cup, the thickness will be too even and when you wrap, you
might leak the filling. Make sure you practice or learn from a master. Don’t
listen to anyone who doesn’t roll out the dough this way. This is the only
proper way of making dumpling skin. If someone tells you to do it another way,
they are believers of a false god.
- As the dumpling skins
are rolled out, the other person can start making the dumplings.
- The dumpling skins
should be about the size of the center of your palm.
- Fill the dumpling skin
with about a table spoon of filling. Your should fill as much as possible,
being sure to leave enough dough space around the filling so that you can
make the dumpling. If the filling touches the dough, it will not stick
anymore, and the filling will spill everywhere in the water you boil it
in, making bowls of empty skin and dumpling filling soup. (Which is fine
too, if you like that kind of thing.) If you are really struggling, you
can always fry the dumplings, the leaky filling won’t interfere with this.
- Wrap the dumpling,
Start from one end, start sticking one side of the dough with the other
side, until the whole thing is sticking together from the middle, like a
half moon. Now your can make crimps in the sticking (only dough) part by
folding bits of dough over the top of each other. This will help ensure
the dumplings don’t explode while boiling. You can also squeeze the dough
part between the sides of your thumb and index finger (this is technically
challenging, not recommended for beginners).
- Put finished dumplings
on a non-stick surface (plastic mats, baking plates lined with parchment
paper). If the process takes a long time, cover your dumplings with a
semi-wet piece of clothe to prevent them from drying out. Do not let
dumplings touch each other since they will stick together almost
immediately.
- Boil dumplings.
- KEY STEP: boil large
pot of water. Place enough dumplings into pot until basically the surface
area of dumplings is the same as the pot. DO NOT PUT TOO MUCH IN, they
will stick together. Best to do in batches. Use a spatula to continuously
scrape the bottom to prevent dumplings from sticking to the bottom of the
pot. The dumplings will float to the top after about 3-5 minutes. Turn
down heat to medium, cover. The water will start to boil over after about
30 seconds to a minute, open the cover at this time. The boil-over will
stop. Repeat this twice.
- Serve with dipping
sauce. You can simply combine soy sauce with balsamic vinegar or rice
vinegar. You can also put some sriracha or wasabi in it.
Authentic
dumpling dipping sauce:
- Peal garlic
bulbs.
- Using a
mortar and pestle, ground the garlic with some salt.
- Add Chinese
vinegar, preferably “Lao Chen Cu” until covering garlic completely.