Since my success in making choco crepes (though no success in egg roll wrapper yet), I have been looking for the opportunity to try making fresh lumpia, which means, a time for another Filipino-get-together. Our supposed lunch meeting the previous week was postponed. I actually was no longer in a mood to bring anything (and I told the hostess Fe about that, and she did not mind). But when I still had cabbage from Vengie and some more carrots from my garden (getting quite wrinkly already), plus a scan of my freezer and pantry revealed that I still had that pack of frozen ubod and a small can of water chestnut, I immediately went online to print out that recipe that I saw a long time ago.
The best compliment I received was that it was very much like what they ordered in a restaurant that costed $27 each!(Did I hear it right??? Maybe it was in pesos at a PI resto. ) That's expensive! I am now thinking of making and selling this and maybe siopao to Filipinos as a sideline when I start working as a nurse in a nearby hospital that has 5 Filipino doctors, 1 PT, and 1 CNA (who have their own families, of course). I wonder how much I can reasonably price these two Pinoy goodies? Hhmmmm....Any ideas?
Since thess's recipe did not have any amount for the ingredients for the filling, I approximated (read: I did not measure, either) the proportions, and that is what I will post here. Also, I did not have the time to go to the grocery store to buy tofu and roasted peanuts, but I did have 1 small can of water chestnut (my first time to use it) and several pounds of uncooked pecan nuts, which I toasted at 200 deg F for 10 minutes then cooled before I chopped (in the chopper).
INGREDIENTS and PROCEDURE:
For the wrapper (crepes) --
2 cups flour
4 beaten eggs
4 cups water
dash of salt
2-3 tbsp melted butter
(I omitted the oil since I will be brushing the crepe maker with butter for every crepe)
Coffee filters - to place in between crepes
Mix everything well and let stand in room temperature for at least 30 minutes.
Plug the crepe maker and brush with melted butter. Place the batter on the plastic pan that went with the crepe maker and stir well, then dip the crepe maker for 2-3 seconds, lift up and swirl while still upside down. Let stand upright to cook for 1-2 minutes (you will notice if the sides are beginning to get drier and start to separate from the pan; this takes practice! I wasted the first 1/4 of the batter to finally find this right technique!). Positioning the pan upside down above the coffee filter, use a silicone spatula or a wooden stirrer to start separating the edge. The crepe will smoothly fall right away. Repeat the process and place coffee filters between each crepe. (I had a layer of parchment paper at the bottom, placed on top of a wire rack to cool the crepes as I add to the stack.) You can then place this stack in a ziplock bag, squeeze out excess air, and refrigerate for up to one week.)
For the filling --
1-2 tbsp oil
1 clove garlic, minced
1/4 pound pork, sliced into bits
1/4 cup shrimp, sliced into bits
1/4 cup pre-boiled chicken meat, sliced into bits
1/2 head of cabbage, sliced thinly
1 carrot, sliced thinly
1 small can water chestnut, sliced thinly
frozen ubod, thawed (I have had it in my freezer for months now, so I did not have to resort to bamboo shoots. I actually have not seen any bamboo shoots here.)
salad greens (these are not cooked with the rest of the ingredients, but placed at the bottom before putting the cooked filling)
Heat the oil. Cook the pork. Remove from pan and set aside. Sautee garlic, add chicken and shrimp and cook for 3 minutes, stirring constantly. Add the ubod and water chestnut, cook for a minute, then add carrots and cabbage, 1/2-3/4 cup chicken broth and let simmer for 1 minute.
UPDATE 7-25-09:
One of my readers, Toto, offered the following piece of information for those who do not have access to ubod/hearts of palm:
A little info about substitutes. I live in Norway and they don't sell Ubod here. I'm using Yellow Turnip instead. It's almost the same taste. I don't know though if you can find it outside Scandinavia but it's very common here.
Here's how it looks like:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rutabaga
Thanks, Toto!
For the sauce --
I had to research online for a good sauce because I had a hard time trying to imagine the proportion of the ingredients as described by thess, since she did not have amounts stated, and found one by a Filipino, which I tweaked to achieve what I imagined should be, according to what I recall of Goldilocks' fresh lumpia's paalat sauce. From recall, the sauce had a strong garlicky taste which I loved, but the recipe I found had only 1 clove of garlic. And of course, the peanutty taste. So what I did was to roast 10 cloves of garlic and mash them. Then I chopped roasted pecan nuts, about 1/2 cup. So I sauteed the garlic in peanut oil, then the nuts, then I followed the rest of the recipe. After cooking, I was not satisfied with the taste yet, so I added 1 tbsp white sugar and some more salt. I was quite disappointed with the dark brown color, and thought that maybe I should have used white sugar all the way, and light soy sauce instead of all purpose. I stirred the mashed roasted garlic into the mixture. Then as I tasted, still, something was missing -- the bite of garlic. So I minced one clove of garlic and just stirred those into the sauce. Suddenly I loved the taste! (Although I still did not like the dark brown color). Anyway, because it tasted good, I will share it here, although I think I could have made it look more like how I envisioned it if I used white sugar and light soy sauce. I liked the effects of pecans because the crunch was not too hard on my sensitive teeth, so I guess I will keep that. But as of this posting, I realized too late that there were other fresh lumpia posted a long time ago in other foodblogs: stel's and ting-aling's, which had the recipe for paalat. Oh well, I can try them another time. Maybe the tapioca flour and/or the peanut butter ingredients will give me what I want. Let me just claim (ahem!) that this sauce has turned out to be one of my creations that I am proud of because of its taste (never mind the looks). Here is my final recipe (which I may change in the future):
INGREDIENTS:
10 cloves garlic, roasted for 5 minutes in oven toaster then peeled and mashed
1/2 cup roasted pecans (peanuts if you prefer), roughly chopped
1 tbsp peanut oil
1 clove garlic, crushed
1/2 cup brown sugar (maybe white would be better) + 1 tbsp white sugar
1/2 cup soy sauce (maybe light would be better)
1-1/2 cups water
salt, if needed
4 tbsp cornstarch dissolved in 1/3 cup cold water
1 clove garlic, minced (to be added after cooking the sauce)
1 cup chopped roasted pecan nuts for topping
PROCEDURE:
Mix the sugar, soy sauce, and water. Sautee the garlic in peanut oil until golden brown then add the chopped nuts and stir to cook for about 30 seconds. Pour the mixture and stir, add 1 tbsp white sugar, and salt as necessary. thicken by pouring the cornstarch-water mixture in a slow stream while stirring, stopping when the desired consistency is achieved.
To serve:
The fillings will, of course, occupy the middle part of the crepe/lumpia wrapper. Place a layer of fresh greens at the bottom (lettuce is most preferable), then the filling. You may want to add some sauce here before you fold the sides over the filling. Spoon the sauce over the lumpia, then top with chopped nuts and enjoy!
I will definitely, in the future, try those paalat sauces by stel and ting-aling, and maybe add some things to tweak them according to my taste.
15 comments:
manang, your recipe is perfect already. this is one favorite of mine that i crave for all the time but i can't just make on a whim sa dami ng ingredients at kuchi kuchi involved. the combination of the nuts and garlic and vegetables and paalat...ayayay nakakagutom.
teka teka where did you get the frozen ubod??
stel,
I bought it from the Filipino store 1 hr away a long time ago, I have almost forgotten about it. Sad thing, when my friend and I went yesterday to an Asian store 2 hrs away, there was none, puro labong. Ala ring Sarsa ni Mang Tomas or Lucky Me Pancit Canton (my sons' favorites). Pero alam mo, dahil sa special mention mo on tapioca in the paalat, napakuha ako nung makita ko.
Oh my, inggit ako sa iyo Manang. I don't know how to make the crepe :( Sarap niyan.
here's another dish I have been meaning to try forever, I even have the wrappers in my pantry already, but just haven't gotten around to it. I hope I get to try it soon...when I have more time to make the "kuchi kuchi" like stel said. lol!
Ay sarap naman! It's one of my favorites. Sarap ng ubod- always reminds me of Tagaytay. Pahinge naman.
Hi, Manang! Loved the lumpiang sariwa post. Buti marunong ka gumawa nu'ng wrapper; I can never seem to get the hang of making it. Lagi dumidikit sa pan!
hello all, pasensya na sa tagal ng reply ko.
Stel, nakakita ako ng sliced "heart of palm" sa Hannaford kasama ng canned veggies (although in jar yung nakuha ko, but there's canned whole in another branch).
lani, nasayang yung 1/4 ng batter ko bago ko nakuha ang trick. Depende rin sa gamit mong pan.Madali gamitin yung Villaware crepe maker basta sundin yung tips nya sa manual.
jmom, ako naman, gagawa uli this week for the sake of 2 friends who missed it the first time.
KK, kung kapitbahay lang kita, salu-salo tayo eh.
Midge, yung ginagamit kong pan, papahiran muna ng butter bago i-dip sa batter. Tapos, yung batter dapat tama lang ang thickness (by swirling it upon lifting up), pag sobra nipis, hirap tanggalin at nasisira.
Hi Manang,
Is there another substitute for ubod? I can't find it here in australia.. ive been searching for years now.. bamboo shoots in cans stink like wee.. any suggestions? thank you.
Thank you manang for the receipe. I must say though it's a lot of work that I did not anticipate. I am very proud to say that this is one of the food I cooked the first time and I got them perfectly. If I may say though for the people who's trying this for the first time. To cut your time of cutting the vegestable used the cheese greater, you can get one of this in the dollar store with 4 sizes in one used the biggest hole for the carrots, ubod, and water chesnut. And be patience on making your sauce, dont keep adding cornstarch, they will eventualy get thicker. And for making the wrapper you dont need the creep maker if you dont have one. Just get a small pan, and used a new 2 inch paint brush in circular motion adding more in the middle.Dont try to flip it with spatula they will eventualy feel off from the pan if you keep it on a midium high. I must say that I'm very proud of myself of making this, but I cant blame the restaurant for charging so much for one of this coz it sure is a lot of work. Once again thank you manang......Alexa from Ontario Canada
Hi Alexa,
That is so true what you said about lots of work making these (I find the crepe preparation especially time-consuming!). I use my mandoline slicer for the veggies so that helps save time.
Kudos to you for being able to make those wrappers without a crepe maker! I could never make it good enough! Thanks for the tips (I am sure some of the readers will find them valuable as well!).
hello po manang bago lng po ako d2 at mahilig po akong magluto, now ko lng nkita tong website mu.ask ko lng po para san po ginagamit ung ubod???cencia na po hndi ko po kc alam salamat po godbless!!!
hi manang!it's my first time on your page.I was actually googling lumpiang sariwa and I am now here salivating with all these delish foods.I am 6wks pregnant so you can imagine the cravings I have right now.Salamat at may Manang na katulad mo sharing all these recipes.San nga ka nga pala manang?
hmmm..
nice..
fresh lumpia is healthier and i love it more than fried, ty for posting
it's my first time to visit your site and i was so impressed by your generous contribution of recipes that you mastered through hard work but i know this is all about your passion in cooking. Thank you so much!!!
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