"Kusina" = kitchen; "Manang" (aka Ate in Tagalog)= Ilokano term for older sister.
A Filipina's adaptation in an American Kitchen
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Pork Siomai (Shu-Mai)
This is a re-post from my old kusina.
I got this recipe from The Book of Chinese Cooking by Jasper Spencer-Smith.
(Karen also has a post on the basic recipe for siomai here, including the recipe for the wrapper.)
My sons and I love these. Also a good finger food to bring during Pinoy get-togethers.
Ingredients:
3/4 pound ground pork
1/4 pound raw shelled shrimp, ground
(Believe me, I used a scale to measure these, but of course, you can approximate.)
1-1/2 tbsp soy sauce
1/2 tbsp Chinese rice wine or dry sherry
1/2 tbsp sesame oil
1/2 tbsp sugar
Dash of pepper
1 egg white
1-1/2 tsbp cornstarch
won-ton skins (I buy Nasoya brand)
green peas or chopped hard-cooked egg yolks for garnish
(Note: I usually buy pork chops then grind them using my Kitchen Aid attachment, since I can't find ground pork for sale here. I grind other ingredients as well, like the shrimp. when making lumpia, I also grind the garlic, onions, and other veggies.)
Procedure (I revised according to how I made it):
To make filling: Mix together ground pork, ground shrimp, soy sauce, rice wine or sherry, sesame oil, sugar, pepper and egg white until mixture is well blended and smoth. Stir in cornstarch.
Place filling in a storage bag and cut one corner big enough for the content to squeeze through. Place about 1 tbsp or so of filling in the middle of wonton skin and gather the skin around the filling. Alternatively, you can use a cookie scoop. Dip a spoon in water and use to smooth the surface of the meat. Garnish by placing a green pea or chopped egg yolk on top of meat.
Repeat with the rest of the wonton/filling. Line a steamer (or bamboo steamer) with a damp cloth; place each siomai about 1/2 inch apart so they don't stick together; steam over high heat 5 minutes or until done (do not overcook). Serve with your fave dip (I use soy sauce/kalamansi juice as a dip. When I was in PI, I used to like it with chili paste.)
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11 comments:
manang K, lovely sio mai, makes me really hungry. i haven't made it good enough like fr. the dim sum we get from the restaurant. pag punta mo dito dadalhin kita don pramis!
thanks for the recipe! i have a few questions though, do we really need the shelled shrimp and the rice wine for siomai??? what if i exclude them from the recipe? will that make a difference?? im sorry if im asking stupid questions, i just wanted to make my siomai better.. hehehe! thanks again!
hi john,
i do think it makes a difference if you remove these two key ingredients(both contribute smell and taste that are significantly different from the other ingredients). I have not tried making siomai without them.
How many wonton wrappers are in a package?
Hi. I have a question myself. I know shrimp is a good ingredient, but its hard to find fresh shrimp here. If its not fresh, the siomai winds up tasting really bad. Can I substitute shrimp with shiitake mushrooms?
THE PICTURE LOOKS REALLY YUMMY... Thanks for sharing your recipe... i cant wait to try them :)
They are very authentic-looking, Manang. Siguradong masarap sila!
Hi Mely,
Well, they sure do not taste like meatballs. haha! I think the shrimp and the sesame oil makes the difference. There were those who commented in my old kusina that they liked this recipe.
hi manang, i want to ask about the rice wine is it similar to rice vinegar? and about the dry sherry, all i saw was sherry wine...should i get that or meron tlagang dry sherry sa grocery? thanks...
ready to make siomai except for these 2 ingredients.
Hi ellen,
rice wine really smells like wine while rice vinegar really smells and tastes like vinegar. sherry wine I think is same as dry sherry. I would get rice wine and whatever sherry. :)
just ate siomai, last sat, love it, thanks for sharing it
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