Welcome to my food blog!
I enjoy cooking and eating just as much as creating art, so I have created this blog to share my passion for food. My collection of recipes have been inspired by my travels to various places, including Vietnam, Italy, and New York City and by close family and friends who share in my passion for food. I have been told that I cook like I paint, oftentimes throwing in ingredients with no measuring tools and using whatever I find available. The upside is that I never create the same exact dish twice. The downside is I never create the same exact dish twice. But one thing for sure, it's always unique and tasty and in the end, that's what counts. I want to share these amazing experiences of cooking and eating with you. I cook by sight, so it's a little bit of this and a little bit of that. Every ingredient is an approximation, so you would have to use your own judgment to add or decrease salt, pepper or any other ingredient depending on your taste. I will try my best to use some measurements (for those of you who might be interested in trying out these recipes). Feel free to make any comments or suggestions.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Chả Giò Vietnamese Egg Rolls
I am very excited to share with you one of my dearest recipes passed down from my mom to me. Ever since I was little, I would help her make these delicious egg rolls for special occasions, such as holidays and weddings. I have made some changes, such as using ground beef instead of pork and I have also added minced shrimp to give the egg rolls another dimension. Here is a pictorial step by step recipe for Vietnamese chả giò. I will add the written description soon. So stay tuned...
Egg roll ingredients
Dried black mushrooms, also known as tree/wood ear fungus, called nam meo
Black mushrooms, soaked and thinly sliced
The filling: ground beef, shrimp, onions, scallions, eggs, glass noodles, black mushrooms
The filling
The filling
Frying a sample for taste
Step 1: placing the filling on the wrapper
Step 2: first roll
Step 3: folding the sides of the wrapper into the center
Step 4: egg wash on the tip of the wrapper
Step 5: the final roll
Into the frying pot
Frying the egg rolls
Nước chấm, a Vietnamese "dipping sauce" consisting of fish sauce, fresh minced garlic, lime juice, sugar, water, and chilis
Nước chấm with egg rolls
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This is fantastic! The photography is nice as well. Miss cooking with you.
ReplyDeleteIt's really interesting to see that -- although the ingredients differ -- the process is very similar to how Filipinos created lumpia. Nice photos by the way!
ReplyDeleteThank you Chieu.
ReplyDeleteYes, Ronnell, it does have a lot of similarities to lumpia, which is also yuuuuummmy :-)