RECIPE OF THE MONTH: Pork and Scallion Dumplings With Crispy Skirt

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Wash your hands with soap and water, then gather all your equipment and ingredients and put them on a counter.

Recipe provided by: https://www.bonappetit.com

Ingredients

  • 8oz. ground pork (not lean)
  • 8 scallions
  • 1″ piece ginger
  • 2 tsp. plus 2 Tbsp. soy sauce
  • 1 tsp. kosher salt, divided
  • ½ tsp. freshly ground white or black pepper
  • 24 3½”-diameter wonton wrappers
  • 5 Tbsp. unseasoned rice vinegar, divided
  • 4 tsp. all-purpose flour
  • 4 tsp. cornstarch
  • 6–8 tsp. vegetable oil, divided
  • 2 tsp. chili oil (optional)

Instructions

  1. Place 8 oz. ground pork (not lean) in a medium bowl. Trim roots and 1″ from tops of 8 scallions; discard. Thinly slice; transfer 2 Tbsp. scallion to a small bowl and set aside for dipping sauce. Coarsely chop remaining scallions and add to bowl with pork.
  2. Peel 1″ piece ginger with a spoon and finely grate into bowl with pork using a Microplate.
  3. Add 2 tsp. soy sauce, ¾ tsp. kosher salt, and ½ tsp. freshly ground white or black pepper to pork. Rake through pork with chopsticks or your hands to quickly but thoroughly combine ingredients.
  4. Get ready to form the dumplings: Place twenty-four 3½”-diameter wonton wrappers on a work surface and cover with a damp kitchen towel to prevent them from drying out. Place a small bowl of water nearby.
  5. Place 1 wrapper in the palm of your nondominant hand. Scoop out a rounded teaspoonful of filling and place into center of wrapper. Use teaspoon to nudge filling into a football shape. (This will make it easier to fold the wrapper around it.)
  6. Dip a finger on your dominant hand in water and lightly moisten the half of the wrapper that is closest to you. Using your dominant hand, fold wrapper in half over filling and pinch closed using both of your hands. Using your fingers, make 6–7 pleats along the edge, pressing each pleat closed after you form it. Repeat process with remaining wrappers and filling.
  7. To make the slurry for your crispy skirt, whisk 3 Tbsp. unseasoned rice vinegar, 4 tsp. all-purpose flour, 4 tsp. cornstarch, remaining ¼ tsp. kosher salt, and 2 cups water in a large measuring glass to combine.
  8. Now you are ready to cook your dumplings. Heat 2 tsp. vegetable oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high. Arrange 6–10 dumplings in pan (steam fewer at a time if you want a more crispy skirt) and cook until they start to sizzle, about 1 minute. (You don’t want them to take on any color at this point.) Stir slurry well and add a generous ½ cup to pan. Cover and steam dumplings 5 minutes. Remove lid. Dumplings should be plumped and cooked through and most of the water should have evaporated, leaving a thin lacy layer of slurry beneath them. Cover and cook a minute longer if needed.
  9. Uncover dumplings and cook until all the liquid evaporates from slurry and it becomes a crisp, golden brown skirt, about 2 minutes. You may need to rotate your pan as some areas will brown faster than others.
  10. Invert a plate over pan and flip dumplings out onto plate. (You can also slide them out onto a plate if that’s more your comfort level.) Repeat cooking process with remaining dumplings and slurry (stirring well before each batch) in 2–3 more batches, adding 2 tsp. vegetable oil to pan after each batch.
  11. While the dumplings are cooking, make the dipping sauce. Add 2 tsp. chili oil (if using), remaining 2 Tbsp. unseasoned rice vinegar, and remaining 2 Tbsp. soy sauce to reserved sliced scallions and mix well.
  12. Serve dumplings with sauce alongside.
Dumplings