Since it's supposedly spring, it seemed like a good opportunity to do some fresh spring rolls using rice paper. Full of herbs and vegetables; they're very light, fresh and extremely healthy; we'll just ignore the fact that it's still only about 10 degrees and pouring down outside!
Since I was already doing one variety of spring roll, and I had a whole pack of dried rice paper sheets, I thought I'd do a second type of roll and also made Nam Nuang- a Vietnamese type of spring roll that uses pork 'sausages'. I will follow up this post very soon with the nam nuang.
* Just a note- the plate of herbs/veggies was used for both the po pia sot and the nam nuang and the darker sauce on the plate is the sauce for the nam nuang, not the po pia
If you're looking for the deep fried variety of spring roll, or Po Pia (to use the Chinese name) you can find the recipe here- Po Pia Tod. Spring rolls pop up with various fillings and wrappers in just about every east and south east Asian country (we even ate them in Malaysia last year) and there's lots of debates over who made them first, whose variation is the most authentic etc. I don't make any such claims with my version though this version has distinct Vietnamese influences.
Enjoy as a snack, a starter or as part of a larger meal.
For 8 rolls use:
- 2 poached chicken thighs (simmer in plain water for 20 mins), cooled and shredded finely
- 8 dried rice paper circles
- a shallow dish of cold water
- peanut sauce (I went for the easy option and pre bought- Lee Kum Kee brand) but you can use the sauce recipe from when I made satay- click here
- 1 sliced large red chilli
- fresh mint leaves
- fresh coriander leaves
- a small piece of cucumber, seeds removed and cut into very thin slivers
- some shredded lettuce
- a few extra peanuts for crunch (mixed into the sauce)
Have all your ingredients prepped and ready in front of you. Take a dried disc of rice paper and dunk it into the dish of water for about ten seconds before lifting out, turning over and dunking for ten seconds more. It should now feel fairly flexible. If not, and you still feel it will snap if you tried to fold it, dunk for a further ten seconds then shake off the excess water.
Place the damp rice paper sheet on a board (it will continue to soften and become gelatinous) and fill with your choice of ingredients place horizontally across the middle of the sheet. It's worth placing some of the pretty ingredients like mint leaves and sliced chilli on the bottom, so when you roll them up they are visible through the wrapper.
Fold the sides into the middles then roll up from bottom to top, using your fingers to hold all the ingredients inside the wrapper.
Place them on a ceramic or metal plate as they will stick fast to wood or other porous materials as well as each other.
Drizzle over some of the peanut sauce and place a bowl alongside to dip into.
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