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Food Guide to Cooking

Chinese shrimp dim sum guide from Dubai-based restaurant is a work of art

These daytime tidbits can be made in 2,000 different ways and it just gets tastier...



How to make Chinese shrimp dim sums at home
Video Credit: Anas Thacharpadikkal/Gulf News

Dubai: Chinese cuisine is more than just your traditional bowl of noodles, dumplings and fried rice. The true (and authentic) gastronomical experience lies in the little things. Like dim sum. Often served as an accompaniment for tea, the dim sum is the one dish you would find on every Chinese restaurant's menu. Not to be confused for Tibetan momos or Nepal's yomari, because this dish has a 2,500-year-old history behind it.

While eating it straight out of a bamboo basket is the traditional way of doing so, there can be days when finding a seat at your favourite Chinese restaurant to enjoy a basket of dim sum may look close to impossible. On those days, you can make it yourself at home with this simple food guide right out of Chinese fine dining restaurant Hutong, Dubai's kitchen.

Preparation time: 15 minutes

Cooking time: 1 hour 30 minutes

Serves: 2

Ingredients:

From left to right: Corn starch, potato starch and diced carrots for the dough. For the filling, chopped asparagus, shrimp, spice mix, salt, sugar and Chinese fennel
Image Credit: Stefan Lindeque/Gulf News
  1. ½ carrot, diced
  2. 1 cup corn starch
  3. 1 cup potato starch
  4. ½ tsp salt
  5. ½ tsp sugar
  6. ½ tsp spice mix (you can choose the spice of your choice)
  7. ½ sprig Chinese fennel
  8. 3 pieces shrimp, chopped
  9. 1 tsp asparagus, chopped

Method:

Step 1: For the dough, first add diced carrots to a blender and juice it. By using a sieve, make sure to strain it out properly so that you don’t get any chunks. Pour it into a pan.

Dice carrots

Add it to a blender...

... and juice it well

Strain the juice out and leave out any chunks

Pour it into a pan

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Step 2: Once done, pour it into a pan and heat it on a medium-high flame. Cover the pan with a lid and allow it to boil for 10 minutes. Mix it well.

Heat it on a medium-high flame

Cover the pan with a lid...

...and allow it to boil for 10 minutes

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Step 3:Next, add corn starch and potato starch in equal measures in a bowl. Once the carrot juice comes to a boil, take it off the flame and pour it into the bowl.

While the carrot juice boils, add corn starch in a bowl...

...and potato starch in equal measures

Once the carrot juice is boiled and cooled for a few minutes, pour it in to the bowl...

...and mix it well

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Step 4: Once mixed, sprinkle a little corn starch on a flat surface and place the dough on it. Using the heels of your palm, knead the dough slowly, pushing it down and then outward till it becomes smooth enough to pull out easily without sticking to your fingers. Once the dough is kneaded well enough, wrap it in cling film and keep it aside to rest for 10 minutes.

Sprinkle corn starch on a flat surface and place the dough on it...

Time to knead...

Use the heels of your palm and slowly knead it

Roll it into a ball...

...and wrap it in cling film

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Step 5: While the dough rests, it's time to prepare the filling. For this you will need to chop your shrimp pieces (or any meat of your choice) and add a pinch of salt, sugar, spice mix, Chinese fennel and chopped asparagus. Mix it well and keep it aside. 

Chop the shrimp...

...into small pieces

Season it with a pinch of salt and sugar,

spices...

...Chinese fennel

and chopped asparagus.

Mix it well.

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Step 6: Once the dough is ready, knead it for one last time and roll it out into a long thin strip. Using a Chinese cleaver or what is natively known as paì pí dao and cut the dough in small pieces. Firmly press a piece of it using your palm and then flatten the edges out with the cleaver.

Knead the dough once again...

...and roll it into a long, thin strip.

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Step 6: Using a Chinese cleaver or what is natively known as paì pí dao and cut the dough in small pieces. Firmly press a piece of the dough using your palm and then flatten the edges out with the cleaver. Carefully scrape the dim sum wrapper off the surface as well.

Using a Chinese cleaver...

...cut the dough into small pieces

Roll the dough on a flat surface using your palm...

...and press it lightly.

Using the Chinese cleaver, flatten the dough till you get a thin wrapper

Scrape it off the surface carefully

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Step 7: Place each wrapper on a plate and ensure that they do not stick to each other. Once done, wrap it in cling film once again and keep it aside for a 4 to 5 minutes.

Place it on a plate. Make sure they don't stick to each other

Cover it in cling film

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Step 9: To make the dim sum, pull each dough wrapper carefully. Scoop out a small portion of the filling and place it in the centre of the dough. Slowly cup the wrapper and hold it like you would hold a Mexican taco. Lightly pinch the two sides of the dim sum wrapper together at the centre of the dumpling's seam. Now, here's the tricky part...

Time to make the dim sum...

Scoop a small portion of the filling...

...and place it on the centre of the dough

Pinch the dough at the seam of the wrapper. Time to seal the dim sum...

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Step 10: This is the pleated fold technique of sealing a dim sum. Hold your thumb and index finger against the seam you just pinched and fold a small portion of the dumpling wrapper from the top towards the center seam, using your other thumb and index finger. Continue the same process till you get a sealed dim sum.

If your filling seems to be coming out of the wrapper, it may be because you put more than a little. So scrape it off using a small spoon and seal it tightly shut.

...pleat the dough wrapper carefully using your thumb and index finger.

Fold a small portion of the dumpling wrapper from the top towards the center seam, using your other thumb and index finger

Continue doing this...

...till you get a sealed dim sum

In case your filling comes out, clean it up with a spoon...

...and make sure it stays intact with no tears.

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Step 11: Once done, cut off the excess dough using a metal or plastic scraper.

Cut off any excess dough using a metal or plastic scraper
Image Credit: Stefan Lindeque/Gulf News

Step 12: Place the sealed dim sums in a Chinese bamboo basket. Make sure to not overcrowd it.

Place it carefully in a bamboo basket
Image Credit: Stefan Lindeque/Gulf News

Step 13: Steam it for four minutes on a steaming base and keep it shut till it is ready to be served.

Time to steam...

...for only four minutes!

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Step 14: Brush a little bit of oil on the surface of the dim sums before serving it with chilli oil and soy sauce.

Chinese shrimp dim sums are now ready to devour!
Image Credit: Stefan Lindeque/Gulf News
Chef Xiao Gang Bin
Head Dim Sum Chef at Hutong, Dubai
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