
I was disgusted by a recent blog post I read on yet-another recipe of crispy baked potatoes in rosemary and olive oil in which the (female, natch) blogger proclaimed her potatoes to be crack. Granted, fancier small red potatoes were utilized, and there might have been some zesty twist but, really, it was just another one of thousands of baked crisp potato olive oil/rosemary recipe. Why write yet another snore of a recipe regurgitating the same? Really, your spaghetti and meatball? Probably not better than Barefoot Contessa’s. You know Cookin’ with Coolio is basically useless, free or otherwise.
And following above rant, I personally guarantee this to be the BEST US-based English version recipe of an “authentic” style Taiwanese spring roll, (that should enough qualifiers to cover my ass) or I’ll delete this post come February.



Ingredients
* 1 lb of char siu pork. Won’t go into the recipe here, but there are plenty out there. Or buy it from your fave Chinese restaurant.
* 1/4 head of cabbage, sliced thickly
* 1 large carrot, shredded
* 1 cup of pickled turnip. Buy Taiwanese. See pix.
* 1 cup of julienned bamboo shoots (canned, bulk, or otherwise, ok)
* 1.5 cups of green bean sprouts, lightly boiled, drained.
* 1 pack of 5 spice stewed hard pressed tofu (I chose Taiwanese imported brand, even tho VP Tofu is down the street from me)
* half a cup of chopped cilantro
* 1/4 cup of roasted peanut powder
* 1/4 cup of sugar
* dried chili flakes
* 1/2 cup of Yeo’s (or AGV) Sweet Spicy Sauce (you can sub with mixed sriracha, ketchup and sugar to achieve a balanced 50/50 spicy/sugary ratio)
* 2 tablespoon of curry powder
* soy sauce, salt, minced garlic
* a bag of spring roll skin. This is SUPER importante. Get the right kind.
Do not get the WRONG kind. The Wei Chuan (Taiwanese) brand sold in squares, as 春卷皮? NOT the right kind. The overpriced stuff made by Lung Lung (at least in Los Angeles, CA, US of A), is the “right kind”. Yes, it’s 400% more than the machine pressed version sold by Wei Chuan, but the Lung Lung brand stuff is much closer to the “real thing”.
If you want to be hard core, feel free to make your very own popiah skin per Sunflower’s recipe guide.
For comparison, here’s my Kitch3n’s spring roll recipe, here’s Kong Kay’s non-Taiwanese version, and finally, a French-Chicagoan’s take.
Procedure:
First, soak pickled turnip in water. Do not soak for too long, as turnip will lose intended purpose: saltiness.
Stir fry carrots in a dash of oil & salt, when pungent, pour in a cup of water, and allow to simmer. Set aside.

Re-heat pan, toss minched garlic into hot oil, brown garlic, toss in cabbage. When slightly cooked, in goes curry powder, and a dash of salt. No need to overcook by pouring in water. Allow some texture to remain.
Stir fry bamboo, with no garlic, instead, use chili flakes. Add in dash of sugar.

Then, heat 3+ cups of oil in a deep pan, scramble eggs, and swirl eggs, over a strainer, or a collander, into heated oil. Fry until golden brown on both sides. This will create a textured fried egg which is then chopped.

To roll:
Steam the spring roll skin.
Spread sweet spicy sauce as base. Double up on skin if you’re afraid of breaking. Sprinkle peanut powder and sugar mixture over hot sauce. Begin placing non-moist items over sauce/peanut powder base. (Think fried egg & strained bean sprouts):

Follow up with char siu, cilantro, carrots, etc.:

Brush the top of the skin with sweet spicy sauce as glue, fold both sides in, then continue to roll.

And.. Voila. Kinda. Sorry. I suck at rolling, but it’s tasty enough. Really!

Another blogger’s take on the 3 confusing names of the same exact roll.
A video from Taiwanese TV talking about a tremendous spring roll shop that has been around for 60 years, using fried duck egg yolk as a main filling:
And why is there no previous discussion of this AWESOME roll? Because 潤餅 is usualliy only eaten during Chinese New Years, or “Tomb Sweeping Day: http://www.gio.gov.tw/taiwan-website/5-gp/culture/folkbeliefs/index.htm
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Comments ( 12 )
weezermonkey added these pithy words on Jan 11 10 at 2:19 amSometimes I wonder if I’m really Taiwanese. I’m not sure I’ve ever had this. :s
weezermonkey´s last blog ..Day 2: Monkeying Around El Parque Nacional Corcovado
Wandering Chopsticks added these pithy words on Jan 11 10 at 2:35 amI ate 2.5 rolls. Oink. Oink. Sooo good. I couldn’t even count all the different flavors but totally, totally worth all that work.
Thanks for bringing them to my party!
Wandering Chopsticks´s last blog ..Royal/T Cafe (Three Apples: An Exhibition Celebrating 35 Years of Hello Kitty/In Bed Together: Art & Bites from Ludo Lefebvre) – Culver City
Anna A added these pithy words on Jan 11 10 at 11:27 amLooks really good and I didn’t know you are Taiwanese? That’s cool I grew up with mostly Taiwanese. Thanks for bringing something new to the table and I forgive your rolling skills, just know Taco Bell would never hire you.
Anna A´s last blog ..Greek Style Baked Brie, because feta isn’t the only cheese
sook added these pithy words on Jan 11 10 at 3:27 pmYeah, I would eat this. For sure. If I had the skillz I’d even make it but for now I stick to baked potato in microwave with organic butter and freshly ground black pepper aka “cooking with Sookio”.
sook´s last blog ..Honey’s Family Kettle
amy added these pithy words on Jan 12 10 at 12:57 amomg, that looks so effen good!!! i want some! i’m officially starving and it’s midnight.
amy´s last blog ..Newport Tan Cang Seafood
JThur01 added these pithy words on Jan 12 10 at 11:54 amLooks great. Can we look forward to more “In The Kitchen with Tony” posts?
sawyer added these pithy words on Jan 12 10 at 11:58 amlmao, your first line of this post is hilariousss!!! awesome post…i’m gonna try this out because this looks delicious. do you usually make your own char siu?
KK added these pithy words on Jan 13 10 at 6:40 pmDamn I hella miss 潤餅 from Taiwan, last time I had it must have been in Keelung Night Market circa 2007. That receipe looks dope, well done! The missus recreated it a bit a while ago but I can’t for the life of me remember what she did. By the way, Taiwanese cha siu (or should I say Cha Sao for the Mando pronounciation) is grilled pork belly soaked in red vinegar and sliced, or at least that’s the version my MIL gets to go as part of home cooking whenever we visit.
KK´s last blog ..Tu Hsiao Yueh Authentic Original Tainan Peddler Noodle 1895 – Yong Kang Street location (台南度小月擔仔麵永康街)
TonyC added these pithy words on Jan 13 10 at 11:32 pmKK, thanks for the comment. Majority of the recipe was taken from this video: http://www.ytower.com.tw/movie/view.asp?movieid=567 . The cha shao was actually deep fried. Amazing! I personally have not had an actual Taiwanese spring roll since ‘85, but the memories remain vivid.
djjewelz added these pithy words on Jan 13 10 at 11:39 pmI’m waiting for you to do the youtube version of this post. And damn I am pissed I missed the wrap and roll party that wknd.
djjewelz´s last blog ..Josef Centeno’s Infamous Bäco at Lazy Ox Canteen
BeefNoGuy added these pithy words on Jan 14 10 at 6:56 pmTony, I was looking through some old reviews I did and my last meal in Taipei 12/08 was at a place that had Taiwanese tsa sao as a side dish, and in my notes, the meat was indeed marinated in red vinegar and deep fried (then sliced).
Here are two pix, first one of a whole piece, 2nd one is in slices.
http://lh5.ggpht.com/_M6u5eDshSDo/S0_DqIgRpkI/AAAAAAAABs4/v1L0OR5nkNc/s640/DSC_1422.JPG
http://lh6.ggpht.com/_M6u5eDshSDo/S0_BMPoiaGI/AAAAAAAABr4/cq9IzSog4D8/s640/DSC_1568.JPG
BeefNoGuy´s last blog ..Goose City Seafood (鵝肉城) Taipei
Bonnibella added these pithy words on Jan 15 10 at 1:58 pmThis is really interesting I never seen or had this although the combination looks like a myriad of flavors. My parents roast their own BBQ Pork so already mine will taste better than yours.
Bonnibella´s last blog ..Beautiful and Handsome Quince


