Try my new budgeting app Cheddar 🧀
Better than YNAB, Mint (RIP), or EveryDollar.

the most delicate dumpling taro puff wu gok recipe

4.0

(24)

curatedkitchenware.com
Your Recipes

Prep Time: 2 hours

Cook Time: 20 minutes

Total: 2 hours, 20 minutes

Servings: 4

Ingredients

Remove All · Remove Spices · Remove Staples

Export 17 ingredients for grocery delivery

Instructions

Helping creators monetize
Show ad-free recipes at the top of any site

Step 1

There are more than 100 varieties of taro, but in the USA, you're most likely to only come across two of them:

Step 2

Dasheen (C. esculenta var. esculenta) is large, dense, and heavy and has a higher starch content, which is excellent for this recipe. However, it is so large that you'll sometimes find it sold cut in smaller sections. Please avoid using the end section where connects to the taro stems because it is low in starch.

Step 3

Eddoe (C. esculenta var. antiquorum) is smaller, ranging in size from that of a fingerling potato to that of a large lemon. It has a lower starch content and moist texture once cooked. Tachniquely, you can use it for this recipe, but the dumplings might be less crispy.

Step 4

Safety Note: Most edible taro contains oxalic acid crystals, which can cause itchy skin for some people (I don't react to it, but my mom is sensitive to it). Oxalic acid crystals will dissolve once cooked and lose their effect. However, if you have never touched it, it is better to wear gloves to handle the corm.

Step 5

Peel the taro, slice it into 1/4 of an inch thick slaps, then stack the slaps and cut them into strips.

Step 6

Put the taro strips, salt, sugar, and water into a sauce pot. Put on the lid, turn the heat to medium, and bring to a boil, then turn the heat to low and simmer for 10 minutes.

Step 7

Remove the pot from the stove and add wheat starch immediately. Use a potato masher to mash the taro and combine it with the wheat starch until everything becomes crumbly.

Step 8

Can corn starch, potato starch, or tapioca starch be a replacement? Yes, but you will have to test it many times to find the correct water-starch ratio and the perfect frying temperature in order to get the puffy appearance.

Step 9

Add the taro and wheat starch mixture into a food processor and use the lowest speed to mix until a rough dough forms. If your food processor is small, do this in 2 batches.

Step 10

Add the pork lard and continue to mix at low speed until all the oil is well absorbed. If necessary, stop the food processor a few times and mix with a spatula to help to incorporate everything.

Step 11

You are looking for a non-stick, soft, and oily dough. Put it in a sealed container and chill it in the fridge for at least 24 hours. The starch needs a long time to fully retrograde; otherwise, the dumplings will not puff perfectly.

Step 12

Soak the dried shiitake mushrooms 2 hours in advance. Dice them finely and reserve the soaking liquid.

Step 13

Finely dice the carrot, Cantonese sausage, and shrimp; if you don't have Cantonese sausage, use your favorite sausage.

Step 14

Turn the heat to high and heat the wok until smoking hot. Add oil, ground pork, the diced mushroom, and diced sausage. Stir for a few minutes until the pork changes color.

Step 15

Turn the heat to low. Add carrot, Chinese cooking wine, white pepper, soy sauce, oyster sauce, and dark soy sauce. Continue to stir until well combined.

Step 16

Quickly mix the cornstarch with the mushroom-soaking liquid and add to the wok. Stir to bind the filling slightly. Add the shrimp and continue to cook until it changes color. Turn off the heat and mix in the diced scallion. Set the filling aside.

Step 17

Take the taro dough out of the fridge. As the lard solidifies, it becomes firm and loses some ductility. Knead it on the working surface for a few minutes until it becomes soft and elastic.

Step 18

Divide the taro dough into 20 even pieces, 35 grams each.

Step 19

To wrap the dumplings, roll a taro dough in between your hands until it becomes a smooth ball, then use your thumbs to shape it into a small bowl.

Step 20

Put about 15 grams of filling in the bowl and pack it tight, then carefully bend the bowl in half and pinch the middle to close the dumpling; set it aside and continue to fold the rest.

Step 21

Heat the oil and use a thermometer to monitor the temperature between 390° F and 400 F.

Step 22

Deep frying is the trickiest part of this recipe. If the temperature is too low (below 370° F), the wrapper will peel off and float everywhere; your dumpling will have no crust. On the other hand, if you fry it too high (over 420° F), the surface will set too fast before it gets a chance to blossom.

Step 23

If you don't have a thermometer, test the temperature by dropping a small dough into the oil and letting it fry for 20 seconds. If the dough forms a porous crust, the temperature is correct.

Step 24

Place the dumplings on a flat strainer with 1/2 inch space between each other to allow them to puff; Slightly press the dumplings against the strainer so they stick to the tool, preventing them from floating around while deep frying.

Step 25

With the help of the strainer, immerse the dumplings in the oil and fry until the taro wrap puffs into a golden honeycomb structure; this will take a few minutes. Please use large cookware and fry the dumplings in batches to prevent overflow.

Step 26

Remove the dumplings from the oil and use paper towels to absorb the excess grease, then serve. You don't need any dipping sauce because it is delicious on its own.