Funny, you google "egg roll" and all you get are pages about American Chinese spring rolls. But enter "hollow egg roll" and most of the search results are for egg roll machines, of the straw-shaped dessert variety, usually jazzed up with a chocolate swirl (here's an example). Look up "phoenix egg rolls" or "é³³å°å·" and you get folded, pillow-shaped products from Macau, for instance from the Koi Kei bakery (and it's impressive to watch someone folding the rolls by hand).
For the record, what I wanted was to find a good recipe for making basic Chinese egg rolls, of the moderately sweet, flaky, tubular persuasion (as eaten in Hong Kong, Macau, and the southern parts of mainland China), by hand without the use of a machine, hot iron plates, or other specialist equipment.
Egg rolls from Duck Shing Ho factory, picture from buriki blog. Look at those web-like layers! |
It's interesting to see a machine in action of course:
and it's amazing to watch the skill of people making egg rolls in the street:
but it would be nice to know they can easily be made at home as well, even though nobody does. (By the way, did you notice that in both of the videos above, they squirt two blobs of dough for each roll? All the recipes I found just call for making one flattened circle.)
In the course of my research, I discovered that there are some very similar snacks outside of China. The ones in Malaysia and Singapore include coconut milk in the batter, and are also known as love letters, or kueh belanda. Made by the Peranakan Chinese for Chinese New Year, they often use moulds with intricate designs. Kuih kapit is much the same, but generally thinner and folded into quarters rather than rolled into a tube. Both versions may be made with rice flour, wheat flour, or a mixture of both. [Added 27 April 2014: I have just come across the Thai equivalent of egg rolls, tong muan (à¸à¸à¸à¸¡้วà¸), which also uses coconut milk, but are smaller, almost bite-sized.]
Love letters and mould from an online trader. |
The Norwegians have a Christmas cookie called krumkake, which has similar patterning, but is rolled into a cone rather than a cylinder. The batter may be spiced with cardamom or nutmeg, and they are sometimes eaten filled with whipped cream and fruit, like a brandy snap.
Norwegian krumkake with decorative iron and shaping cone, from Lefse Time. |
Much more surprising to me is that the Spanish, and by extension the Filipinos, have a dessert called barquillos, or neules in the Catalan language, which is basically identical to the Chinese egg roll. Some make them with whole egg, some just with the whites, some just with the yolks, and some add lemon rind, but apart from minor differences, they seem to be the same thing. The Filipinos have also branched out into other flavours, for instance ube (purple yam) and pandan.
Spanish neules, from GastronomÃa y CÃa website. |
Coloured barquillos in the Philippines, photo from bucaio blog. Flavours shown are strawberry, ube, pandan, coconut, chocolate and goat's milk. |
While all the Chinese recipes contain eggs, butter/lard, flour and sugar, there is some variation between them. The version on Cooking of China makes use of "sweet potato mud", which I assume is kumara purée, as well as milk. In Kitty Choi's Foundation Dim Sum Making cookbook, she adds milk, coconut milk, dessicated coconut, custard powder and baking powder. Other recipes throw in a sprinkling of salt and sesame.
What I am most intrigued by is how the best egg rolls have that rough, lace-like surface. Is it a result of the ingredients, or the cooking technique? This forum post proved to me that no fancy machine is required to obtain a beautiful texture, but the photo accompanying every recipe I found presents egg rolls with a smooth surface. I guess I just have to give it a try myself, and see.
Posts in this series
- Egg Rolls Part 1: Variations Around the World
- Egg Rolls Part 2: Sweet Flaky Egg Rolls (èå·, or Biscuit/Cookie/Wafer Rolls)
- Egg Rolls Part 3: Recipe for Handmade Sweet Flaky Egg Rolls (æå·¥èå·)
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