Tekitouna Gyoza (適当なギョーザ ) Recipe

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Ingredients
Ingredient amounts are rough if they exist, and intended only to give you a ballpark idea. You can't go that wrong if you follow your preferences.Filling:
- 1.5 pounds ground pork
- 1 whole head garlic, diced (I like garlicky gyoza, you may, of course, use less)
- A small or medium knob of ginger, grated
- Cabbage or nappa cabbage, shredded (I use quite a bit, it gives the filling a lighter texture).
- Nira chives (garlic chives), most of a bunch, finely chopped
- ~2/3T Mirin
- ~1 T Soy sauce
- ~1 T Sesame oil
- 1 Egg
- Salt
- Pepper
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How to make Tekitouna Gyoza (適当なギョーザ )
I was taught to make these by a friend of mine who learned how to cook Japanese food as part of his training to become a kodo drummer in Japan.
Tekitou means makeshift or thrown together. Basically these are gyoza that will turn out well no matter what.
Instructions:
Just mix all the filling ingredients in a large bowl. Most of the work is in the chopping. I like to knead it together with my hands until the texture is smooth.
To form gyoza:
Brush off excess flour from the gyoza skin you're using.
Form a small amount of filling into a ball or (American) football shape in the center of a gyoza skin.
Wet a finger with water and run across half the circumference. Close the gyoza into a half-circle and make 4-5 pleats in the closed wrapper. Put on wax paper and bend so that the bottom looks like a crescent shape.
This is much easier than it sounds.
You can now cook them or freeze for later.
To freeze:
Place gyoza on a wax paper-covered cookie sheet so that they're not touching and freeze. Once frozen, you can put them in ziploc and put into the freezer again for long-term storage. This is so the gyoza don't freeze together.
To cook:
Heat oil in a frying pan. Put gyoza in, making sure to keep the pan moving so they don't stick to the bottom. After they brown, dump in a little bit of water and cover until cooked thoroughly. Serve with a mixture of soy, vinegar, sesame oil and garlic or ginger.
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s00zer sayshow do you get them to NOT stick the bottom of the pan after putting the water in? They brown perfectly, and once I add a little water, they steam and get mushy and getting them out of the pan is a nightmare. What am I doing wrong?
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muttoneer saysI would guess you're putting too much water in or steaming them for too long. Put in just enough to make sure there's plenty of steam. If that doesn't work, I would try is using very smooth, nonstick pan and making the gyoza keep moving while they steam (move the pan back and forth). Good luck!
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s00zer saysok, I think I am putting too much water in. I will try them again. The meat was delicious. thanks for the tip!
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muttoneer saysLet me know if it turns out. If not, I'm happy to help continue troubleshooting. You could always cook them a few at a time until you master your technique.
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michaelic saysI tried this last week, and they were reeeeeally tasty. But I had the same problem as s00zer - everything stuck like crazy. Maybe I'll have another go with less water.
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muttoneer saysI hope it goes well. If you think it's starting to over-steam, you can always take off the lid and let the vapor escape.
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eatfoodrecipe saysgrr!..seems yummy..
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dawdawdo saysFor the sticking problem, I would try using a cast iron skillet, or maybe try baking them on a greased baking stone instead of frying. These look delicious.
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muttoneer saysI've always used nonstick and it's worked fine. Baking might work, but you wouldn't get the same wonderful texture. A higher temperature might also help, in order to evaporate the water faster once you're done steaming.
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petitmiam saysI guess you could always steam them and then fry them afterwards. I never heard of steaming them in the frying pan. I thought you either fry them or steam them, not both. I have a gas stove, so everything sticks.
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Jaylene saysI put oil on the pan, let the bottoms fry, then add water. Let it steam fully and remove the lid of the pan. It'll fry up and water will evaporate.
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Papillon01 saysI followed this Gyoza recipe on New Years Eve cooking for a small group of friends and they were amazing. I used up a whole packet of skins - must of made 50 and they were demolished. I had no problem with them sticking. I added a little oil to a hot wok, added the gyoza and then half a glass of water. This steamed the gyoza and once the water had evaporated the gyoza fried nicely on one side.
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muttoneer saysSounds like you did it just fine. Glad you enjoyed it.
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These look GREAT.