DUMPLING MAN serves dumplings in the classic northern Asian style. Some of the earliest writing about these dumplings dates back 1400 years to northern China. This popular dish was later introduced in Korea and Japan virtually unchanged. In fact, the names mandoo and gyoza are both phonic translations from the Chinese language. Cultures in southern Asia also picked up on this traditional dish, adding rice flour to create more translucent dumplings.
Northern Asian dumplings differ from their Western cousins both in their fillings and their dough. The filling is prepared using a technique called Shang-Jian where the protein-rich ingredients are beaten with herbal juices. This helps to infuse the filling with moisture and fragrance, and provides a pleasant texture. The dough is made of water and flour, with no eggs or butter (this makes our veggie dumplings truly vegan-friendly). Without the aid of eggs, several stages of kneading are required to create a full-bodied dough. A more complicated process of dough preparation, called Tang-Mian, involves adding boiling water. This results in a subtle sweetness and a softer texture — ideal for searing or steaming. You might wonder why we don't call the seared dumplings "fried." Searing takes significantly less fat and relies mostly on the cooking power of steam.
Another unique aspect of authentic northern Asian dumplings is how the wrappers are rolled. Western dumplings use a circle-cutter or pasta wheel to divide the sheet of dough. Our wrappers are painstakingly rolled out individually. Every wrapper has a thin edge and a fuller center, so that the seam on the dumplings is the same thickness as the bottom — making it a lot less doughy. Many dumpling makers ignore this step in exchange for the convenience of machine-cut product. You will never find heavy, doughy dumplings at DUMPLING MAN .
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