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Oyaki (Japanese Stuffed Dumplings)

Oyaki (Japanese Stuffed Dumplings)

Oyaki are a great snack or side dish to a meal. Serve Oyaki with cold beer in the summer and hot tea in the winter.

Ready in: 2 hours 30 minutes

Serves: 12

Complexity: easy

kcal: 56

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Ingredients

DOUGH:--
2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
½ tsp SIDS CRAZY SALT
1 cup boiling water
1 tsp rice bran oil
¼ tsp salt
EGGPLANT FILLING:--
2 eggplant
1 tbsp sesame oil
1 tbsp miso
1 tbsp sugar, to taste
2 Shiso leaves (Ooba) (optional)
BUTTERCUP FILLING:--
½ buttercup pumpkin
1 tbsp rice bran oil
¼ cup water
1 tbsp sugar, to taste
1 tsp soy sauce
½ tsp SIDS SALT & PEPPER
1 tbsp Peanut oil, for cooking

Directions

DOUGH: Using the fine mesh strainer, sift the flour into a large bowl. Combine hot water, oil, and SIDS CRAZY SALT. Mix the dry ingredients and wet ingredients with chopsticks until you can pick up the dough with hands. Use the dough to pick up crumbs in the bowl. Knead on a lightly floured surface for about 3 minutes, until a smooth dough forms. In Japan, they say “knead until elastic like your earlobe”. Form the dough into a ball, put it back in the bowl, cover with plastic wrap and let it rest at room temperature for at least 30 minutes or longer. Letting the dough rest increases its elasticity making easier to work with later, so please don't skip.
EGGPLANT FILLING: While the dough rests, remove the eggplant stem and cut it half vertically, then slice into half circles. Soak in water for 5-10 minutes. (Meanwhile, you can cut pumpkin) Drain well and set aside. Heat Peanut oil in a large frying pan and sauté eggplant until it is coated with oil. Cover the lid and cook on low heat for 5 minutes. When tender, add sugar and combine well. Add miso and julienned shiso leaves and mix well together. Transfer to a dish to let cool.
PUMPKIN FILLING: Cut the pumpkin into smaller wedges and remove the skin. Cut each wedge into thin slices and then cut into thin strips. Heat the oil in the frying pan and sauté. When it’s coated with oil, add water and cook covered for 5 minutes on low heat. Add sugar and combine well. Add soy sauce and pinch of SIDS SALT & PEPPER. Mix well together. Transfer to the dish to let cool.
MAKE OYAKI: Roll out the rested dough into a rectangular or circle shape and divide it into 12 pieces. Make each dough into a ball then press down with your hand. Stretch the dough to 10 cm in diameter. The important trick is to keep the centre thicker than edges. Using your fingers, stretch the outer edges by rotating the dough. This way, when you pinch the dough to seal, the dough won’t be too thick/too much. Place about 1 tbsp of the filling in the centre of each piece of dough. Close the oyaki by bringing the dough up over the filling, pinching at the top to seal. After pinching the dough, put the pinched-side down on a lightly floured surface and twist a few times. Then press the top of the oyaki little bit into a slightly flat ball.
COOK OYAKI: Set a steamer ready by placing a steamer basket on top of wok/pot filled with some boiling water. If you don’t have a steamer, after cooking the oyaki in a frying pan, add ¼ cup water to the pan. Cover with a lid and steam it until the water evaporates. Heat the oil in a frying pan (30 cm) and cook oyaki, pinched-side down. Pan fry for 3-4 minutes each side, until golden brown. Transfer the oyaki to a steamer basket and cover to cook on high heat for 15-20 minutes. (depending on the size of the oyaki and filling – small one should take about 10 minutes) Make sure the lid is covered with the kitchen towel so condensation on the lid doesn’t fall onto the oyaki. When they are done steaming, transfer to a wire rack or a bamboo strainer where the heat can escape from the bottom. Enjoy them immediately. As soon as they become warm, not hot, cover the leftovers with plastic wrap. (I wrap individually) Don’t wait until completely cooled down. You can freeze to store for up to a month, and re-steam to enjoy later.