The traditional cooking method is to pan-fry one side of the gyoza until crispy, then add a dash of water and cover to steam the remaining part of the dough. The resulting dish is simultaneously crisp and tender. Common gyoza fillings include ground pork, wood ear mushrooms, scallions, shrimp, and cabbage. Try It: Pork Gyoza.
For those of you that don't know, Lumpia, are Filipino Eggrolls! For the filling, I keto-fied my Filipina mama's "Lumpia Shanghai Recipe" and used Cut Da Carb wraps as the wrapper. Each Cut Da Carb wrap has 9g net carbs and I divided each wrap into fours making each eggroll just under 3g net carbs each (filling carb ct included). Drain the excess oil, add the water and bring to a boil. Add the carrots and simmer for 5 minutes. Add the green beans, celery, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, and jicama.
I made the lumpia shanghai according to your recipe. I followed your recipe exactly and after I cooked the lumpia it tasted VERY salty. I used the same exact wrapper and everything. I’m a little disappointed as I quadrupled the recipe and wrapped over 100 lumpias(you know us filipinos always have to make a lot).
Stir-in the bean sprouts and cook for 5 minutes. Transfer the cooked vegetable in a plate. Drain the excess liquid. Once the vegetable cools-off, start to wrap it using the egg roll wrappers. Lay the wrapper flat on a big plate. Place around 2 to 2 1/2 tablespoon of vegetable on one end of the wrapper.
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the best filipino lumpia shanghai recipe