Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives

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Easy to make, easy to please with – these pork and garlic chives potstickers (or dumplings/gyoza) are a huge hit with my family and hopefully they’ll be for yours too. 

Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives
Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives

After biting into these pork and chive gyoza, my son, Wee Scotch, went into a whole minute of “yum, yum, yum, yum…” I kid you not.

After a few hours, while we were driving around town running errands, Wee Scotch says to me: “Mama, I just can’t stop thinking about your dumplings!”

I’m a proud mama.

Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives
Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives

Did you know that “Gyoza” is the japanese word for “Jiaozi” and Jiaozi is the Chinese term for a type of dumpling. Potstickers are jiaozi that are panfried.

Got that?


 

If you are a food geek like me, you can devour more details about gyoza and jiaozi on Wiki.

Gyoza wrappers – I like the made-in-Japan gyoza skin for these potstickers. They are thin (I don’t like thick dumpling skins) and so easy to work with.

Japanese Gyoza wrappers
Japanese Gyoza wrappers

In Dubai, they are sold in Waitrose (8 dhs I think) in the Japanese frozen section and also at Dean Fujiya’s (also the frozen section). They are slightly cheaper at Dean’s.

I have tried another brand of gyoza skin (made in the U.S.A. from Lulu’s hypermarket Barsha) but they were not as good.

Gyoza with Pork and Chives
Gyoza with Pork and Chives

Garlic Chives – These are similar to onion chives but with a garlicky flavor, hence the name, and are popular in Chinese cooking – especially in soups and dumplings.

garlic chives
garlic chives @ Waitrose Al Thanya

Buying Tip – Up into recently, garlic chives were rarely sold in supermarkets outside of the Chinese food markets in international city.

But now, they are sometimes available at Waitrose and more frequently at 1004 Mart which is a store in Al Barsha that sells predominantly Korean products. If you don’t see them at 1004 Mart, be sure to check with a store assistant as they do get regular deliveries on specific days of the week.

Sign up here for my map to Dean Fujiya’s, 1004 Mart and other Asian grocery stores in Dubai.

The garlic chives I use in my cooking almost always comes from my garden. I have a few pots of them and I started the the plants from seeds that my mom harvested from her New York garden.

They are growing very well in Dubai and when they are nearly 12 inches long, I harvest them and use them in dumpling or soup recipes.

For these potstickers, I cut the garlic chives with my kitchen shears to 3/4″ (2 cm) length:

Garlic Chives from the Garden
Garlic Chives from the Garden

Here’s Li’L Ginger eating a potsticker – hurray!

She’s such a picky eater. She liked the first batch I made with no garlic but was turned off by the subsequent batches made with minced garlic.

Li'L Ginger eating potstickers
Li’L Ginger eating potstickers

Below is a video of Wee Scotch demonstrating how to wrap the filling into the gyoza skin. He is using a little dumpling mold that I bought a few years ago in Chinatown (Brooklyn, NY) for $1.

I love how proud he is of all his gyoza creations. If you cannot see the video below for any reason, click here.

 

You can eat potstickers on their own or with a dipping sauce like soy sauce mixed with a little bit of rice vinegar.

Enjoy!

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Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives

Potstickers with Pork and Garlic Chives

Ginger and Scotch
Easy to make, easy to please with - these pork and garlic chives dumplings are a huge hit with my family and hopefully they'll be for yours too.
4.67 from 3 votes
Prep Time 45 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Course Appetizer
Cuisine Chinese
Servings 30 dumplings

Ingredients
  

  • 1-2 Tb vegetable oil for pan-frying
  • gyoza wrappers , about 30

Dumpling Filling:

  • 450 grams (1 lb) minced pork
  • 70 grams (2.5 oz) chives, cut into 1.5 cm (about 1 1/4 cup packed)
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground pepper
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 2 cloves garlic (optional but nice), minced
  • 1 teaspoon sugar , optional
  • 1 egg

Instructions
 

  • Mix together all the ingredients for the dumpling filling until well combined. Taste test one by microwaving a tablespoon-size ball of filling for 30 seconds. Adjust seasonings to your taste.
  • Refrigerate dumpling filling for at least 30 minutes.
  • Put some water into a small bowl and use the water to wet the edges of the gyoza wrappers with your fingers.
  • Put a teaspoon of the dumpling mixture into the middle of the wrapper.
  • Fold the wrapper over and pressing down on the edges to seal.

To Pan-Fry:

  • In a saute pan with a lid, heat 1-2 tablespoons vegetable oil on med-high heat.
  • Add dumplings and swirl pan so dumplings slide around the oil so they don’t stick to pan.
  • Allow to brown for 3 minutes, then gently flip the dumplings over using chopsticks or a spatula.
  • Add 1/4 cup water, cover pan and lower heat to simmer and cook for 5 minutes after which most of the water should have evaporated.
  • Remove lid by lifting straight up so condensation does not drip back onto frying pan.
  • Turn the heat up to medium, swirl dumplings around again and cook for another 5 minutes to get a nice browning.
  • Remove to serving plate and serve with dipping sauce.

To Freeze for Later:

  • After folding the filling into the wrapper and before cooking, place dumplings on a freezer safe plate for 1.5 to 2 hours or until frozen.
  • Transfer to a resealable bag.
  • To cook, do not defrost but follow pan-frying instructions as per the above.
  • You can also boil the dumplings from frozen if you don't want to make potstickers: Bring a pot of water to boil, then simmer dumplings for 10 min being careful not to let dumplings stick to the bottom of the pan or to each other.

Notes

(1) This recipe makes about 30 dumplings
(2) There are about 20 dumpling skins in the gyoza wrapper sold at Waitrose
(3) If you don't want to make these dumplings as potstickers, you can also boil them for 4-5 minutes then serve in soup or eat by themselves with or without dumpling sauce.

 

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Recipe Rating




12 Comments

  1. Your Gyoza is so perfect! My hnbasud and kids alone can eat so many of this, but it’s so easy to make that it’s pretty much like one dish meal at my house. I just make a lot, and serve with miso soup and rice… and that’s it! LOL. So nice to find out that you can find gyoza wrappers. I tried Chinese kind but it’s a bit different. Japanese ones are thinner so it will be crispier. I LOVE your photos!! Lastly thank you so much for the links for dipping sauce and how to wrap gyoza. You are very kind and sweet friend… xoxo 🙂

  2. These looks so delicious however I don’t eat pork. Have you tried it using beef? I’m wondering it I could make something like this using something other than pork.

    1. I don’t like beef dumplings but you can always substitute pork with chicken – that is the way of life in the middle east and many restaurants here in Dubai do a really good job with it. Although some pork purists would beg to differ.

    1. Dean Fujiya’s and Waitrose stock the gyoza wrappers 99.9% of the time. They are the best ones I’ve seen in Dubai – unless you like thick wrappers that are difficult to work with.

    1. Yes, very true about cooking being more enjoyable when I know the kids (or anyone!) will love it.

      My son is a budding gourmande and I hope my daughter will go down that route.

  3. These look like a great game day treat. Maybe a bit unconventional, but I think that’s why I like it! I love that you call your kids Wee Scotch and Lil Ginger! Too cute!!