japanese gyoza

I’ve always loved Japanese gyoza. Something I always order when I go out for sushi. Gyoza or shumai – I can’t get enough.

Something about that little fried and steamed dumpling dipped in a simple soy rice wine vinegar mix just makes me smile. If they make you smile, read on.

They aren’t that hard to make either. Only problem is when you’re making them you wind up making 30 or 40 of them so it’s not a bad idea to have a few friends over to help you eat them.

Japanese gyoza or potstickers are a great start to any meal.

And maybe help you make them. Those folds take time. Not a ton of time once you get it but time. Or you can just say forget the folds and go with a simple seal.

Pretty sure the they don’t taste any different without the pleats. Maybe the pleats will go out of style. You never know. Look what happened to mens pants.

Someday everyone will say – I’d rather be caught dead than eat gyoza with pleats. It could happen…

 

Japanese gyoza or potstickers are a great start to any meal.

Japanese gyoza or potstickers are a great start to any meal.
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5 from 3 votes

japanese gyoza

Japanese gyoza are a great starter to any asian inspired menu. Cook them in batches and serve them up as soon as they come out of the pan.
Course Appetizer
Cuisine Japanese
Keyword gyoza, japanese dumplings, japanese gyoza, pot stickers
Prep Time 40 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings 35 -40
Calories 47kcal
Author romain | glebekitchen

Ingredients

  • 10 oz ground pork
  • 4 cups napa cabbage super finely sliced
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1/4 cup nira chives - regular chives or green onions, finely sliced
  • 1/2 tsp ginger - grated on a microplane
  • 2 or 3 cloves garlic - grated on a microplane or put through a garlic press
  • 1 tsp togarashi shichimi or 1/4 tsp cayenne
  • 2 tsp shiro miso
  • 1 1/2 tsp sesame oil
  • 35-40 round dumpling wrappers
  • Togarashi shichimi to season

Dipping sauce

  • 2 tbsp Japanese soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp rice wine vinegar

Instructions

  • Prep the dipping sauce by mixing two parts soy with one part rice wine vinegar. For 40 gyoza 2 Tbsp of soy to 1 Tbsp of rice wine vinegar should be about enough. Scale it up - 2 parts soy to 1 part rice wine vinegar if you need more...

The filling

  • Slice the napa cabbage as thinly as you can.
  • Mix in 1 tsp salt and let the cabbage stand for around 15 minutes.
  • Working a big handful at a time, squeeze the water out of the cabbage. Do this over the sink. Squeeze hard to get as much water out as possible or your gyoza will be soggy.
  • Add the chives, ginger, garlic, togarashi shichimi, miso and sesame oil. Mix thoroughly. You especially want to distribute the garlic and ginger evenly.
  • Now mix in the pork. Get you hands in there and really, really mix. Go nuts. This is important. The cabbage keeps the pork from getting tough as it cooks.

Shape the gyoza

  • Have a small bowl of water handy.
  • Place a wonton wrapper on a cutting board.
  • Shape a small ball (like a big marble) of the filling and place it in the middle of the wrapper.
  • Wet about 1/2 the edge (circumference) of the wrapper with a bit of water. Just dip your finger in the bowl of water and rub the outer edge of the wrapper.
  • Fold the wrapper over the filling to form a semi-circle. Pinch the middle of the semi-circle where the two halves touch.
  • Now make those irritating little pleats. Do the side to the right of the point where the two sides are pinched, then do the left. Google a video for this. It helps. Or be a trend setter and just don't bother.

Cook the gyoza

  • Pre-heat a frying pan with a tight fitting lid over medium heat. Non-stick won't brown the gyoza as well as a regular pan but they do have a tendency to stick a bit so decide what your priorities are.
  • Add 1 tsp vegetable oil and 1 tsp sesame oil.
  • Making sure you don't let the gyoza touch, carefully place as many as will reasonably fit in the pan and fry, flat side down (pleated side up if you bothered) for about 2 minutes. Check to see how they are browning.
  • When they are just a bit less brown than you want, add a 1/4 cup of water. Be careful. You are adding water to hot oil. That's generally not a good idea. It will splatter.
  • Cover, turn the heat to medium-low and cook for about 2-3 minutes.
  • Remove the lid, turn the heat back to medium and cook until the water has evaporated.
  • If you are into food safety, check the internal temperature with an instant read thermometer. You want the inside to read at least 160F. I've never seen it not get there but it's always a good idea to check.
  • Sprinkle with togarashi shichimi if you have it. Serve with dipping sauce.

Notes

Nira is a flat asian garlic chive. It's a really nice flavour but if you can't find them in your Asian market green onions will do just fine.
Togarashi shichimi is a Japanese chili red chili mix with orange peel, sesame seed and pepper. It comes in little bottles and is available in most Asian markets.

Nutrition

Serving: 35gyoza | Calories: 47kcal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 6mg | Sodium: 158mg | Potassium: 52mg | Vitamin A: 55IU | Vitamin C: 2.6mg | Calcium: 12mg | Iron: 0.4mg