Recipe


Back to Recipe Index

Shallot Pancakes
 


Serves 4 as an appetizer

 


1 recipe hot water dough*
3 cups sliced shallots
1 tablespoon sesame oil
1/4 cup canola oil
2 tablespoons untoasted sesame seeds
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Canola oil


Flour a work surface very lightly and roll out hot water dough into a log. Cut log in half. Roll out one half log very thinly (1/8-inch thick) into a large rectangle. In a small bowl, combine the sesame oil and canola oil and brush over the pancake and season with salt and pepper. Cover lightly with the shallots and pinwheel the dough: Starting with one long side nearest you, roll the dough jelly-roll fashion to make a tight log. Twist each end of the log in opposite directions 4 or 5 times (this will make additional pancake layers), then wrap the log around itself to make a coil, tucking the outside end beneath the coil. With a rolling pin, flatten the coil to 1/4-inch thick, brush with oil mixture and press sesame seeds into both sides. Repeat with the remaining dough to make 1 more pancake. Heat a cast-iron pan over medium heat. Add oil and swirl to coat the pan. Add pancake, one at a time, and cook until brown and crispy on both sides, turning once, 2 to 3 minutes per side. Slice each pancake into 4 wedges and serve with dim sum dipper.

 


Dim Sum Dipper:
Makes 3/4 cup

1/2 cup naturally brewed soy sauce
1/4 cup naturally brewed rice vinegar
1 tablespoon sambal
1/2 bunch scallion greens, sliced thinly

Combine all in a bowl and serve with shallot pancakes.

*Hot water Dough
 4 cups (16 ounces) all purpose flour
8 ounces hot water

In a stand mixer fitted with dough hook, gradually add water to flour. Once dough forms a ball and all the dry ingredients are incorporated, remove from mixer. Dough should not be sticky, if it is add more flour, tablespoon by tablespoon. Very lightly flour a flat surface and bring dough together into a disk. Wrap tightly with plastic wrap and chill in fridge for up to 48 hours.
 

  • Wine Notes:

    Tsingtao Beer
    -- From China

    --High malt, well-hopped
    -- Pairs well with Chinese food
    -- Produced with spring water from Laoshan, a mountain area famous in China for the purity of its water.
    --yeast and barley imported from Australia and Canada

    2005 Four Graces Pinot Noir
    -- from the Dundee Hills, Oregon

    TASTE: Ripe pomegranate and cranberry, laced with an earthy spiciness
    MOUTHFEEL: Velvety texture, vibrant acidity and integrated tannins, with a long, elegant finish

    -- a classic Oregonian Pinot Noir
  • >>This recipe appears in Episode #605.
  • >>Return to the recipe index.
  • >>Click here for a printer friendly version
  • Shallot Pancakes
photo by Emily Sterne