Dough #1 — Hot-Water Dumpling Wrappers (jiaozi, potstickers)
Hot water partially denatures gluten so the dough rolls thin without springing back.
Yield: ~36 wrappers
Ingredients (metric | US)
- 300 g all-purpose flour | 2 cups leveled
- 180–195 g hot water at 75–80°C | ¾–⅞ cup
- 3 g fine salt | ½ tsp
Method
- Mix flour + salt. Stream in hot water while stirring with chopsticks until shaggy.
- Knead 6–8 min until smooth. If sticky, dust lightly; if dry, wet fingers and continue.
- Rest covered 30 min (room temp).
- Roll into a rope; cut into 36 pieces (~12 g each). Flatten, dust, and roll into 8–9 cm rounds, center slightly thicker than edges.
Texture target: Soft Play-Doh. Warm dough = easy pleats.
Dough #2 — Egg Pasta for Ravioli (silky and elastic)
Eggs bring structure so ravioli survive boiling.
Yield: serves 4
Ingredients
- 300 g “00” or all-purpose flour | ~2 cups
- 165–180 g eggs (3 large) + 1 tsp olive oil
- 3 g fine salt | ½ tsp
Method
- Make a well; whisk eggs, pull in flour.
- Knead 8–10 min until taut and smooth.
- Wrap; rest 30–60 min.
- Roll with a pasta machine to #6–#7 thinness (≈0.6–0.8 mm). Keep sheets covered to prevent drying.
Moisture Math (don’t skip)
- Wet veg (cabbage, spinach, mushrooms) must be pre-salted/squeezed or sautéed to drive off water.
- Juicy meat needs binding: 1–2 tbsp beaten egg or 1–3 tbsp ice-cold stock per 250 g filling, mixed vigorously until tacky.
- Cheese (ricotta) should be drained in a sieve 2–12 hours.
Four Foolproof Fillings
A) Pork & Cabbage Dumpling
- 350 g ground pork (20% fat)
- 250 g Napa cabbage, finely minced, salted ½ tsp and squeezed dry
- 1 tbsp ginger, 2 tbsp scallion, 1 tbsp light soy, 1 tbsp Shaoxing/dry sherry, 1 tsp sesame oil, ½ tsp sugar, ¼ tsp white pepper
- 2–4 tbsp ice-cold chicken stock, added while stirring until the mix turns sticky
B) Shrimp & Chive Dumpling
- 300 g shrimp, chopped; 40 g Chinese chives or scallion; 1 tsp grated ginger
- 1 tsp soy, ½ tsp sesame oil, pinch white pepper, 1 tsp cornstarch, 1–2 tbsp cold water
C) Spinach-Ricotta Ravioli
- 250 g ricotta, well-drained
- 120 g cooked spinach, squeezed and chopped
- 40 g grated Parmesan, 1 egg yolk, pinch nutmeg, salt & pepper
D) Butternut Squash Ravioli
- 350 g roasted squash, mashed
- 40 g grated Parmesan, 15 g butter, 1 tsp lemon zest, salt, pepper
Shaping
Dumplings (half-moon with pleats)
- Place 1 tbsp filling in the center.
- Wet half the rim; fold into a half-moon.
- Pleat the front edge toward the center while pressing to seal against the back edge.
- Set on a floured tray; keep covered.
Wrapper size: 8–9 cm; target weight ~12 g each, filling ~18–20 g.
Ravioli (two-sheet method)
- Pipe 1 tbsp filling, spaced 4–5 cm apart on a thin sheet.
- Brush around mounds with water or egg wash.
- Lay a second sheet; press out air pockets from filling outward.
- Cut squares or stamp rounds; crimp edges firmly. Rest 10 min under a towel.
Cooking
Dumplings
- Boiled (shuǐjiǎo): Simmer in salted water 3–4 min after they float; gentle boil prevents bursting.
- Steamed: 8–10 min over brisk steam on parchment or oiled cabbage leaves.
- Potstickers (steam-fry): Medium-high heat, 1–2 tbsp oil. Add dumplings; brown bottoms 2–3 min. Add 120 ml water, cover, steam 5–6 min. Uncover to evaporate; let bottoms re-crisp 1 min.
Dipping sauce (balanced): 2 tbsp light soy + 1 tbsp rice vinegar + 1 tsp water + ½ tsp sugar + chili oil + sliced scallion.
Ravioli
- Boil in abundantly salted water (like the sea) 2–3 min, just until they float and pasta turns satiny.
- Move directly to sauce with a splash of pasta water to glaze.
Sauce pairings:
- Spinach-ricotta → light tomato butter or lemon-brown-butter with herbs.
- Squash → brown butter + sage + toasted hazelnuts, finish with lemon.
Make-Ahead, Freeze, Reheat
- Arrange uncooked dumplings or ravioli on a floured/semolina-dusted sheet; freeze solid, then bag up to 2 months.
- Cook from frozen: add ~1–2 minutes (or an extra 60 ml water cycle for potstickers).
- Cooked leftovers: cool fast, refrigerate up to 3 days; re-crisp potstickers in a pan, gently reheat ravioli in sauce with a splash of water.
Troubleshooting
- Wrappers tearing: Dough too dry or rolled too thin. Lightly mist; thicken next batch.
- Leaks during boil: Air pockets or weak seal. Press edges firmly; use egg wash for ravioli.
- Mushy filling: Veg not drained; sauté or salt/squeeze next time.
- Tough pasta: Over-kneaded without rest, or overcooked. Give the dough its nap; cook to just-done.
- Soggy potsticker bottoms: Too much water left at the end; uncover earlier to evaporate and re-crisp.
Scaling & Ratios (quick reference)
- Dumpling dough hydration: 60–65% (water to flour by weight).
- Ravioli dough: 1 egg per 100 g flour (+ a drizzle of water if dry).
- Filling per piece: 18–25 g dumplings; 15–20 g ravioli.
