Serve with fried rice and Ginger Bok Choy to create your own little restaurant experience. đ
Din Tai Fungâs famous Spicy Wontons!
Ahhh, wontons. I love those bite size dumplings with irresistible slippery flappy bits. I love them in soup form. One of my ultimate 10 minutes convenience meals. But my favourite way is with a spicy chilli oil sauce. Specifically, the Din Tai Fung version, a global dumpling chain that declares itself makers of the best dumplings in the world (and many people agree!) The Din Tai Fung chilli sauce for wontons is less oily, less vinegary and slightly less spicy than standard Chinese dumpling houses. Because of this, they are generous with the amount of sauce so you can eat each slippery, plump, juicy wonton with a spoonful of the sauce without blowing your head off with a chilli explosion. Any other Din Tai Fung devotees reading this who can vouch for how good they are?? I LOVE âEM!
The spicy chilli sauce
The key, unsurprisingly, to the awesomeness that is the Din Tai Fung Spicy Wontons is their secret chilli sauce. Team RecipeTin is mighty proud that we cracked the code! While easy recipes will use just chilli oil and maybe some chilli paste or chilli crisp, the reason Din Tai Fungâs sauce is so tasty it because itâs flavoured with garlic, spices and sauces. Itâs also got a lovely savouriness to it, with more flavour than what you can get from just using salt or soy sauce. I wonât say ours is a dead ringer but itâs very, very close. Actually, Team RecipeTin prefers ours to Din Tai Fungâs because itâs got fresher flavours, itâs less oily, and itâs not as sweet. Intentionally!
What you need to make the chilli sauce
Chinese chicken stock powder â The secret ingredient! Itâs the tastier salt. Itâs got a cleaner, less artificial flavour than Western chickens stock powders. In fact, when I run out of liquid chicken stock/broth, I use Chinese stock powder mixed with water, over western chicken stock powders. I use Knorr brand, yellow can with a green lid. Get it at any Asian grocery store here in Australia, itâs so common, and good value, a little bit goes far. Substitute with any regular chicken stock powder, or crumbled bouillon cube.
Chilli oil â Any Chinese brand red chilli oil (check the label). Chili oils vary in spiciness between Asian countries, so best to stick with Chinese as in my experience, they are relatively consistent in spiciness between brands. Alternatives â Chilli crisp will also work here but obviously adds lots more crispy âbitsâ into the sauce and less oil! For a non spicy option, substitute some or all with sesame oil (toasted, the brown oil, not yellow un-toasted). Obviously no longer spicy, but a lovely sesame-forward flavour! Sichuan pepper â Whiteish pepper powder that has a âcoldâ spiciness to it, used in famous dishes like Kung Pao chicken. I use pre-ground for convenience here because itâs a small amount, just 1/4 teaspoon. Kudos to anyone who makes their own: toast, grind, sift, measure! Chinese Five Spice Powder â Blend of (you guessed it!) five spices that is sold at regular grocery stores, in the dried spices aisle. Chilli flakes (red pepper flakes) â Takes the sauce to âpretty spicyâ range but very enjoyable for people who love spicy Asian food. Omit, or stir in at the end bit by bit, for less spicy. Soy sauce â Use either light or all purpose soy sauce. But not dark soy sauce â flavour is too strong and the colour is too intense! More on which soy sauce to use when here. Garlic â Fresh (donât talk to me about jarred!), finely minced with a knife or use a garlic crusher. Rice vinegar â For a touch of tang, to balance out the other flavours. Substitute with any clear vinegar, or Chinese black vinegar. Sugar â Just a small touch to mimic the flavour of the Din Tai Fung chilli sauce. Though ours is less sweet than theirs, I actually find the Din Tai Fung one a little too sweet.
The wontons
You can use any wontons you want, homemade or store bought! Though thereâs a hierarchy, unsurpsingly. đ Homemade wontons trumps Asian store frozen wontons trump regular grocery store wontons. I use Knorr brand, yellow can with a green lid. Get it at any Asian grocery store here in Australia, itâs so common, and good value, a little bit goes far. Substitute with any regular chicken stock powder, or crumbled bouillon cube. Alternatives â Chilli crisp will also work here but obviously adds lots more crispy âbitsâ into the sauce and less oil! For a non spicy option, substitute some or all with sesame oil (toasted, the brown oil, not yellow un-toasted). Obviously no longer spicy, but a lovely sesame-forward flavour! There is no shame in buying wontons. Frozen are pretty good these days! The classic is pork and prawns/shrimp (this is the filling in my wontons recipe). But feel free to use any type of wonton.
How to make Din Tai Fungâs Spicy Wontons
Ready to see how easy it is to make? Here we go!
And thatâs it! Just set aside until ready to use. Itâs fine if it cools down, the heat from the wontons will reheat it. (PS If youâre brave, add an extra drizzle of chilli oil. I like to be brave. đ ) Scooping up a good spoonful of the sauce with every wonton is essential here. In fact, as mentioned earlier, the sauce is intentionally designed as such. Just shovel the whole spoonful in and eat in one mouthful! This really is very similar to the Din Tai Fung spicy wontons. Though, as noted above, less sweet and less oily. Both good things! Big shout out to my brother and our Chef JB for doing the legwork to crack the code! Youâd be surprised how many iterations it took before we were all in agreement it was as good / better than Din Tai Fungâs. Itâs not a hard recipe to make, but getting the ratios just right and figuring out the flavourings was a challenge. The Chinese stock powder was the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle. đ Spicy Asian Food Lovers, rejoice! â Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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