Southern Salad Rolls
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 24 small shrimp, peeled
- 1 boneless, thick pork loin chop or 1/3 pound boneless pork shoulder
- 1/3 pound small dried round rice noodles, cooked in boiling water for 3 to 5 minutes, drained, and flushed with cold water
- 1 head butter lettuce, leaves separated
- 12 to 16 sprigs cilantro
- 12 to 16 sprigs mint
- 32 to 48 Chinese chives (about 1/2 small bunch), optional
- 16 rice paper rounds,
- 8 1/2 inches in diameter
- 1 1/2 cups Spicy Hoisin-Garlic Sauce (page 310)
- To poach the shrimp, fill a small saucepan half full with water, add the salt, and bring to a rolling boil over high heat.
- Add the shrimp, remove from the heat, and let stand for 3 to 5 minutes, or until the shrimp have curled nicely and are pinkish orange.
- Lift them out with a slotted spoon and set aside to cool.
- Leave the water in the pan.
- While the shrimp are poaching, trim any excess fat from the pork chop.
- Return the water in the pan to a rolling boil and drop in the pork.
- When the water starts bubbling at the edges of the pan, remove the pan from the heat and cover tightly.
- Let stand for 20 minutes.
- The pork should be firm yet still yield a bit to the touch.
- Remove the pork from the pan and let cool.
- Save the light stock for another use or discard.
- Working with 1 shrimp at a time, lay it flat on a cutting board and cut in half horizontally.
- (Use the index and middle fingers of your noncutting hand to keep the shrimp in place as you wield the knife.)
- Devein the shrimp as necessary.
- Set aside on a plate.
- Thinly slice the pork across the grain into strips about 1/8 inch thick, 1/2 inch wide, and 4 inches long.
- Add to the plate of shrimp.
- Set up a wrapping station composed of a flat work surface (a cutting board, inverted baking sheet, or dish towel) and a bowl of water for dipping the rice papers.
- Place the shrimp, pork, noodles, lettuce, and herbs nearby.
- Dip a rice paper round in water and then place it on your work surface.
- (See page 331 for tips on working with rice paper.)
- When the rice paper is pliable and tacky, fold a lettuce leaf in half along its central spine and then tear off the spine.
- Place the folded leaf on the lower third of the rice paper round.
- Put about 1/4 cup of the noodles on top of the lettuce, spreading them in a rectangle.
- Lay a couple of pork strips on top (slightly overlapping, if necessary), and then arrange a few mint and cilantro leaves on top of the pork, spreading them out to distribute their flavors evenly.
- Bring up the lower edge of the rice paper to just cover the herbs.
- Then roll the rice paper a half turn so that the lettuce is on top and visible through the rice paper.
- Add 3 shrimp halves, cut side up, to the unrolled portion of rice paper, lining them up snugly along the partially finished roll.
- Fold the sides of the round inward to cover the filling.
- Roll one more full turn, so that the orange sides of the shrimp are now facing up and visible through the rice paper.
- Tuck 2 or 3 Chinese chives into the roll, letting them extend out one end.
- Continue to roll until you have a snug cylindrical package.
- The rice paper is self-sealing.
- Use a knife or scissors to trim the chives, leaving a 3/4-inch tail extending from the end.
- Repeat this process to make 16 rolls in all, placing the finished rolls on a serving platter.
- If the rolls seem too long to manage and eat comfortably, cut them in half on the diagonal.
- Serve the rolls with the sauce.
- Diners can dip the rolls into the sauce or spoon some sauce onto the rolls.
- While the pork and shrimp may be poached a day ahead, slice them on the day you wrap.
- The noodles may be cooked early in the day, covered with plastic wrap, and kept at room temperature.
- You may wrap the rolls 2 hours in advance of serving.
- Keep them covered with plastic wrap to prevent the rice paper from drying out and becoming unpleasantly tough.
- If you are cutting the rolls, do so just before serving, or they may lose their nice shape.
- You can wrap other items in these rolls, too, but they must be thinly sliced so that they are flexible enough to roll.
- Seeded cucumber strips, julienned carrot, seared tofu strips, and slices of left over grilled meats are among the possibilities.
- Different fresh herbs, such as Vietnamese coriander (rau ram) or Thai basil, may be incorporated to introduce different flavors.
- The elements that you need to preserve are the lettuce leaves and noodles, which give the rolls body, and the hoisin-garlic sauce, which marries all the flavors.
salt, shrimp, pork loin chop, rice noodles, butter, cilantro, mint, chinese chives, rice, diameter, hoisingarlic sauce
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/southern-salad-rolls-382895 (may not work)