Wonton skin raviolis
4 Servings
Ingredients
Quantity | Ingredient | |
---|---|---|
50 | Wonton wrappers (about 1 1/2 packages) | |
1 | Egg; Beaten With | |
1 | Teaspoon of water | |
1 | cup | Ravioli filling (2 recipes follow) |
(grown-up version can be prepared In Advance) |
Directions
Lay out 8 wonton wrappers on counter in front of you. Paint each one lightly with beaten egg. Place 1 tablespoon filling in the center of each ravioli. Seal by placing 8 additional wonton wrappers on top to cover each square. Pick up each ravioli and press well all around edges to seal. For a good seal, make sure no filling is stuck in the edges. Square ravioli can be left as is or cut into festive shapes (stars, hearts etc.) with a medium cookie cutter. Place the ravioli upside down on a cookie sheet lined with parchment. Lay out 8 more wrappers and repeat the process until either wrappers or filling is gone. Lay additional parchment or plastic wrap between layers of ravioli as needed as you lay them on the cookie sheet.
The entire cookie sheet can be wrapped well and refrigerated for 12 days.
When ready to cook ravioli, bring large pot of salted water to a boil.
Lower heat to a simmer, give the water a good stir to form a whirlpool effect and quickly drop in 1215 raviolis one by one, stirring gently to separate them as they hit the water. Poach gently 23 minutes, or until ravioli puff up, float to the surface and are opaque in the center (in the case of raw poultry or fish fillings) Remove ravioli from pot with a slotted spoon and reserve. Cook remaining ravioli in same manner. Serve with sauce, butter, or oil, or in broth, and with or without cheese. Yield: 25 ravioli; 4 main course servings or 6 appetizers Every culture has its version of the dumpling, or tasty tidbit wrapped up in dough. Think about empanadas, calzone, ravioli, pierogi, or dim sum, and you'll see that every culture has taken its best flavors and put them inside some dough! Here we fill Chinese wonton wrappers, a form of pasta with an interesting slippery texture due to some cornstarch in the dough, with some flavors kids love.
These ravioli are easy and fun to make with kids. Little ones enjoy brushing on the glue (egg wash) while older kids love to help seal and cut out the dumplings. Be sure kids don't handle or taste raw poultry, meat or fish. Copyright, 1996, TV FOOD NETWORK, G.P., All Rights Reserved 11/20/96 show
Recipe By : TOO HOT TAMALES SHOW TH6347 Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #316 Date: Tue, 26 Nov 1996 06:52:59 -0600 From: Pat Asher <asher@...>
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