My favourite Chinese restaurant treat, made at home! So easy, and unbelievably good. The roll out dough will keep in the fridge for a couple of days, or you can freeze them, then pop them in the pan when you are ready to cook (you don't even need to defrost them). They are best eaten fresh off the stove!
Prep Time20 minutesmins
Cook Time10 minutesmins
Total Time30 minutesmins
Course: Appetizer, Starter
Cuisine: Asian, Chinese
Servings: 4
Author: Nagi | RecipeTin Eats
Ingredients
2 1/2cupsplain flour
1tspsalt
1cupwater
2cupschopped shallots (aka green onions, shallots)(half a large bunch)
Oil spray(any is fine, except olive oil)
4tbspvegetable or canola oil
Dipping Sauce
Soy sauce
Black vinegar(or substitute with white vinegar)
Chilli paste(optional)
Instructions
Combine flour and 1 tsp salt in a bowl, add water in 3 batches, mixing in between with a spoon (see notes for tips on getting the dough right).
Knead for a minute, either in the bowl or on a flour dusted surface, then cover with cling wrap and rest for 10 minutes.
Divide dough into 2 pieces.
Roll out dough thinly into a rectangle should about 1.5ft/50cm x 8"/20cm.
Spray lightly with oil (any oil is fine - except perhaps olive oil), then roll it up starting from the wide end so you have a long roll.
Coil it into a snail shape, push down with your hand and roll out again into the same shape.
Spray again with oil, scatter over the chopped scallions and a pinch of salt. Then roll it up again, starting from the wide end.
Cut the roll in half, and coil each roll.
Repeat with the other ball of dough. You will end up with 4 coils.
Flatten each coil, then roll out into round shapes about 1/3 " / 0.5 cm thick.
Heat 1 tbsp oil in pan, pan fry for 1 1/2 minutes on the first side, then 1 minute on the other side, pushing down with a spatula if necessary to get it to cook the surface evenly. It should be a dark golden brown colour.
Combine equal parts of soy sauce and black vinegar into a small sauce dish, and add a dollop of Asian chilli paste.
Notes
1. You might need to adjust the amount of water slightly - you want a dough that is quite sticky but so that it comes away from the edge of the bowl (as opposed to leaving a lot of dough on the bowl). 2. You can refrigerate or freeze the rolled out ready-to-cook pancakes. You do not even need to defrost them to cook them, just pop them straight into the pan, though it will take a minute or so longer to cook.