Here's a dilemma. It's 9:30PM on a Sunday. You last ate at 3:30PM, enjoying a later Friendly Toast brunch of monstrous chocolate-toffee pancakes, or a breakfast burrito with homefries. What are you going to make for dinner?
As I found out this past weekend, the correct answer is...wontons! Berry, chocolate, and bacon wontons, to be exact. It was a good answer. These dessert-like interpretations of the savory Asian appetizer are really easy to make, and they're tasty to boot! Here are the ingredients and process.- wonton "skin" / wrappers
- frozen mixed berries (fresh berries risk turning into mush during the frying process)
- chocolate chips
- bacon, cooked
- canola oil
- powdered sugar (optional)
- Lay out a wonton skin. Rub its edges with water.
- Put a small amount of frozen fruit, chocolate chips, and/or bacon crumbles in the middle of the skin (for square wontons) or slightly toward one corner (for triangular/trapezoidal ones). I made berry chocolate or bacon chocolate wontons; never did the berries and bacon mix.
- Fold the wonton skin over the filling onto itself, and press the wet edges against each other to form a seal.
- Fold the sealed parts together, and press them securely. This extra step will help secure against breaking and bursting during the frying process.
- Experiment with shapes and sizes! Multiple wrappers can be secured together, etc.
- Heat approximately 1.5 inches of oil in a saucepan.
- Drop the wontons in the hot oil, and fry them until done.
- Remove the wontons from the hot oil, and let them cool to an edible, yet warm, temperature.
- Dust with powdered sugar, if desired.
- Enjoy!
Behold, our happy little confections! You bite through the crunchy outer shell, with its characteristic taste of oil and salt, and are met with a burst of warm fruit filling and melted chocolate. I was surprised at how much air snuck into the wontons, since they were folded rather tightly; this also disappointed me a little, because then I imagined the air space being filled with that much more gooey chocolate. Alas. Maybe the solution will be to stuff them more next time? The bacon chocolate wontons were also great, though obviously less gushy. If I make that variety again, I'll cook the bacon for less time. Chewier bacon may be a better complement to a crunchy shell than crunchy bacon. Either way, the salty sweetness was great.
It could be fun to start a series on dessert versions of traditionally savory foods. Heck, I'll even create a special tag for such posts. Anyone have suggestions to that end?
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