Fresh Spring Rolls:
These are the soft translucent ones, sorry if you were hoping for fried!
(Makes approximately 25 rolls)
:: 1 bunch each of mint, cilantro, thai basil
:: 1 1/2 cucumber (or 2-3 small cucumbers), peeled, cut into skinny matchsticks
:: shrimp sliced in half butterfly style (I use 1 1/2 shrimp per roll, you can omit, add more in, whatever. These do NOT need to be nice large ones, 36-45+ (meaning 36-45 shrimp per pound) work just fine
:: round tapioca sheets (for this and the rice stick noodles, I can't explain how to choose from among the billions of options. Your best bet is to ask whoever the store owner is and hopefully they will be able to point you in the right direction. I've had more luck in mom and pop grocers than the big chains, but good luck!)
:: 1 package rice stick noodles
Sauce:
:: hoisin sauce
:: peanut butter (creamy or crunchy is fine!)
:: chopped peanuts (optional)
:: rice wine vinegar
Rinse the herbs, feel free to leave them on stems as you will be picking off pieces individually for each roll anyway.
Boil the shrimp. Shrimp barely need any time to cook at all - once the water comes to a rolling boil after you dump the shrimp in they should be finished. Rinse thoroughly in cold water. At this point, you can cut the shrimp in half along the 'c' curve of the shrimp to make them flatter and easier to wrap. Drain, set aside.
Boil the rice stick noodles. They need to be 'al dente' when you're finished. Immediately rinse them thoroughly with cold water - after the rinsing they shouldn't be warm at all! Drain, set aside.
THAT BEING SAID....I think perhaps I am too picky, though, because no one else in my family seems to mind eating it and usually I end up making twice as much as I intend to even though I think it's not possible to eat all of the sauce....and then by the end of the meal it's gone. My grandma started slathering it all over her pad thai, so if that's any indication.
And at the end of the day, it's a flippin' 3-4 ingredient sauce. How much simpler do you get?
Please don't get upset with me for not including measurements here. Asian cooking and measuring spoons have never mixed for me. I just do it by taste; if I had to guess, it's 2 parts hoisin to 1 part peanut butter. Stir it all up nicely and you should get a thick, creamy sauce! Here is where you add some vinegar to loosen up, if desired.
*EDIT*
If you want to make these ahead of time, it's fine to wrap them the day or morning of when you intend to serve them. I feel pretty safe letting the rolls sit in room temperature for 6-8 hours or so, but perhaps my attitude towards possible food poisoning is a little too casual for your taste. Just cover them with a damp paper towel or cloth, otherwise they will dry out.
DON'T make them the day ahead. Once refrigerated, the tapioca sheets become really irreversibly hard and unpleasant - they don't really soften up once coming up to room temperature, either.
If you prefer something lighter, another yummy dipping sauce alternative is sweet chili sauce. I like the Mae Ploy brand, but probably only because I've never used any of the others! (amazon.com lists it as $8..... I'm pretty sure it's usually $2-3 at most markets.) It is very mildly spicy, sweet, and tangy - like a much better version of duck sauce you eat with chinese egg rolls.
squirt
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