Lumpia Shanghai

Lumpia Shanghai
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Prop Stylist: Carla Gonzalez-Hart.
Total Time
1¼ hours
Rating
4(254)
Comments
Read comments

Lumpia are cousins to spring rolls, a tradition that most likely goes back to the Chinese traders who first visited the Philippines in the ninth century. As kids, we’d crowd around the kitchen counter to make them, spooning out the filling and rolling up the skins before sliding them into hot oil. They come in different incarnations and may be served unfried and even unwrapped, but the classic is lumpia Shanghai, skinny cigarillos with supercrunchy skins, packed with meat, juices seething. I like dipping them in banana ketchup, which you can buy or improvise by cooking overripe bananas and tomato paste into a sweet-and-sour jam.

Featured in: Angela Dimayuga’s 10 Essential Filipino Recipes

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Ingredients

Yield:20 lumpia
  • 1medium carrot, peeled, then coarsely grated on box grater (about ½ packed cup)
  • ½medium yellow onion, finely minced (about 1½ cups)
  • ½(8-ounce) can water chestnuts, drained, then finely minced (about ½ cup)
  • 1celery stalk, finely minced (about ½ cup)
  • 3garlic cloves, finely minced
  • 2eggs (1 egg white reserved to seal wrappers)
  • teaspoons fish sauce
  • teaspoons kosher salt
  • ½pound ground pork
  • ½pound ground beef
  • ¾teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
  • 20(8-by-8-inch) lumpia or spring roll wrappers (from two 11-ounce packages), thawed if frozen, peeled to separate, then set under a moistened cloth
  • Canola oil
  • Banana ketchup, for serving
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (20 servings)

123 calories; 6 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 12 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 2 grams sugars; 5 grams protein; 153 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the filling: In a large bowl, combine the carrot, onion, water chestnuts, celery, garlic, 1 whole egg and 1 egg yolk, fish sauce and ½ teaspoon salt; mix until well blended. Add the pork, beef, pepper and remaining 2 teaspoons salt. Using your hands, gently mix until everything is evenly distributed, being careful not to overwork or compress the meat mixture.

  2. Step 2

    Prepare the lumpia: In a small bowl, whisk about 3 tablespoons water into remaining egg white. Working one at a time, place a lumpia wrapper on a work surface with one corner facing you. Add 3 tablespoons of filling in the center of the wrapper and shape it into a 7-inch-long log stretching from the left corner of the wrapper toward the right corner of the wrapper. Brush the outer 1-inch edge of the wrapper with the egg white mixture, then lift the bottom corner of the lumpia wrapper and fold it up and over the filling, making sure there’s no air between the filling and the wrapper. Tightly fold the left and right corners of the wrapper toward the center, pulling and folding the corners over the filling. Roll the log away from you toward the top corner, tightly sealing it closed and forming it into a compact roll.

  3. Step 3

    In a deep pot, add enough oil to reach 3 inches and heat over medium-high until about 350 degrees. Working in batches, add 6 or so lumpia and cook, rotating frequently and separating if needed, until golden brown and cooked through, 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer to a large, paper towel-lined baking sheet to cool, then cook the remaining lumpia. (You can also freeze uncooked lumpia until firm on a wax paper-lined baking sheet, wrap them well and keep them frozen for up to 2 weeks. Fry frozen lumpia for 4 to 5 minutes.)

  4. Step 4

    Serve lumpia whole or halved crosswise, with banana ketchup for dipping. If serving a crowd, you can cook the lumpia an hour or two ahead, let them come to room temperature then reheat them in a 350-degree oven for 10 minutes.

Ratings

4 out of 5
254 user ratings
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Comments

Lumpia Shanghai are prepared many ways depending on how one was raised in the Philippines. I make my own version of Lumpia Shanghai: freshly ground pork, ground shrimp, freshly chopped garlic, chopped black pepper, grated carrots, sliced white and green scallions, low salt soy sauce and MSG (optional). Mix them all together, refrigerate for at least an hour. Wrap with lumpia wrapper (covered with moistened clean white linen). Wrap or roll the meat like a cigar very thinly, fry, enjoy!

My recipe (from my mom) is just ground pork, shrimp, green onions, water chestnuts, and egg. I use the 8x8 square sheets and then cut each log into thirds with scissors for bite size appetizers. Also, I like to fry frozen lumpia. Somehow they seem crispier that way?

Celery is not a traditional ingredient. The recipe is definitely the chef's interpretation of this Filipino dish.

Depending on the region, lumpia recipes will vary. My family's recipe: make ginasa first (basis of most filipino dishes--stir fry tomato, onions, and garlic), stir fry ground pork, then add mung bean sprouts, julienned carrots, julienned chayote squash, diced shrimp until cooked through. Add a splash of soy sauce to your taste. We don't deep fry lumpia--just enough oil to cook one side then flip until both sides are brown. Dip in Mang Tomas liver sauce!

Although not the recipe, I tried baking these convection, and they did not turn out. You must fry them if you want the real thing.

Made a double batch for a thanksgiving office party. They were a big hit! You might want to up the fish sauce.

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