Grape Dumplings
Published April 20, 2022

- Total Time
- 30 minutes, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½cup/75 grams blue cornmeal (or medium-grind yellow)
- ½cup/70 grams whole-wheat flour, plus more for kneading
- 1½teaspoons baking powder
- ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
- ¼cup Concord grape juice (see Tip)
- 1egg
- 2teaspoons melted butter
- 2teaspoons agave (optional)
- 4cups Concord grape juice (see Tip), plus more if needed
- 1½teaspoons cornstarch
- 2cups/10 ounces dark, seedless grapes, plus more for serving
- 2teaspoons agave (optional)
- Vanilla ice cream and fresh tarragon leaves, for serving
For the Dumplings
For the Sauce
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare dry dumpling ingredients: Sift all dry ingredients into a medium bowl. Use a fork or whisk to blend thoroughly. Dump the contents of the bowl onto a flat, clean workspace. Using your hands, make a round mound at least 1 ½ inches tall, then use fingers to clear a hole in the middle. It should go all the way down to the surface to accommodate all of the wet ingredients.
- Step 2
Combine wet dumpling ingredients: In a small bowl, whisk together grape juice, egg, melted butter and agave, if using. Pour the mixture into the well of the dry ingredients.
- Step 3
Blend dough: Using a fork, gradually fold the dry mixture along the perimeter of the well into the wet mixture in the center, stirring to integrate. Do not overmix. When combined, use your hands to form a ball.
- Step 4
Roll out dough: Sprinkle a small amount of flour onto a dry, clean work surface. Use your hand to spread the flour into a 12-by-12-inch square. Roll the ball of dough into the flour, coating all sides. Generously sprinkle additional flour onto the workspace and slowly mash the ball with your hand. Use a floured rolling pin to flatten dough into a large rectangle approximately ¼-inch thick and 8-by-12 inches wide, dusting the pin with flour as needed to prevent sticking.
- Step 5
Cut dumplings: Using a dry knife or pizza cutter, cut dough into strips to make 1-inch squares. Using a fork, prick each square in three parallel lines, all the way to the work surface. This will help aerate the dough to absorb the grape juice as it simmers.
- Step 6
Make the sauce: Pour 4 cups well-shaken grape juice into a wide, high-sided skillet and turn heat to medium. Dissolve cornstarch in 2 tablespoons of cold water before whisking into grape juice. Add grapes and agave, if desired. Bring to a rolling boil over medium heat.
- Step 7
Cook the dumplings: Using a rubber spatula, carefully add dumplings to boiling juice until skillet is full but not crowded. Stir the dumplings to immerse; the dumplings may touch, but not stack. Reduce heat to low, cover, and cook for 10 minutes. Check for overcrowding after 5 minutes, removing extra dumplings if needed. (Discard any remaining uncooked dumplings, or simmer in additional grape juice, if desired.)
- Step 8
Thicken sauce: Uncover simmering dumplings and keep temperature at medium-low. Cook for 5 minutes until the sauce thickens but does not bubble. It should be the consistency of a thick syrup. Remove from heat and let cool for 5 minutes.
- Step 9
Spoon mixture over vanilla ice cream and garnish with fresh grapes and tarragon.
- Bottled grape juice tends to settle, so shake thoroughly before using.
Private Notes
Comments
What about gluten-free? What to do here so the texture and flavor of dumplings are not lost? Suggestion from someone who has made them?
When I make cornbread I use cornmeal and masa harina, about 3:1. With the egg, the finely ground masa helps hold it together as well as flour does, plus it's gluten free. And really tasty.
Heaven! OMG so good,
Seems 2 cups of grapes are the same whether they’re small or larger. Obviously it would take more little grapes than larger but if you can pick them free of cost and chemical sprays go for it!
How do the dumplings taste? Do they become dense/rubbery/slimy from being simmered in liquid?
Gluten free version... I altered the flour proportions to 3/4 med blue corn meal and 1/4 cup masa corn flour. This worked well but next time I am going to add 1-2 teaspoons of cornstarch to the dough's dry ingredients. I hope this may give all allows a more "sticky" dough.
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