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Asparagus and Green Onion Spring Rolls

This past Saturday was a glorious Spring day in Brooklyn - weather in the 70s with full sunshine all day. Forget raindrops on roses and even whiskers on kittens; sunshine and vegetarian food are two of my favorite things. Put them together and you’ve got is, in the words of Yogi Bear, a pic-a-nic.

Spring rolls make the perfect picnic food - light, fresh, easy to pack and fun to dip. Add a pasta, potato or fruit salad and you’re good to go for a day of frisbee and wallowing in the sun.

These spring rolls are my contribution to the new blogging event hosted by Real Epicurean, A Slice of Cherry Pie, and Cherry’s English Kitchen called “In The Bag.” The idea is that the hosts spotlight a few seasonal ingredients that go “in your bag” and you make a seasonal dish with them. Eating seasonally is great for a number of reasons, the most immediately gratifying of which is that fresh food at the peak of it’s growing season just tastes better! So kudos to these folks for starting such a great event.

Makes about 12 rolls to serve 4 as a main dish or 6-12 as an appetizer
Time: 30 minutes

Asparagus and Green Onion Spring Rolls

Asparagus and Green Onion Spring Rolls

2 bunches of asparagus
2 bunches of green onions, sliced
1 16oz block of extra firm tofu, cut into 1/4 inch dice
2 cups of pea shoots or a carton of your favorite kind of sprouts
1.5 cups slivered almonds
15 spring roll wrappers (round rice paper wraps)

Wash the asparagus and snap off the woody part of the stems. Steam by placing a bundle (tied with a rubber band or string) upright in a large pot filled with an inch of boiling water. Cover and steam for 5 - 8 minutes. When the asparagus are bright green, take them out and plunge into a bowl of cold water. Drain and set aside in a bowl.

Prepare separate bowls of the chopped green onion, tofu, sprouts, and almonds.

Prepare your choice of dipping sauce(s). You can use the ones below or your favorite homemade or prepared sauce or dressing.

To work with the spring roll wrappers first find a shallow dish that’s large enough to soak the wrapper without folding it. Heat a kettle of water until almost boiling. Fill your dish with a half inch of water and gently submerge one spring roll wrapper being careful to keep all the edges soaking equally. Soak for a few seconds, until the whole wrapper is just translucent and pliable.

Place the wrapper on a large cutting board or table. In the bottom 1/3 of the wrapper place lengthwise two thin or one large asparagus spears. Sprinkle over some green onions, tofu, sprouts, and almonds. Holding the filling tight, fold over the bottom part of the wrapper and start to roll the filling upward, then fold in the sides and keep rolling tightly.

To store the rolls, place in a casserole dish with a moistened towel on top.

The rolls can be served whole or cut in half on an angle for a fancy look.

Truffle Dipping Sauce

truffle oil
lemon slices
sea salt
freshly grated pepper

Give each guests a small dipping bowl with a bit of truffle oil and have them squeeze in lemon and add salt and pepper to taste.

L’il Sis’s Thai Peanut Dipping Sauce

3 Tbsp peanut butter - chunky or smooth
1 tsp ginger, minced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 cup vegetable broth
3 Tbsp soy sauce
2 Tbsp rice vinegar
2 - 3 tsp sugar or honey
1 tsp hot sauce
3 Tbsp fresh cilantro, chopped

This sauce is jotted down in the L’il Sis’s food diary. I have no idea where she got it but it’s perfect for dipping or over a Thai-style salad.  Just mix all the ingrediants together.  Sometimes it mixes better if you heat it up in the microwave or over the stove.

10 Responses to “Asparagus and Green Onion Spring Rolls”

  1. Freya
    May 11th, 2007 15:39
    1

    What a fantastic blog! And a great entry for the event too! It looks and sounds delicious!

  2. Julia
    May 12th, 2007 05:40
    2

    What a fabulous idea, thanks so much for entering!

  3. melody
    May 12th, 2007 20:16
    3

    Wow.. they are beautiful and sound delicious…

  4. Lisa (Homesick Texan)
    May 15th, 2007 11:50
    4

    Love the truffle dipping sauce, so decadent. And hear, hear to eating seasonally–everything always tastes much better when it’s fresh.

  5. vanessa
    May 17th, 2007 13:49
    5

    Thanks Freya - looking foward to seeing what the other folks make.

    Julia - thanks!

    Thanks Melody. I’ll admit that the sisters and I like tripled this recipe and I gladly ate them for lunch for a number of days following.

    Lisa - I just found out (from so respectable a source as the NY Times) that truffle oil is “fake” - made by a chemical compound not by steeping truffles in oil. Not sure if I really care or not…

  6. Scott at Realepicurean
    May 24th, 2007 18:55
    6

    Oh so delicate and beautiful!

    I have a fear my big clumsy hands aren’t capable of such a thing!

  7. Theresa
    May 24th, 2007 20:27
    7

    I made this recipe along with some Miso Soup tonight, and it was delicious!!! Thanks so much for sharing such a beautiful (and gluten-free) recipe.

  8. leah
    January 6th, 2008 12:49
    8

    where can you find rice paper? i really want to try this recipe! do you think it would work with the seaweed they use on sushi? that’s all i can find!

  9. vanessa
    January 6th, 2008 14:12
    9

    Leah, yes, you really need rice paper. Try a Whole Foods-type store or of
    course an asian grocery would have it. It may even be stocked at your
    local supermarket - you might have to ask where it is.

    It looks like this: http://www.importfood.com/nrga1222.html

    Good luck!

  10. leah
    January 6th, 2008 18:24
    10

    Ok, I’ve tried all the local grocery stores and the Whole Foods Market, but there is a Vietnamese part of town where I’ll try. Thanks for the help!

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