Vietnamese Spring Rolls with Shrimp
Vietnamese Spring Rolls with Shrimp
(Makes 15-20)


1½ cups Thai Basil leaves
1½ cups Cilantro leaves
1½ cups Mint leaves
1 package rice paper wrappers
6 oz rice vermicelli noodles
1¼ lbs medium shrimp, (41-50 shrimp per pound)
1 bunch green onions
1 medium carrot
1 cup bean sprouts
1 lime
1 tblsp fish sauce
1 tsp white sugar
2 cloves garlic, crushed and minced


NOTES: The perfect accompanying side is this delicious peanut sauce! When buying rice paper wrappers remember this: The less ingredients the better (usually tapioca, rice flour water and salt) and the package says product of Vietnam, that being said "Three Ladies" Brand is always a great choice. Same with the rice vermicelli noodles (rice flour, water and salt) and "Three Ladies" Brand you can't go wrong.

Also every 4 or 5 wrapped rolls you do, you may want to replace the water you soak the wrappers in with hotter water. And note that the wrapper will continue absorbing the water while you are building the roll, so if not entirely pliable when you remove from the hot water it should be by the time you start rolling.

 

In a pot of boiling water, add the 6 ounces of rice noodles, cook for 8 minutes, drain immediately and rinse under cool water until cold. The noodles may be stored in the water until your ready to roll the spring rolls (then you drain the water).

De-shell and clean the shrimp, rinse in cold water, and drain completely, a gentle squeeze can get a bit more water out.
I added a tablespoon of ginger syrup, used in cocktails, for a quick marinade with a dash of salt. You can use anything and nothing, from salt and pepper to boiling them plain for 45-60 seconds. I heated up a pan very hot with a couple teaspoons of any high heat oil and fry the shrimp for a minute (30 seconds each side) in small batches, until they are all fried off. Set aside, spread them out, and let them cool. You can also split them in half length-wise if they are large and you are stretching out your supply of shrimp.

In a large glass bowl add the juice of 1 lime, 1 tsp sugar, 1 tablespoon fish sauce and 2 cloves of minced garlic, mix until the sugar dissolves, this is our quick pickling mix, set aside.
Discard the ends of the carrot and the peel, cut into 3 inch long chunks and then cut those in half and make matchsticks out of the carrots. Cut the ends off the green onions, and then cut into 3 inch lengths and then julienne them length-wise. Now add all the julienned/match sticks of vegetables to the large bowl of our pickling mix along with the bean sprouts and mix well.

Mice en place: "gather all of your ingredients", the cleaned leaves of each herb separately in small bowls, the stack of rice wrappers, the rice noodles in their own bowl, the cooked shrimp in their own bowl, a pie plate sized container with warm-medium hot water and a center work area with a damp kitchen towel or lightly wet cutting board.

Dip a single wrapper into the warm/hot water for about 7-8 seconds, place on your damp work surface and first add the noodles to the very center bottom, leaving an inch of plain wrapper below it and on both sides, then place 5 or 6 pieces of the various pickled julienned vegetables on top of the rice noodles, make a quick fold of the edge, from the bottom, over the rice noodles and vegetables, tucking them into their own little section, now place 2 or 3 shrimp down, side by side next to the folded edge in the center of the wrapper, cover the shrimp with a sprig or 2 of cilantro, Thai basil and mint leaves. Now roll the noodle section over the top of the shrimp and herbs and tuck the left then the right sides over and finish rolling from the bottom to the top. If you are not eating these immediately, I'd recommend putting them in Tupperware with layers of parchment paper to keep them from sticking.

Use my Thai peanut sauce as a dip or the traditional Nuac Chom dipping sauce!

Vietnamese Spring Rolls