Best Tibetan Veggie Or Meat Momos Tibetan Dumplings Recipes

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TSAK SHA MOMOS



Tsak Sha Momos image

Momos are shaped like half-moons or like plump round purses. And although they can be made with store-bought wrappers, most Tibetan households here have a small wooden dowel reserved for rolling out the thin rounds of dough. Back in Tibet, wheat was even scarcer than meat, so momos were treats for special occasions like Losar, the Tibetan New Year celebration.

Provided by Julia Moskin

Categories     dinner, dumplings, side dish

Time 1h

Yield 3 to 4 dozen

Number Of Ingredients 9

1 pound ground or finely chopped beef, about 85% lean
1/2 cup minced onion
1/2 cup minced cilantro stems
3 tablespoons minced fresh ginger
2 tablespoons canola oil
2 teaspoons minced garlic
1 1/4 teaspoons salt
About 48 round dumpling or gyoza wrappers (about 3 1/4 inches wide)
Sepen (see recipe) or other hot sauce or soy sauce, for serving

Steps:

  • In a bowl, combine the beef, onion, cilantro, ginger, oil, garlic, salt and 2 tablespoons of water. Using your hands or a spoon, mix lightly but well. Set aside, from 30 minutes to 2 hours, to develop the flavors.
  • Lay 6 wrappers out on a work surface. Spoon about 2 teaspoons of filling onto the upper half of each wrapper. With a damp cloth, lightly moisten the edges of each wrapper and fold up and over the filling into a half-moon, gently pressing the edges to seal. To pleat the sealed edges, start at one tip of the half-moon and make small folds in the dough, pressing them flat as you work your way along the edge. There should be space for about 7 folds. Place finished dumplings on a nonstick surface and cover lightly with damp paper towels. Refrigerate if not cooking immediately.
  • When ready to cook, boil water in the bottom of a large steamer. Spray the steamer tray lightly with nonstick spray and gently add the dumplings, making sure they do not touch. Steam in batches for 10 minutes, until the wrappers are slightly translucent, and serve immediately.
  • To eat, spoon a dab of sauce onto a small plate. Pick up a dumpling and bite off one end; do not let the juice spill out. Carefully suck out the juice, then eat the rest in bites, dipping it into the sauce.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 48, UnsaturatedFat 1 gram, Carbohydrate 6 grams, Fat 1 gram, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 3 grams, SaturatedFat 0 grams, Sodium 61 milligrams, Sugar 0 grams, TransFat 0 grams

TIBETAN VEGGIE OR MEAT MOMO'S (TIBETAN DUMPLINGS)



TIBETAN VEGGIE OR MEAT MOMO'S (TIBETAN DUMPLINGS) image

Categories     Beef     Vegetable     Steam

Yield ~30 momos: for ~4 people

Number Of Ingredients 20

For the dough:
3 cups of flour (all-purpose)
3/4 cup of water
For vegetable momo filling:
Chop all the following ingredients into very, very small pieces:
Two onions
Two inches fresh ginger
Two or three cloves of garlic
A bunch of cilantro
One pound of cabbage
One pound of tofu*
One quarter pound of dark brown mushrooms (I buy them dried from Asian markets)*
Two tablespoons of soy sauce
One teaspoon of chicken, beef or vegetable bouillon
*don't use these if you are making meat momo's
For meat momo filling, add:
One pound of ground beef: This beef replaces the mushrooms and tofu in the vegetable recipe. If you have enough time, you can use un-ground beef and chop the meat into very small pieces.
Dough:
Mix the flour and water very well by hand and keep adding water until you make a pretty smooth ball of dough. Then knead the dough very well until the dough is flexible. Now leave your dough in the pot with the lid on while you prepare the rest of the ingredients. You should not let the dough dry out, or it will be hard to work with.
For both kinds of momo's, put all of the ingredients in a pot or big bowl, then add a teaspoon of bouillon and two tablespoons of soy sauce. Mix everything together very well. (If you are making meat momo's with ground beef, you may need to use your hands to mix it up.)

Steps:

  • (See http://www.yowangdu.com -- for photos, for round momo shape directions, and for more Tibetan recipes.) To shape the dumplings, place the dough on a chopping board and use a rolling pin to roll it out quite thinly. It should not be so thin that you can see through it when you pick it up, nor should it be quite as thick as a floppy disk for a computer. After you have rolled out the dough, you will need to cut it into little circles for each momo. The easiest way to do this is turn a small cup or glass upside down to cut out circles a little smaller than the palm of your hand. Then you are ready to add the filling. I will teach you the easiest momo shape-- the half-moon. You begin by holding the flat circular dough in your left hand and putting a tablespoon of filling in the middle of the dough. Then you have to fold your circle of dough in half, covering over the filling. Now press together the two edges of the half circle so that there is no open edge in your half circle, and the filling is completely enclosed in the dough. You will now have the basic half-moon shape, and you can make your momo pretty by pinching and folding along the curved edge of the half circle. Start at one tip of the half-moon, and fold over a very small piece of dough, pinching it down. Continue folding and pinching from the starting point, moving along the edge until you reach the other tip of the half-moon. As you are making your momo's, you will need to have a non-stick surface and a damp cloth or lid handy to keep the momo's you've made from drying out while you're finishing the others. Finally, you should boil water in a large steamer. Oil the steamer surface lightly so the momos won't stick to the metal, then place as many as you can without touching each other. Steam the momo's for 10 minutes, then serve them hot, with soy sauce or hot sauce of your choice to dip them in.

TIBETAN MOMO (A DIM SUM DUMPLING FROM TIBET)



Tibetan Momo (A Dim Sum Dumpling from Tibet) image

Love dim sum, dumplings of all types and momo is excellent. Found the recipes at recipecottage after watching restaurant makeover and Chef Lynn's reaction to it. I actually use bison because of its leanness since i cannot find yak. Simple flavors but that is why it is important to use enough ginger and garlic. Test the momo by dropping a mini pea size ball into the oil and correct seasonings if needed. I like a strong ginger flavor. Will post ingredients for Sherpa Momo and Nepalese under directions as well, same dough and methods as the Tibetan. Go crazy and use vegetarian or whatever you like, but I think the first one is the best to try and get the authentic Tibetan taste to build on. If you want a dipping sauce with them, this seems like a good one: Recipe #245575 final serving amounts are guesstimates, depends on the size you make them.

Provided by MarraMamba

Categories     Meat

Time 35m

Yield 30 dumplings, 4-8 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 8

2 medium onions, finely chopped
1 lb yak meat, finely chopped (or ground beef bison or chicken)
2 -5 cm minced ginger or 2 -5 cm galangal
2 tablespoons soy sauce
3 minced garlic cloves
salt
4 cups flour
oil or vegetable oil cooking spray

Steps:

  • Mix the flour with enough cold water to make a fairly stiff dough.
  • Knead it well and roll small pieces into thin rounds,about 3 1/2 inches in diameter.
  • Mix meat, onion, garlic, soy sauce, ginger and salt together.
  • Put a teaspoon of meat mixture in each little pancake and fold over. Pinch, flute or pleat the edges together so the momo looks like a half-moon or is round shaped.
  • Lightly coat a bamboo or metal steamer with vegetable spray and arrange momo so they do not touch. Cover and steam over boiling water for l0-15 minutes.
  • Momo also can be cooked in broth and served as a soup or fried.
  • NEPALESE meat filling.
  • 1 cup buffalo meat, ground or minced.
  • l large onion, minced.
  • 2-3 cloves garlic.
  • 2.5 cm. piece ginger.
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt.
  • 1/2 teaspoon chili powder.
  • 1/2 teaspoon turmeric powder.
  • 1 tablespoon ghee or clarified butter.
  • 1/2 teaspoon cumin seed powder.
  • oil or vegetable oil spray.
  • 2 cups+ flour.
  • SHERPA Meat Filling.
  • 4 chicken breast halves,boneless, minced.
  • 2 minced onions.
  • 5 cloves garlic (or to taste), diced.
  • 3 tbs ginger, to taste, or one large piece diced.
  • 1-2 tablespoons soy sauce.
  • salt, paper and accent to taste.
  • 1 teaspoon garam masala (optional).

Nutrition Facts : Calories 485.8, Fat 1.3, SaturatedFat 0.2, Sodium 507.8, Carbohydrate 101.8, Fiber 4.4, Sugar 2.9, Protein 14.6

SHAMEY MOMOS (VEGETABLE MOMOS)



Shamey Momos (Vegetable Momos) image

A blend of tofu, bok choy, and shiitake mushrooms make for light and delicious Tibetan dumplings. These shamey momos or vegetable momos are

Provided by Lobsang Wangdu

Yield Makes about 25 momos

Number Of Ingredients 14

2 cups all-purpose flour
¾ cup water
½ large onion (we use red onion)
1½ Tbsp. fresh ginger (measured after mincing)
4 garlic cloves
½ cup cilantro
1 cup baby bok choy (about 2 clusters) or cabbage
5 oz. extra-firm tofu
2 stalks green onion
6 large shiitake mushrooms (you can substitute white mushrooms)
1 Tbsp. salt, or more to taste
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
1½ tsp. vegetable boullion
¼ cup cooking oil (we use canola)

Steps:

  • Mix the all-purpose flour and the water very well by hand and knead until you make a smooth ball of dough.
  • Knead the dough very well until the dough is quite flexible (about 5 minutes).
  • Leave your dough in the bowl, covered, or in a plastic bag while you prepare the rest of the ingredients. You should not let the dough dry out or it will be hard to work with.
  • Chop the onion, garlic, ginger, cilantro, bok choy, green onions, and mushrooms into very, very small pieces.
  • Pre-cook the tofu and mushrooms, with the goal of cooking the water out of them. To do this, heat ¼ cup of cooking oil in a pan on high. Add chopped tofu and cook on medium-high for 2 minutes, until the edges are brown. Add the chopped mushrooms and cook another 3-4 minutes on medium high.
  • Cool the mushrooms and tofu then mix very well with the other filling ingredients (if the mushrooms and tofu are not cooled, the green of the other vegetables will not come out correctly).
  • Place the dough on a chopping board and use a rolling pin to roll it out quite thin, about ⅛ inch thick. It should not be so thin that you can see through it when you pick it up.
  • After you have rolled out the dough, you will need to cut it into little circles for each momo.
  • Method 1: The easiest way to do this is to turn a small cup or glass upside-down to cut out circles about the side of the palm of your hand. We use a cup 3 and ⅓ inches in diameter. That way, you don't have to worry about making good circles of dough, because each one will be the same size and shape. If you make circles this way, you may want to thin the edges of the circle a little bit before adding the filling by pinching your way around the edge of the circle. The idea is to make the edges thinner so that when you fold the dough there won't be a giant glob of dough in the folded places.
  • Method 2: Of course, you can also make the circles by the more difficult traditional way. For this, first pinch off a small ball of dough. Next, use your palm to flatten out the ball. Then, flatten out the dough into a circle with a polling pin, making the edges more thin than the middle. This method is much harder to do and takes more time, though many Tibetans still use this method. In this case, the edges are pre-thinned so there is no need to thin them anymore.
  • Now that you have a small, flat, circular piece of dough, you are ready to add the filling and make the mom shapes. These are many different choices for mom shapes, but for these veggie momos we will use a very common and pretty half-moon shape. This is one of the easier shapes to make.
  • For this style, you begin by holding the flat circular dough in your left hand and putting about a tablespoon of veggie filling in the middle of the dough. It can be challenging if you put too much, so at first you may want to start with a little less filling.
  • Beginning anywhere on the circle, pinch the edge of the dough together. Now you will fold in a small piece of dough from the "top" edge of the circle and pinch it down against the "bottom" edge of the circle. (Where the "bottom" half of the circle is the half facing you when the mom is in your hand.) The "bottom" edge of the circle-the edge nearest you-stays relatively flat and doesn't get folded. All the folding happens only on one side of the momo. Continue folding and pitching from the starting point, moving along the edge until you reach the other tip of the half-moon. The important point is to close all the openings well so that you don't lose the juice while cooking.
  • As you are making your momos, you will need to have a nonstick surface and a damp cloth or lid handy to keep the momos you've made from drying out while you're finishing the others. You can lay the momos in the lightly greased trays of your steamer and keep the lid on them, or you can lay them on wax paper and cover them with the damp cloth.
  • Boil water in a large steamer. (Tibetans often use a double-decker steamer to make many momos at one time.)
  • Oil the steamer surface lightly before putting the momos in, so they won't stick to the metal. (We use spray oil.)
  • Place the momos a little distance apart in the steamer and they will expand a little bit when they cook. They should not be touching.
  • Add the momos after the water is boiling.
  • With the water boiling on high heat, steam the momos for 10-12 minutes.
  • As long as the dough is cooked, they are done, as the veggie filling hardly needs to cook more.
  • Serve the momos right off the stove with the dipping sauce of your choice. At home, we mix together soy sauce and Patak's Lime Relish, which we get in Indian stores or the Asian section of supermarkets.

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