Best 5 Chicken Gyoza Recipes

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Are you looking for a delicious and easy-to-make appetizer or snack? Look no further than chicken gyoza! These Japanese dumplings are filled with a savory mixture of chicken, vegetables, and seasonings, and then pan-fried until golden brown. The result is a crispy, flavorful dumpling that can be enjoyed with a variety of dipping sauces. This article provides two recipes for chicken gyoza: a traditional recipe and a vegetarian recipe. The traditional recipe uses ground chicken, while the vegetarian recipe uses a mixture of tofu, mushrooms, and vegetables. Both recipes are easy to follow and can be made in about an hour. So gather your ingredients and get ready to make some delicious chicken gyoza!

Here are our top 5 tried and tested recipes!

GYOZA (JAPANESE DUMPLINGS)



Gyoza (Japanese Dumplings) image

Provided by Sachie Nomura

Categories     Mushroom     Appetizer     Kid-Friendly     Lunch     Meat     Deep-Fry     Cabbage     Pastry     Sugar Conscious     Kidney Friendly     Dairy Free     Peanut Free     Tree Nut Free     Small Plates

Yield 50 dumplings

Number Of Ingredients 15

1 packet 50 gyoza wrappers
Filling:
1/8 cabbage
1 teaspoon salt
400 g lean pork or chicken
1/2 bunch garlic chives, finely chopped
4 dried shiitake mushrooms, soaked in hot water and finely chopped
1 tablespoon grated ginger
2 teaspoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons sesame oil, plus 2 teaspoons extra, for cooking
Pinch of salt
Dipping sauce:
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
La-yu (Japanese chilli oil), optional

Steps:

  • Dice cabbage finely and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt. Give it a bit of a massage. Leave for 10-15 minutes and then squeeze with your hands to remove any moisture.
  • With your hands thoroughly mix together cabbage, ground meat, chives, mushrooms, ginger, soy sauce, sesame oil and pinch of salt.
  • Dry your hands completely (or wrappers will stick). Place a gyoza wrapper on one hand and put 1 teaspoon filling in centre of wrapper.
  • Brush edge of half the wrapper with cold water. Make a semi-circle by folding the wrapper in half. Pinch open sides of wrapper together with your fingers and seal the top.
  • Place a large frying pan over medium-high heat, add 2 teaspoons sesame oil and arrange 20-25 gyoza in pan. Add 200ml water to cover bottom of pan, cover with lid and cook on medium-high heat for 6-7 minutes or until translucent, cooked and no liquid is left in pan. Take off lid and cook for another 30-60 seconds for the bottoms to go crunchy. Cook remaining gyoza or freeze them.
  • Mix together soy sauce, vinegar and chilli oil, if using. Serve gyoza hot with dipping sauce.

PAN-SEARED GYOZA



Pan-Seared Gyoza image

Gyoza are plump, Japanese dumplings typically filled with a mixture of ground pork, cabbage, chives, ginger and garlic. They originated as a spin-off of Chinese jiaozi, but they differ in many ways, particularly in how they are wrapped: Gyoza have very thin wrappers sealed with signature pleats, while Chinese jiaozi have thick wrappers that vary in how they are sealed. Throughout Japan, you can find gyoza steamed, pan-fried and deep-fried, and in recent years, lattice-edged dumplings have become popular. Made by pouring a slurry of flour and water into the pan with the dumplings, the water evaporates and the batter creates a crisp, lacy net. This pan-fried version is adapted from "The Gaijin Cookbook: Japanese Recipes from a Chef, Father, Eater, and Lifelong Outsider," a collection of Japanese recipes from the chef Ivan Orkin, an owner of two ramen shops in New York. (Instructions for creating a lattice are below the recipe.)

Provided by Kiera Wright-Ruiz

Categories     dinner, lunch, dumplings, appetizer, main course

Time 2h

Yield 60 gyoza (4 to 6 servings)

Number Of Ingredients 14

1/2 cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons rice vinegar
1 to 2 teaspoons Japanese chile oil (rayu) or Chinese chile oil (optional), or to taste
1 pound green cabbage (about 1/2 medium head)
4 teaspoons kosher salt
3/4 pound ground pork
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon minced ginger
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon minced garlic
1 cup chopped garlic chives (nira) or regular chives
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
Cornstarch or potato starch, for sprinkling
60 gyoza wrappers (about 12 ounces)
Neutral oil (such as vegetable or canola oil), for frying

Steps:

  • Prepare the gyoza dipping sauce: In a small bowl, whisk together the soy sauce and rice vinegar, plus chile oil, if using. Set aside (makes a generous 1/2 cup).
  • Finely chop the cabbage or process it in a food processor into confetti-size bits, then transfer it to a sieve set over a large bowl. Toss with 2 teaspoons of the salt and let sit for 20 minutes in the sink. Gently press the cabbage to squeeze out as much water as you can.
  • Combine the drained cabbage, pork, ginger, garlic, chives, soy sauce, sesame oil and the remaining 2 teaspoons salt in a large bowl and mix thoroughly just until everything is evenly distributed. (Don't overdo it: Too much handling and the fat in the pork will begin to melt.)
  • Here's where you want to employ some extra hands to help you: Fill a small bowl with water. Sprinkle a rimmed sheet pan or two with cornstarch or potato starch to prevent the finished gyoza from sticking. For each gyoza, place a wrapper in the palm of your hand and spoon about 1 1/2 teaspoons of the filling into the center. Use the back of the spoon to smoosh it lightly (it should fill about half the wrapper). You don't want the filling to run to the edges, but you also don't want it sitting in a fat clump in the middle. Dip your finger into the water and run it along the perimeter of one half of the wrapper. Now fold the wet edge of the wrapper over to meet the dry edge. Crimp the edges together at one corner, then proceed around the dumpling, using your finger to push the dough into little pleats on one side and pressing them against the other side to seal it. (If you need more guidance, there are hundreds of gyoza-folding videos online.) Place the gyoza on the sheet pan as you finish them. If your gyoza seem to be sticking to one another, sprinkle each layer of gyozas with potato or cornstarch.
  • To pan-fry the gyoza, you will need a lidded 10-inch nonstick pan or a well-seasoned carbon steel pan. (You could also use whatever skillet you have, but increase the oil and keep a close eye on the gyoza.) Heat 1 tablespoon neutral oil in the pan over medium heat. When hot, add 10 to 15 gyoza, flat-side down, and cook until browned on the bottoms, 2 to 3 minutes. Add enough water to come just under a quarter of the way up the gyoza (about 1/2 cup, depending on how many gyoza you have in the pan), cover, and let the water cook away until the pan is dry and the gyoza wrappers have softened completely, 3 to 4 minutes. Remove the lid, increase the heat to medium-high, and let the gyoza crisp up on the bottoms for another minute or two, depending on how crisp you like them. Serve immediately with the dipping sauce and additional chile oil. Wipe the pan clean and cook the remaining gyoza. (Alternately, uncooked gyoza can be frozen on a baking sheet in a single layer until firm and then stored in resealable plastic bags for a couple months. To cook frozen gyoza, add a second batch of water in step 4 after the first batch evaporates.)

GYOZA



Gyoza image

Learn to make these authentic Japanese meat or vegetable dumplings, known as yaki gyoza, with our step-by-step guide

Provided by Yuki Gomi

Categories     Buffet, Canapes, Dinner, Lunch, Side dish, Snack, Starter, Supper

Time 50m

Yield 26 gyoza

Number Of Ingredients 19

2 tbsp cornflour
26 ready-made gyoza skins, defrosted if frozen (see tip)
2-3 tbsp vegetable oil
4 spring onions, ends trimmed, roughly chopped
2 large leaves of Savoy or pointed cabbages, hard stem removed, roughly chopped
a 1½cm piece of ginger, peeled and chopped
1 garlic clove
50g water chestnuts, about 5 (drained weight)
2 tsp soy sauce
2 tsp oyster sauce
1 tsp cooking saké
½ tsp sesame oil
140g minced pork or chicken
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp rice vinegar
2 tsp sesame oil
2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp Yuzu juice
2 tsp peanut oil

Steps:

  • Put the spring onions, cabbage, ginger and garlic in a food processor, and whizz to a fine mix (or finely chop by hand).
  • Add the water chestnuts and pulse to chop, but not too finely - these will add a nice crunchy texture. Add the soy sauce, oyster sauce, sake, sesame oil and a pinch of salt, and whizz again.
  • Tip the ingredients into a bowl and add the minced pork or chicken. Mix by hand until well combined. Chill until ready to use.
  • Have a pot of water to hand. Sprinkle the cornflour onto a plate. To assemble the gyoza, hold the dumpling skin in the palm of one hand and put a heaped teaspoon of the filling onto the centre of the skin.
  • Dip your finger in the water and wipe around the edge of the skin - this will moisten it and help the edges stick together.
  • Bring the edges of the skin together. Pinch pleats along one side, then press each pleat against the opposite flat side of the skin. With each pinch make sure that you are sealing the parcel and keeping the filling in the centre. Put each gyoza onto the plate dusted with cornflour. Can be covered with cling film and chilled for up to 8 hrs.
  • Cook the gyoza in batches. Heat a non-stick frying pan with 1 tbsp vegetable oil. Brush off any excess cornflour from the bases of the dumplings. Fry the gyoza on one side only - don't turn them over, you just want one crispy side. They should be golden brown after about 2 mins.
  • Add a good splash of water to the pan and cover with a steaming lid or a large sheet of foil with a few holes poked in the top. Cook over a medium heat for 3-5 mins until the water has evaporated and the gyoza filling is cooked through. Set aside while you cook the rest.
  • Mix all the dipping sauce ingredients and serve alongside the dumplings in dipping bowls. You can serve with both or just one dipping sauce.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 197 calories, Fat 8 grams fat, SaturatedFat 2 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 23 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 1 grams sugar, Fiber 1 grams fiber, Protein 8 grams protein, Sodium 1.4 milligram of sodium

GYOZA



Gyoza image

I learned this recipe for pot stickers while living in Japan. They're great hot or cold, and may be eaten plain or with the dipping sauce. Any ground meat can be substituted for pork.

Provided by Mersi

Categories     Main Dish Recipes     Dumpling Recipes

Time 45m

Yield 10

Number Of Ingredients 12

1 tablespoon sesame oil
2 cups chopped cabbage
¼ cup chopped onion
1 clove garlic, chopped
¼ cup chopped carrot
½ pound ground pork
1 egg
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 (10 ounce) package wonton wrappers
¼ cup water
¼ cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons rice vinegar

Steps:

  • Heat sesame oil in a large skillet over medium high heat. Mix in cabbage, onion, garlic and carrot. Cook and stir until cabbage is limp. Mix in ground pork and egg. Cook until pork is evenly brown and egg is no longer runny.
  • Preheat vegetable oil in a large skillet over medium high heat.
  • Place approximately 1 tablespoon of the cabbage and pork mixture in the center of each wrapper. Fold wrappers in half over filling, and seal edges with moistened fingers.
  • In the preheated vegetable oil, cook gyoza approximately 1 minute per side, until lightly browned. Place water into skillet and reduce heat. Cover and allow gyoza to steam until the water is gone.
  • In a small bowl, mix soy sauce and rice vinegar. Use the mixture as a dipping sauce for the finished wrappers.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 183.6 calories, Carbohydrate 18.5 g, Cholesterol 37.5 mg, Fat 8.5 g, Fiber 1.2 g, Protein 7.9 g, SaturatedFat 2.4 g, Sodium 546.3 mg, Sugar 1 g

CHICKEN GYOZA



Chicken Gyoza image

This is a very basic chicken gyoza with shredded cabbage. You may add chives or green onion if you'd like.

Provided by MoonglowGardens

Categories     Lunch/Snacks

Time 25m

Yield 36 gyozas, 3 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 8

1 lb ground chicken
1 cup shredded cabbage
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon sesame oil
1 tablespoon sake
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon onion powder
36 wonton wrappers

Steps:

  • 1. Combine all ingredients. Pipe 1 tablespoon filling onto each won ton wrap.
  • 2. In batches of 12, lightly pan-fry, add 1/2 cup water and a tablespoon of sesame oil.
  • 3. Steam for 6 minutes.
  • 4. Uncover, and let water steam off.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 521.1, Fat 10.7, SaturatedFat 2.1, Cholesterol 114.6, Sodium 1005.8, Carbohydrate 58.8, Fiber 2.5, Sugar 1.4, Protein 43

Tips:

  • Choose the right gyoza wrappers. Look for wrappers that are thin and pliable, with a slight sheen. Avoid wrappers that are too thick or dry, as they will be difficult to work with and may not cook evenly.
  • Make sure your filling is well-seasoned. The filling is the heart of the gyoza, so make sure it is packed with flavor. Use a variety of seasonings, such as soy sauce, ginger, garlic, and sesame oil.
  • Don't overfill the gyoza wrappers. Too much filling will make the gyoza difficult to fold and seal. Aim for about 1 tablespoon of filling per wrapper.
  • Fold the gyoza carefully. There are many different ways to fold gyoza, but the most common method is the half-moon fold. Make sure to seal the edges of the gyoza tightly so that the filling doesn't leak out during cooking.
  • Cook the gyoza in a well-heated pan. A hot pan will help to create a crispy bottom on the gyoza. Be careful not to overcrowd the pan, as this will prevent the gyoza from cooking evenly.
  • Serve the gyoza with your favorite dipping sauce. There are many different dipping sauces that can be used with gyoza, such as soy sauce, vinegar, and chili sauce. Choose a sauce that you enjoy and that complements the flavors of the gyoza.

Conclusion:

Chicken gyoza are a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed as an appetizer, main course, or snack. They are easy to make at home with a few simple ingredients, and they can be customized to your own taste preferences. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced cook, I encourage you to try making chicken gyoza at home. You won't be disappointed!

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