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The [[Japanese language|Japanese]] word ''gyōza'' (ギョーザ, ギョウザ) was derived from the reading of 餃子 in the [[Shandong]] Chinese dialect (giaozi) and is written using the same Chinese characters. The selection of characters indicates that the word is of non-Japanese origin.
The [[Japanese language|Japanese]] word ''gyōza'' (ギョーザ, ギョウザ) was derived from the reading of 餃子 in the [[Shandong]] Chinese dialect (giaozi) and is written using the same Chinese characters. The selection of characters indicates that the word is of non-Japanese origin.


The most prominent differences between Japanese-style gyōza and Chinese-style jiaozi are the rich [[garlic]] flavor, which is less noticeable in the Chinese version, the light seasoning of Japanese gyōza with salt and soy sauce, and the fact that gyōza wrappers are much thinner. Of course, jiaozi vary greatly across regions within China, so these differences are not always substantial. Gyōza are usually served with soy-based [[tare sauce]] seasoned with [[rice vinegar]] and/or [[chili oil]] (''[[rāyu]]'' in Japanese, ''làyóu'' (辣油) in Mandarin Chinese). The most common recipe is a mixture of [[mincing|minced]] [[chicken]], [[cabbage]], [[Allium tuberosum|Asian chives]], and [[sesame oil]], and/or [[garlic]], and/or [[ginger]], which is then wrapped into thinly rolled [[dough]] skins. In essence, gyōza are similar in shape to [[pierogi]].
The most prominent differences between Japanese-style gyōza and Chinese-style jiaozi are the rich [[garlic]] flavor, which is less noticeable in the Chinese version, the light seasoning of Japanese gyōza with salt and soy sauce, and the fact that gyōza wrappers are much thinner. Of course, jiaozi vary greatly across regions within China, so these differences are not always substantial. Gyōza are usually served with soy-based [[tare sauce]] seasoned with [[rice vinegar]] and/or [[chili oil]] (''[[rāyu]]'' in Japanese, ''làyóu'' (辣油) in Mandarin Chinese). The most common recipe is a mixture of [[mincing|minced]] [[chicken]], [[cabbage]], [[Allium tuberosum|Asian chives]], and [[sesame oil]], and/or [[garlic]], and/or [[ginger]],{{fact}} which is then wrapped into thinly rolled [[dough]] skins. In essence, gyōza are similar in shape to [[pierogi]].


Gyōza can be found in supermarkets and restaurants throughout Japan. Pan-fried gyōza are sold as a side dish in many ''[[ramen]]'' and [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese restaurant]]s.
Gyōza can be found in supermarkets and restaurants throughout Japan. Pan-fried gyōza are sold as a side dish in many ''[[ramen]]'' and [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese restaurant]]s.

Revision as of 18:10, 31 August 2016

Jiaozi
Ten steamed jiaozi (zhengjiao) with peanut dipping sauce
TypeDumpling
Place of originChina
Region or stateEast Asia and worldwide
Main ingredientsDough, ground meat or vegetables
Jiaozi
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese饺子
Traditional Chinese餃子
Literal meaning"Little horn" (from jiǎo 角)
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinjiǎozi
IPA[tɕjàʊtsɨ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationgáau jí
Jyutpinggaau2-zi2
Southern Min
Hokkien POJkiáu
Alternative Chinese name
Simplified Chinese锅贴
Traditional Chinese鍋貼
Literal meaningpot sticker
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinguōtiē
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationwō tip
Jyutpingwo1 tip3
Southern Min
Hokkien POJ[ue-tah or e-tah or 煎餃 (chian-kiáu)] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 20) (help)
Korean name
Hangul교자
Hanja餃子
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationGyoja
McCune–ReischauerKyoja
Japanese name
Kanji餃子
Kanaギョーザ, ギョウザ
Transcriptions
Revised Hepburngyōza
Nepali name
Nepaliम:म: or ममचा

Jiaozi (Chinese: 饺子) are a kind of Chinese dumpling, commonly eaten in East Asia. They are one of the major foods eaten during the Chinese New Year and year-round in the northern provinces. Though considered part of Chinese cuisine, jiaozi are popular in other parts of Asia and in Western countries.

Jiaozi typically consist of a ground meat and/or vegetable filling wrapped into a thinly rolled piece of dough, which is then sealed by pressing the edges together or by crimping.

Origin and custom

Pottery dumpling and delicacies from a Tang Dynasty tomb

In China, there are several different folk stories explaining the origin of jiaozi and its name.

Traditionally, jiaozi were thought to be invented during the era of the Eastern Han (AD 25 - 220)[1][2] by Zhang Zhongjing [3] who was a great practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine. Jiaozi were originally referred to as "tender ears" (Chinese: 娇耳; pinyin: jiao'er) because they were used to treat frostbitten ears. Zhang Zhongjing was on his way home during wintertime, when he found many common people had frostbitten ears, because they did not have warm clothes and sufficient food. He treated these poor people by stewing lamb, peppers, and some warming medicines in a pot, chopped them, and used them to fill small dough wrappers. He boiled these dumplings and gave them with the broth to his patients, until the coming of the Chinese New Year. In order to celebrate the New Year as well as recovering from frostbitten ears, people imitated Zhang's recipe to make Jiao'er.[4]

Other theories suggest that jiaozi may have derived from dumplings in Western Asia. In the Western Han dynasty (206 BC - AD 9) jiaozi (饺子) were called Jiaozi (角子). During the Three Kingdoms period (AD 220 - 280), the book Guang Ya (广雅) written by Zhang Yi ( 张揖) mentions jiaozi. Yan Zitui (颜子推) during the Northern Qi dynasty (AD 550 - 577) wrote: "Today the jiaozi, shaped like a crescent moon, is a common food in the world." Six Dynasties Turfan tombs contained dumplings.[5][6] Later in the Tang Dynasty (AD 618 - 907), jiaozi become more popular, called Bian Shi ( 扁食). Chinese archaeologists have found a bowl of jiaozi in the Tang Dynasty tombs in Turpan.[7] 7th or 8th Century dumplings and wontons were found in Turfan.[8]

Jiaozi may also be named because they are horn-shaped. The Chinese word for "horn" is jiao (Chinese: ; pinyin: jiǎo), and jiaozi was originally written with the Chinese character for "horn", but later it was replaced by the specific character , which has the food radical on the left and the phonetic component jiāo () on the right.[9]

At the same time, jiaozi look like yuan bao silver or gold ingots used as currency during the Ming Dynasty, and as the name sounds like the word for the earliest paper money, serving them is believed to bring prosperity.[10] Many families eat these at midnight on Chinese New Year's Eve. Some cooks will even hide a clean coin inside a jiaozi for the lucky to find.[11]

Nowadays, jiaozi are eaten year-round, and can be eaten for breakfast, lunch or dinner. They can be served as an appetizer, a side dish, or as the main course. In China, sometimes jiaozi is served as a last course during restaurant meals. As a breakfast dish, jiaozi are prepared alongside xiaolongbao at inexpensive roadside restaurants. Typically, they are served in small steamers containing ten pieces each. Although mainly serving jiaozi to breakfast customers, these small restaurants keep them hot on steamers and ready to eat all day. Jiaozi are always served with a soy sauce-based dipping sauce that may include vinegar, garlic, ginger, rice wine, hot sauce, and sesame oil.

Types

A plate of boiled dumplings (shuijiao) and sauce

Chinese dumplings (jiaozi) may be divided into various types depending on how they are cooked:

  • Boiled dumplings (Chinese: 水餃; pinyin: shuǐjiǎo; lit. 'water dumpling')
  • Steamed dumplings (Chinese: 蒸餃; pinyin: zhēngjiǎo; lit. 'steam dumpling')
  • Pan fried dumplings (Chinese: 鍋貼; pinyin: guōtiē; lit. 'pan stick', also referred to as Chinese: 煎餃; pinyin: jiānjiǎo; lit. 'dry-fried dumplings').

Dumplings that use egg rather than dough to wrap the filling are called "egg dumplings" (Chinese: 蛋餃; pinyin: dànjiǎo; lit. 'egg dumpling').

Fillings

As a dish prepared at home, each family has its own preferred method of making them, using favorite fillings, with types and methods of preparation varying widely from region to region.Common dumpling meat fillings include pork, mutton, beef, chicken, fish, and shrimp, which are usually mixed with chopped vegetables. Popular vegetable fillings include napa cabbage, scallion (spring onions), leek, celery, mushroom and garlic chives.

Folding technique

There are many ways to fold jiaozi. Basically, steps for folding the skin includes putting a single pleat in the middle, putting multiple pleats along the edge, making a wavy edge like a pie crust, turning a pleated edge in toward the body resulting in a rounded edge, and putting both ends together resulting in a round shape.[12] Different shapes of Jiaozi require different folding techniques, but the most famous and common technique is the pinched-edge fold.[13] Take a wrapper and put one tablespoon of filling into the center of the wrapper. Fold a half of edge to the other half. Use left thumb and forefinger to pinch one side of the half-moon wrapper, and then use right thumb to push the inside skin outward, right forefinger to make outside skin into small pleats. Use right thumb to clench those pleats. Repeat these steps to the other side of the wrapper, and make sure to clench the seal of Jiaozi.[14] This is crescent-shaped jiaozi, the most popular shape in China.

Variations

Gaau ji

Gaau ji (traditional Chinese: 餃子; simplified Chinese: 饺子; pinyin: jiǎozi; Cantonese Yale: gáau jí) are standard fare in dim sum. The immediate noted difference to jiaozi is that they are smaller and wrapped in a thinner translucent skin, and usually steamed. The smaller size and the thinner wrapper make the dumplings easier to cook through with steaming. In contrast to jiaozi, gaau ji are rarely home-made because the wrapper, which needs to be thin but tough enough to not break, is more difficult to make. Just like jiaozi, many types of fillings exist, with the most common type being ha gow (simplified Chinese: 虾饺; traditional Chinese: 蝦餃; Cantonese Yale: hā gáau; lit. 'shrimp dumplings'), but fillings can include scallop, chicken, tofu, and mixed vegetables; dim sum restaurants often feature their own house specials or innovations. Dim sum chefs and artists often use ingredients in new or creative ways, or draw inspiration from other Chinese culinary traditions, such as Chaozhou, Hakka, or Shanghai. More creative chefs may even create fusion jioazi by using elements from other cultures, such as Japanese (teriyaki) or Southeast Asian (satay or curry), while upscale restaurants may use expensive or exotic ingredients such as lobster, shark fin and bird's nest.

Another popular Cantonese dumpling is jau gok (Chinese: 油角; pinyin: yóu jiǎo; Cantonese Yale: yàuh gok), which are made with glutinous rice dough and deep fried.

Guotie

Making guotie
A plate of potstickers (guotie) and dipping sauce

Guotie (simplified Chinese: 锅贴; traditional Chinese: 鍋貼; pinyin: guōtiē; lit. 'pot stick') is pan-fried jiaozi, also known as potstickers in North America (a direct character translation), or yaki-gyoza in Japan. They are a Northern Chinese style dumpling popular as a street food, appetizer, or side order in Chinese. This dish is sometimes served on a dim sum menu, but may be offered independently. The filling for this dish usually contains pork (sometimes chicken, or beef in Muslim areas), cabbage (or Chinese cabbage and sometimes spinach), scallions (spring or green onions), ginger, Chinese rice wine or cooking wine, and sesame seed oil.

Guotie are shallow-fried in a wok (Mandarin "guo"). A small quantity of water is added and the wok is covered. While the base of the dumplings is fried, the upper part is steamed and this gives a texture contrast typical of Chinese cuisine.

An alternative method is to steam in a wok and then fry to crispness on one side in a shallow frying pan.

Exactly the same dumpling is boiled in plenty of water to make jiaozi and both are eaten with a dipping sauce or chilli paste.

Three or five folds are made on one side of the round wrapper that is rolled so that the edges are thinner than the middle. This gives the base a large surface area that helps to give the dumpling stability to stand up in the pan.

The Chinese method of preparing the dough is to pour boiling water onto the flour and letting stand for five minutes and then adding a small quantity of cold water. This helps to activate the gluten in the dough.

Other names for guotie:

History

Guotie is said to date back over four millennia. However, the first mention in literature dates back to the Song Dynasty (960–1280 AD) in ancient China reporting guotie as being exceptionally good for the human soul.

7th or 8th century old dumplings and wontons were found in Turfan.[16]

Gyōza

Hamamatsu gyōza

The Japanese word gyōza (ギョーザ, ギョウザ) was derived from the reading of 餃子 in the Shandong Chinese dialect (giaozi) and is written using the same Chinese characters. The selection of characters indicates that the word is of non-Japanese origin.

The most prominent differences between Japanese-style gyōza and Chinese-style jiaozi are the rich garlic flavor, which is less noticeable in the Chinese version, the light seasoning of Japanese gyōza with salt and soy sauce, and the fact that gyōza wrappers are much thinner. Of course, jiaozi vary greatly across regions within China, so these differences are not always substantial. Gyōza are usually served with soy-based tare sauce seasoned with rice vinegar and/or chili oil (rāyu in Japanese, làyóu (辣油) in Mandarin Chinese). The most common recipe is a mixture of minced chicken, cabbage, Asian chives, and sesame oil, and/or garlic, and/or ginger,[citation needed] which is then wrapped into thinly rolled dough skins. In essence, gyōza are similar in shape to pierogi.

Gyōza can be found in supermarkets and restaurants throughout Japan. Pan-fried gyōza are sold as a side dish in many ramen and Chinese restaurants.

The most popular preparation method is the pan-fried style called yaki-gyōza (焼き餃子), in which the dumpling is first fried on one flat side, creating a crispy skin. Then, water is added and the pan sealed with a lid, until the upper part of the dumpling is steamed. Other popular methods include boiled sui-gyōza (水餃子) and deep fried age-gyōza (揚げ餃子).

Store-bought frozen dumplings are often prepared at home by first placing them in a pot of water which is brought to a boil, and then transferring them to a pan with oil to fry the skin.

Momo

The Nepali version is known as momo (Tibetan: མོག་མོག་) The word "momo" comes from a Chinese loanword "momo" (馍馍).[17] which translates to "steamed bread". When preparing momo, flour is filled, most commonly with ground water buffalo meat. Often, ground lamb or chicken meat is used as alternate to water buffalo meat. Finely chopped onion, minced garlic, fresh minced ginger, cumin powder, salt, coriander/cilantro, etc. are added to meat for flavoring. Sauce made from cooked tomatoes flavored with timur (Szechwan pepper), minced red chilies is often served along with momo.

Jiaozi and wonton

Jiaozi should not be confused with wonton; jiaozi have a thicker skin and a relatively flatter, more oblate, double-saucer like shape (similar in shape to ravioli), and are usually eaten with a soy-vinegar dipping sauce (and/or hot chili sauce), while wontons have thinner skin and are usually served in broth. The dough for the jiaozi and wonton wrappers also consist of different ingredients.

See also

2

References

  1. ^ "Frozen ears: The story of gyozas". The Malay Mail. One would always have suspected that the ubiquitous Japanese gyoza originated from China – and one would be completely right, unlike most economists. The origins of the gyoza are said to stem from the treatments invented by Zhang Zhongjing (150 – 219 AD), a Han Dynasty physician born in Nanyang. One of his inventions was the jiaozi (though it was originally called "tender ears") and they were used to treat frostbitten ears during the freezing winters.
  2. ^ "Seeking XLB". The Austin Chronicle. Chinese dumplings are said to have begun near the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty with Zhang Zhongjing (AD 150 - 219), a famous northern Chinese medicinal herbalist known as "The Medicine Saint."
  3. ^ "the origin of Jiaozi". people.com.cn. people.com.cn. Retrieved 2002-02-07.
  4. ^ "你知道冬至为什么吃饺子吗? 医圣张仲景发明". 人民网. 人民网. 23 December 2015.
  5. ^ http://www.thedailymeal.com/archaeologists-ancient-dumplings-xinjiang-china/21615
  6. ^ http://shanghaiist.com/2016/02/15/1700_year_old_dumplings_found_in_xinjiang.php
  7. ^ "饺子(中国传统食物)_百度百科". baike.baidu.com. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  8. ^ Hansen 2012, p. 11.
  9. ^ Norman, Jerry (1988) Chinese, Cambridge University Press, p76-77.
  10. ^ "Steamed pork dumplings 鮮肉大蒸餃". Graceful Cuisine. 19 January 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  11. ^ Simonds, Nina (25 January 1995). "Dumplings, for a Lucky Year of the Pig". New York Times.
  12. ^ "餃子". 百度百科. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  13. ^ Yarvin, Brian (2007). A World of Dumplings. New York: The Countryman Press Woodstock, Verrmont. p. 50. ISBN 9780881507201.
  14. ^ "饺子的N种时尚新奇包法". 百度经验. 31 December 2012.
  15. ^ "What is Peking Ravioli?". About.com. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  16. ^ Hansen 2012, p. 11.
  17. ^ Jīn Péng 金鹏 (ed.): Zàngyǔ jiǎnzhì 藏语简志. Mínzú chūbǎnshè 民族出版社, Beijing 1983, p. 31.