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Pork & Crab Wontons

ThaiThailandsnack

I first tasted these on a humid Bangkok street corner, where a vendor folded paper-thin skins around a bright, briny mix of minced pork and lump crab, then dropped them into roaring oil until they blistered and curled. Thai wontons are a brilliant adaptation of Chinese dumpling craft, but the local version leans into sweet-savory balance and a lighter hand with aromatics like white pepper, garlic, and a whisper of fish sauce. I make them from scratch because the shop-bought packets you’ll find in supermarket freezers cost nearly five pounds for a dozen, and they are almost always packed with cheap pork extenders, crab-flavour paste, and enough sodium benzoate to preserve them indefinitely. Eating them feels like biting into cardboard. When you mix your own filling, the crab actually tastes like the sea, the pork stays juicy, and the wrapper shatters into delicate flakes rather than turning into a greasy sponge. The most common pitfalls I see are overworking the meat until it becomes rubbery, leaving too much air in the seal so they burst in hot oil, and trying to thaw frozen dumplings before frying. None of those happen when you respect the ratios: keep the filling cold, fold with a light damp fingertip, and freeze them in a single layer before bagging. This recipe scales effortlessly, which means you can spend an afternoon wrapping a proper batch, freeze them in portions, and pull out exactly what you need on a tired weeknight. The result is a crisp, golden snack that tastes like the coast rather than a factory floor.

Nutrition

Per servingCaloriesProteinCarbsFatSat fatFibreSugarSodium
beginner380kcal24g36g14g4g2g4g610mg
intermediate415kcal24g38g18g5g2g3g720mg
expert465kcal24g32g18g4g2g1g810mg

Per serving · Ava-estimated — a guide, not a clinical figure.

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