My usual always included one spring roll no matter what else I ordered. It would come with a little bowl of sauce that is slightly sweet & salty, topped with a small bundle of "do chua" (pickled shredded carrots & daikon) then sprinkled with chopped peanuts.
THAT is the sauce that you're supposed to get with your spring rolls when you order in a Vietnamese restaurants, not the peanut sauce, which is Thai.
To make "old-school" spring rolls, you will need:
To make THE sauce, here is my mom's recipe:
Put Hoisin sauce in.Heat through until it starts to bubble a bit. Put in some water and stir well to blend (Put more if you like your sauce more liquid) Take it off the heat & mix in Sriracha hot sauce if you want.
- A big bowl of warm water to soak the rice paper.
- Rice paper
- Lettuce, washed
- Mint leaves, washed & stemmed
- Coriander, washed & stemmed
- Asian Chives, washed (also called Garlic Chives, the part that has no flower bulbs)
- Vermicelli, cooked as according to package, drained thoroughly.
- Pork (optional, cooked & thinly sliced)
- Shrimp (optional, cooked & split horizontally)
To make THE sauce, here is my mom's recipe:
- a dash of olive oil, or canola oil
- a few cloves of garlic
- 1/2 a small onion, sliced
- Hoisin sauce (about 1-2 cups, depends on you)
- a couple of spoons of water
- Sriracha hot sauce (optional)
- Vietnamese "do chua" (optional, you can buy them in Vietnamese food/sandwich stores)
- crushed roasted peanuts
Put Hoisin sauce in.Heat through until it starts to bubble a bit. Put in some water and stir well to blend (Put more if you like your sauce more liquid) Take it off the heat & mix in Sriracha hot sauce if you want.
This is the "old school" version of Vietnamese spring rolls, but of course you can make them with whatever you like. Add julienned green mango, bell pepper, bean sprouts, cooked fish, chicken, or cooked strips of tofu. The sky is the limit!