- home |
- My Recipe Page |
- Add Your Recipe |
- My Settings |
- Sign In |
- Sign Up
| 1 | pound | shrimp | cleaned and deveined |
| 2 | each | bacon | strips |
| 4 | each | water chestnuts | |
| 1 | x | salt | |
| 1 | x | black pepper | |
| 1 | each | egg | beaten |
| 2 | tablespoons | cornstarch | |
| 1 | x | vegetable oil | for deep frying |
Mince shrimp, bacon, onion or water chestnuts together until fine.
Place mixture in bowl.
Remove crusts from bread.
Dice bread into very fine cubes.
Place cubes in shrimp mixture.
Add salt, pepper, egg and 2 tablespoons corn starch to mixture.
Combine thoroughly.
Fill a wok halfway up with oil. Heat oil on highest heat setting.
When you think oil is sufficiently heated, test the temperature of it with a small piece of bread crust.
If it frys to a golden brown colour, then oil is ready for deep frying.
If bread crust fails to brown readily, then oil is not ready yet.
If bread crust frys to a dark brown, then oil is too hot.
Shut heat off of wok, allow oil to cool 5 minutes before turning heat on again.
Retest oil with bread crust to see if it is of proper temperature.
When oil is ready for deep frying, take 2 teaspoons, dip into shrimp mixtrue and for a 1 inch diametere ball.
Drop ball into hot oil.
Place about 8 balls into the hot oil.
Allow each ball to deep fry 3 minutes.
Turn balls so that each will fry to a golden brown colour.
Remove balls to paper toweling to drain excess oil from them.
Repeat procedure for deep frying rest of shrimp mixture until all of the mixture is used up.
Place shrimp balls on a serving platter.
Garnish with parsley or other raw vegetable.
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 2.0g | 3% |
| Saturated Fat 1.0g | 3% |
| Trans Fat 0.0g | |
| Cholesterol 214mg | 71% |
| Sodium 217mg | 9% |
| Total Carbohydrate 14.0g | 5% |
| Dietary Fiber 0.0g | 0% |
| Sugars 0.0g | |
| Protein 21.0g | 42% |
| Vitamin A | 6% | Vitamin C | 17% | |
| Calcium | 4% | Iron | 18% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
How is this calculated?| Not a member? You can still rate this recipe! |
|
Note: You must be a member to submit a review. Please Sign in or Sign Up.
History - Garlic is native to central Asia, but its use spread across the world more than 5000 years ago, before recorded history. It was worshipped by the Egyptians and fed to workers building the Gread Pyramid at Giza, about 2600 BC. ...
i liked the reipe and i printed it i am going to try to cook it
Add your comment