Ingredients
20 | Dumpling wrappers, also known as chaio tzu or gow gee wrappers which are available in Asian stores |
150 g | Goat's milk cheese |
½ | Lemons, juiced |
½ tsp | Cracked black pepper |
4 sprigs | Fresh rosemary, leaves stripped |
300 g | Butter, diced |
20 | Raw prawn cutlets, peeled and de-veined (Main) |
1 cup | Raisins, hydrated in English breakfast tea |
½ cup | Broad beans, peeled and blanched |
½ | Pine nuts, toasted |
¾ cup | Parmesan cheese, grated |
Directions
- Wipe the bench with a damp cloth, stretch a sheet of cling film over it, lightly dust with cornflour, stretch a gow gee wrapper in your hand and lay it on the film.
- Cover with another sheet of cling film to keep the wrappers from drying out.
- In a mixing bowl, cream the goats' cheese, lemon and milled pepper together.
- Place a teaspoonful on the wrapper, dampen with water around the filling and fold over to create a half-moon shape, sealing the edges.
- Place the butter and rosemary in a saucepan, simmer until you smell the rosemary and the leaves start to crisp, and strain immediately into a cold saucepan to stop the cooking process.
- Bring a saucepan of salted water to the boil, pop in the agnoletti and cook for three minutes, then drain and coat in a little of the rosemary butter.
- In a cold, large non-stick saute pan, add a little of the rosemary butter, drop in the prawns, turn the heat to high and cook them for three to four minutes each side.
- Arrange the prawns and agnoletti on warmed pasta plates, scatter over the raisins, pinenuts and broad beans, spoon over the warmed rosemary butter and top with grated Parmesan.