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Home Asian

Spring Rolls!

By:Nagi
Published:21 Oct '18Updated:11 Oct '22
444 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

You’ve never really had a Spring Roll until you’ve tried homemade!! Way better than your run-of-the-mill suburban Chinese restaurants, this Spring Roll recipe is shatteringly crisp on the outside with a juicy pork, vegetable and mushroom filling. Helpful step-by-step rolling instructions included, to make a pro of you in no time!

This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

Spring Roll recipe

When was the last time you ordered spring rolls at a Chinese restaurant? Did you bite into it and wonder what was actually inside? And if it was a really bad one, you may have even been treated to oil squirting into your mouth when you bit into it.

That pretty much describes the run-of-the-mill spring roll experience at local Chinese restaurants and takeout places in food courts. I mean, you can get truly great spring rolls at “posh” Chinese restaurants, where you can pay $13 for 2 (yes – 2, two, TWO spring rolls).

Or – you can make a whole batch of spring rolls at home for less than $10!

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

Wait a sec. Are these Egg Rolls?

Nope. Egg Rolls are different. We don’t get Egg Rolls here in Australia, but I’ve had my fair share in the States.

Don’t worry Australia, we’re not missing out. Spring Rolls are way better!!They’re shatteringly crispy on the outside whereas Egg Rolls tend to be a bit chewy and also greasier.

Spring Rolls Filling

There’s really no definitive rules about what goes inside Spring Rolls. But typically, you’ll find a mix of some kind of meat (usually ground pork / mince) with finely chopped or shredded vegetables, plus seasoning.

I like to add chopped mushrooms which adds extra umami (savoury flavour) into the filing.

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

Spring Roll Wrappers

Made with wheat flour, spring roll wrappers come broth frozen and refrigerated ready for use. While thin, they are pliable, easy to handle and less fragile than you might imagine.

They come in various sizes, from small squares that make mini spring rolls to the size I’m using here which are 21.5cm/8″ squares that make spring rolls about 10 – 12cm / 4 – 5″ long.

Spring roll wrappers are sold at Asian grocery stores. Though nowadays, Spring Roll wrappers are now widely available in Australia in large supermarkets (Woolworths and Coles, freezer section. ↓↓↓).

I know spring rolls is one of those things that may seem daunting to try your hand at. But it’s actually not that tricky at all. Wrapping spring rolls is more straight forward than Wontons or Gyoza (Japanese dumplings). Plus, the spring roll wrapper is easier to handle than most doughs – it has stretch, you can even scrunch it up, whirl it around and dance around the kitchen with it, then still be able to use it. True story. (I might have done it)

Plus there’s the recipe video too. 🙂 Very handy for demonstrating the spring roll wrapping process.

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

There’s a lot of literature “out there” about how to make the perfect spring rolls. But I really don’t think it’s necessary to write a long list of tips and tricks to make great spring rolls. Just follow the recipe, the steps are perfectly straight forward. 🙂

Healthier BAKED Spring Rolls

For a real-deal spring roll experience, there’s no denying that frying is the way to go. That’s how to make a beautifully golden spring roll that’s flaky and crispy, as it should be (wait until you see the end of the video!).

However, you can most certainly bake them. The best way to bake them is to spray with oil and bake on a rack – no turning required. They will come out golden all over and very crispy. The crispness is just not quite the same delicate flaky crispness that you get from deep frying, but it is undeniably crispy. The main difference is the flavour – when you bake, the flavour of the spring roll wrapping is more dominant than when fried i.e. with fried spring rolls, you can taste the filling more.

Here’s a comparison of baked vs fried: the top is the baked one, the bottom is the fried one. You can see how the fried one is a more even golden colour. But there’s not that much difference!

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

Sauce for Spring Rolls

Spring Rolls are usually served with Sweet and Sour Sauce. it’s truly worth making your own – it’s really quick and easy! I’ve popped the recipe in the notes of the recipe.

One bite of these spring rolls, and you will be amazed. It’s how spring rolls should taste. You can really taste the filling. It has real texture, rather than just being some sort of mystery mush.

It isn’t greasy, you won’t get any squirts of oil when you bite into your homemade spring rolls.

And who cares if your spring rolls come out a bit wonky and lopsided? That isn’t going to affect the flavour AT ALL! – Nagi xx

More great Yum Cha / Dim Sum Recipes

  • Potstickers (Chinese pan fried dumplings)

  • Gyoza (Japanese dumplings)

  • Shumai (Japanese steamed dumplings on my mother’s site, RecipeTin Japan!)

  • Chinese Steamed BBQ Pork Buns

  • Browse the Yum Cha recipe collection, all Chinese Recipes and Asian Takeout copycat recipes

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com
You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! www.recipetineats.com

Watch How To Make It

This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

You've never really had a Spring Roll until you've tried homemade ones. With the quick video tutorial, you'll master it in no time! recipetineats.com

Spring Roll recipe

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Total: 30 minutes mins
Starter
Chinese
4.88 from 108 votes
Servings15 – 20
Tap or hover to scale
Print
  • 1251
Recipe video above. Everybody’s favourite Spring Rolls, made at home! Nothing like the ones at suburban Chinese takeout joints with unidentifiable mushy fillings and overly greasy. These are shatteringly crisp and golden, just like they should be, and you will actually be able to taste the filling!

Ingredients

Filling:

  • 1 tbsp oil
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely chopped or minced
  • 400 g / 13 oz pork mince (ground pork), or chicken or turkey
  • 6 dried shiitake mushrooms soaked in boiling water OR 8 fresh (Note 1)
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded carrot (1 large or 2 small)
  • 1 1/2 cups (heaped) bean sprouts
  • 1 1/2 cups (packed) shredded green cabbage (any type is fine)
  • 1 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
  • 1 1/2 tbsp Oyster Sauce
  • 2 tsp soy sauce (light or all purpose is best, dark is also ok)

Spring Rolls:

  • 15 – 20 spring roll wrappers, defrosted (21.5 cm / 8” squares) OR 35 – 40 small spring roll wrappers (Note 2), or Egg Roll wrappers to make Egg Rolls (Note 6)
  • 2 tsp cornflour (for sealing rolls)
  • 1 tbsp water (for sealing rolls)
  • Oil for frying (I use vegetable) OR oil spray for baking (I use canola)

Sweet and Sour Sauce (makes ~ 2/3 cup):

  • 2 tsp cornflour/ cornstarch
  • 2 tbsp water
  • ½ cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1/3 cup brown sugar (adjust to taste)
  • 2 tbsp tomato ketchup
  • 2 tsp soy sauce

Instructions

FILLING:

  • Heat oil in a skillet or wok over high heat. Add garlic, stir quickly, then add pork. Cook, breaking it up as you go, until it turns white.
  • Add carrot, bean sprouts, cabbage and mushrooms. Cook for 3 minutes or until vegetables are wilted. Add cornflour, soy sauce and Oyster sauce, cook for 1 minute until the liquid is gone. The Filling should not be watery, it should be kind of sticky (watery filling = soggy spring rolls = ? ).
  • Cool Filling (super speedy: spread on tray, refrigerate 5 minutes). (Hot filling = spring rolls burst open = ? )

SPRING ROLL:

  • Mix cornflour and water in a small bowl (for sealing the rolls).
  • Carefully peel off one spring roll wrapper, keep the others covered under a damp tea towel.
  • Place the wrapper with the SMOOTH SIDE DOWN (Note 3) in a diamond position. Place a very heaped dessert spoon of filling on the bottom. Roll up halfway, fold sides in, then finish rolling. Use cornflour sludge to seal. (Watch VIDEO below). They should be about 12 cm / 5″ long, 2.5cm / 1″ wide once wrapped.
  • Pour enough oil in a wok or large saucepan (Note 4) so it is double the height of the spring rolls. Heat on medium high until hot – stick a bamboo chopstick or wooden spoon handle in, if rapid bubbles appear, then it’s hot enough.
  • Carefully place spring rolls in the oil (about 4 – 5 at a time) and cook, turning occasionally, until deep golden – around 1 1/2 – 2 minutes. Transfer to paper towels to drain.
  • Repeat with remaining spring rolls. Serve while hot with Sweet and Sour Sauce!

BAKING option:

  • Place spring rolls on a rack and place the rack on a tray. Spray very generously with oil all over (use canola or other natural oil). Bake at 200C/400F (standard) or 180C/350F (fan / convection) for 20 to 25 minutes until golden and crispy – no need to turn.

SWEET and SOUR SAUCE:

  • Combine ingredients in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to simmer, stirring regularly, then simmer until it thickens to taste (about 3 – 5 minutes).

Recipe Notes:

1. Shitaake Mushrooms: Soak dried mushrooms in plenty of boiled water for 20 minutes or until rehydrated (don’t do this step if using fresh mushrooms). Drain, squeeze excess water out of the mushrooms (like they are a sponge), then finely chop.
Dried Shitaake mushrooms are available at Asian grocery stores and in the Asian section of some supermarkets here in Australia. They are whole dried mushrooms and, like porcini mushrooms, the mushroom flavour is more intense so it brings a great savouriness (“umami”) to anything it is added to.
If you make this with fresh mushrooms instead, finely chop them and add them before the carrot to give them a head start on the cooking, to ensure all the moisture inside cooks out (because wet filling = spring rolls burst open).
2. You can get spring roll wrappers at the supermarkets here in Australia! Frozen section, Woolies, Coles, Harris Farms. Spring roll wrappers are made of wheat. You ca also make this with rice paper spring roll wrappers (that are used to make things like Vietnamese Rice Paper Rolls) but will need to be soaked first before wrapping, and the spring roll will come out crispy with a bubbly surface and kind of see through, like these Crispy Rice Paper Fish Parcels.
3. Look closely at the wrapper and you’ll notice one side is slightly rough, one side is smoother. You want the smooth side on the outside of the spring roll – looks prettier. Not a deal killer. 🙂
4. Because of the shape of woks, the oil usage is more efficient than using a saucepan or skillet. i.e. With a wok, there is more surface area with less oil usage.
5. FRYING vs BAKING: See photos in post for comparison of baking vs fried – they look very similar! Frying makes spring rolls that are more delicate, crispy and flaky as they should be. With baking, the wrapper is still very crispy, but it is not quite the same delicate flaky texture. Also with baking, the wrapper flavour is slightly more dominant. Tip for baking is to SPRAY VERY WELL with oil!! If you don’t use a rack, then turn the spring rolls at about 15 minutes.
6. MAKE AHEAD / FREEZING: Freeze before cooking them cook from frozen. Best to serve freshly cooked so don’t try to store cooked ones. 🙂
7. Nutrition per spring roll, excluding sauce. This is what I think is a conservative estimate as it is impossible for me to determine how much oil is absorbed by the spring rolls. I have assumed 1 tsp per spring roll which is conservative, it is difficult to imagine because the wrapper doesn’t absorb oil and the filling does not get oily from frying. I’ve researched and other sources suggest it is about 150 calories per spring roll.

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 75gCalories: 176cal (9%)
Keywords: Spring Roll recipe, Spring Rolls
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

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Me: Messy bun, ugg boots, hands in food;

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Hi, I'm Nagi!

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444 Comments

  1. Gillian says

    March 16, 2024 at 6:54 pm

    5 stars
    These are fabulous! Love them. Sauce perfect and so easy. Made a stack of rolls and froze for easy future dinners. Thanks nagi. Love to dozer from cooroy qld.

    Reply
  2. Jade says

    March 10, 2024 at 12:06 am

    5 stars
    I just tried this recipe and it’s so yummy! My first time making spring rolls and it turned out so good. Easy to make and delicious ❤️

    Reply
  3. Amy says

    January 23, 2024 at 9:32 pm

    5 stars
    Five stars!

    Reply
  4. Amy says

    January 23, 2024 at 9:30 pm

    I made these for the first time tonight. They were delicious! My 3 and 4-year-olds devoured them. They said they were better than the ones they had recently at a restaurant (which was actually a nice place and had really fresh food). They WERE better. I sprayed them lightly with oil and did them in the air fryer, which was perfect. They were so crispy and not oily at all. The filling was yum.

    They were easy to make, although a bit time-consuming, but didn’t take as long as I expected. We ate half and I froze the other half for next time. I’ll definitely make them again.

    Reply
  5. Heidi says

    January 5, 2024 at 8:26 am

    5 stars
    Have made this twice, very tasty and easy. Another winner

    Reply
  6. Wendy Smith says

    January 1, 2024 at 9:28 am

    I made with lobster claw meat. So stinking good. I made with a chili vinaigrette sauce.

    Reply
  7. Andrew says

    December 30, 2023 at 7:59 pm

    Absolutely love most of your recipes. Gonna be honest though, didn’t like this one at all. Terrible sauce, and the spring rolls were average at best.

    Reply
  8. Cris says

    December 30, 2023 at 3:26 pm

    Does anyone from Australia know the best spring roll pastry to buy? I bought from Coles and it was so hard to use I threw it out, ate the filling as is because the flavour is amazing. But I would really like to make the rolls, is the pastry from Woolworths any better or is there tricks to it, I used damp tea towel or is their a home made pastry, please help 😊

    Reply
  9. Cris says

    December 28, 2023 at 9:45 pm

    I just can’t separate my spring roll wrappers, please help

    Reply
  10. Lisa says

    December 2, 2023 at 3:20 pm

    5 stars
    Very tasty

    Reply
  11. Michael Hirst says

    November 26, 2023 at 5:22 am

    The spring roll recipe introduced me to recipetineats. Now I do not move with any recipe without consulting Nani’s recipes. They are simply the best. Every one of them is delicious, and can be depended on to deliver as promised.

    Reply
  12. Rose says

    November 18, 2023 at 9:01 am

    5 stars
    Forgot to give five stars!

    Reply
  13. Rose says

    November 18, 2023 at 9:00 am

    These are so yum…will never buy a springroll again! I did add salt and pepper as I thought it needed it. For anyone that wants a GF option…I used Rice Paper Springroll Wrappers. Works perfect. I did cook mine in oil. Also…I froze both options thn cooked from frozen. You would never know. Enjoy.

    Reply
  14. S says

    October 11, 2023 at 3:47 pm

    5 stars
    Thanks again Nagi, far easier than expected and tasted wonderful. Will definitely have another batch made soon for the freezer.

    Reply
  15. M Hampton says

    September 4, 2023 at 7:42 am

    Hi Nagi, I’ll be using your recipe one day. I’m thinking of adding crumbled tofu.
    With regards to spring roll wrappers, my experience is that you have to be judicious about the brand one uses. In the SF Bay Area, the brand to look for is Menlo (red package). It doesn’t disappoint. The thickness is consistent and the skin smooth. When the wrappers are outside the plastic package, cover with a moist hand towel to prevent dryness, thus preventing cracking—your filling will stay inside.
    With regards to the sautéed filling, throw it into a wide colander and let the juices run down. For a few hours. I use a fan if I’m in a hurry. That’s how dry it should be. Soggy filling is a no-no. Oh, you can save the juices for your sauce btw. That’s it.

    Reply
  16. Abe says

    August 29, 2023 at 7:15 pm

    I was inspired by the fish fingers recipe to try this one in the oven. I sprayed the tray with oil and the spring rolls. Then gave them a respray and turn every 7 minutes or so. They were amazing! Lovely golden colour and stayed crispy. The oil fried ones go soggy quickly and are much oilier.
    I’ve never used spray oil before Nagi and it’s a game changer!

    Reply
  17. Cathy Rooney says

    August 7, 2023 at 11:37 pm

    I made these Spring Rolls, and they are excellent! Make them!!! My question, what is the temp that you should hit & try to maintain in the oil for frying? I filled my dutch over with about 4″ of peanut oil.

    Reply
  18. Tansley Andrew says

    August 6, 2023 at 4:01 am

    IS THERE SUCH THING AS SPRING ROLLS BBQ?

    Reply
  19. Beth says

    July 22, 2023 at 10:56 pm

    I am making these for a dinner party; how far in advance can I roll them before baking on a rack? Thank you!

    Reply
  20. Helen uk says

    July 22, 2023 at 8:04 pm

    5 stars
    Well, won’t be buying shop bought spring rolls any time soon! Followed all your tips and was able to produce delicious spring rolls. I cheated and bought an £8 stir fry offer from a well known food store here in the uk. Manged to make 24 good sized rolls that the family prefer, but could easily have made 40 restaurant sized ones. Thank you.

    Reply
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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