The World’s Best Egg Roll Recipe

by Tracy

Or, call them egg rolls or spring rolls, these beauties are my mom’s claim to fame!

 

 

Eggrolls with sweet soy sauce and rice vinegar dipping sauce

Egg rolls with sweet soy sauce and rice vinegar dipping sauce

 

Egg rolls hold many treasured memories for me….

 

The other day I went to pick up some Chinese take out and smiled to myself because in the corner there were 3 teenagers peeling lumpia wrappers for egg rolls  and chatting. I think most of my conversations with my mom during my teen years took place around the dining room table while she made egg rolls and I had to peel hundreds of lumpia wrappers. There was something very satisfying and soothing about teasing the delicate sheets of dough apart from each other without ripping too many and with my hands occupied it seemed that my tongue was loosened and it didn’t seem so strange to talk with my mother.

She made hundreds at a time for every potluck and gathering; weeks before the event people would ask to be sure that she was going to make them. When my FBLA chapter needed to raise money to go to the national convention, my mom made two hundred every week for a month and we’d sell out in minutes at a dollar a pop. We should have tried for two bucks, but we were only the future business leaders of America, you see and didn’t really understand maximizing profits.

I’ve tried my own hand at making egg rolls over the years and while mine are good, they pale in comparison to my moms. Hers are never greasy or heavy, but crisp and light and you can taste more than just a vague sense of “fried”. Here is the recipe as best we could pin it down, but it’s something that changes every time you make it, as you adjust for the subtle differences in the season’s produce or atmosphere or your own mood.

As frustrating as these sorts of vague recipes can be for the novice cook, remember that when there is no precise way to make something there is no way to really get it wrong. Your first ones will not be perfect, but they will be good and as your experience grows they will be better still. Feel free to experiment and substitute!

Also note, this recipe makes a lot. I think we got 90 egg rolls from this batch. You can scale it down quite easily. Any excess freeze beautifully; I’ll explain more at the end of the recipe.

eggrolls11

Tracy’s Mom’s World Famous Egg Rolls

(note all amounts are approximate)

2.5-3 lbs of ground beef, cooked through and drained off all fat. You can even rinse it and dry thoroughly.
2 6 ounce packages of frozen salad shrimp, thawed and drained. You can omit or use larger shrimp chopped coarsely.

1 medium head white cabbage, shredded
2 medium napa cabbages shredded
5-6 carrots julienned
3 medium onions julienned

450 grams (about 1 lb) Korean sweet potato starch noodles, prepared according to package instructions, drained and cut into 2 inch lengths with kitchen shears

1 cup or more of oyster sauce

3 eggs beaten lightly

1 cup or more of plain breadcrumbs

salt
pepper

90-100 lumpia wrappers, thawed if frozen

 

 

Vegetables for eggrolls

Vegetables for egg rolls

 

In a very large mixing bowl combine cabbages, carrots and onions and sprinkle with a couple of teaspoons of plain table salt. Let sit for 30-60 minutes to allow the salt to penetrate the vegetables to release excess liquid. Rinse thoroughly and drain.

The most important secret to making good egg rolls is to squeeze as much moisture as possible out of the vegetables, otherwise the finished product will be soggy and heavy. In the past, my mother would put the vegetable mixture into a clean pillowcase and have my father wring it out, but this time we just took handfuls of it and squeezed as hard as possible with our hands. Put the squeezed vegetables in a large mixing container (we used a clean dishpan) and combine with the cooked and drained beef, the shrimp, the noodles, oyster sauce and about a tablespoon of pepper.

 

 

Eggroll filling mixture

Egg roll filling mixture

 

Mix well with your hands then taste for seasoning. If it seems bland, add a bit more oyster sauce and/or pepper. You can add a little salt but probably won’t need to as the vegetables will be a little salty and the oyster sauce is full of salt, too. Add the raw, beaten eggs and breadcrumbs and mix well with your hands again. The mixture should look like the picture.

 

 

Eggroll filling, ready for wrapping

Egg roll filling, ready for wrapping

 

Set the mixture aside, covered in the fridge, while you peel your lumpia wrappers. There are a few different brands on the market, we use Simex brand. If you can get it, they have a version that comes with the wrappers separated by waxed paper which is much easier to separate (you can save the paper to freeze the egg rolls later). If the only kind you can find is the one without waxed paper, it’s fine, too just a little more tricky. Any ones that are completely mangled can be set aside to provide patches for other torn ones.

 

 

Eggroll

Egg roll

 

Rolling the egg rolls takes practice, but after you do a few it should go rather quickly. It’s a lot like rolling a burrito. Put a few tablespoons of filling a couple of inches from the edge, leaving space at the sides. Fold the bottom up over the mixture, then fold the two sides in and roll. You’ll want to try and make it snug and tight but don’t fret if they seem a little lumpy at first. Place them seam side down in a container and go to town.

 

 

Step one eggroll wrapping

Step one egg roll wrapping

 

 

 

Step 2 eggroll wrapping

Step 2 egg roll wrapping

 

 

 

Step 3 eggroll wrapping

Step 3 egg roll wrapping

 

 

 

Step 4 eggroll wrapping

Step 4 egg roll wrapping

 

 

 

Finished eggroll

Finished egg roll

 

 

 

We've got a ways to go before we're finished!

We've got a ways to go before we're finished!

 

To cook the eggrolls, heat about half an inch of vegetable oil in a skillet over a medium hot burner (I use 6 or 7 on my range, but you know your stove best). When the oil is hot (I guess around 375 – I test by putting the end of a wooden chopstick in the oil and if lots of bubbles form around it, it’s good) put a few egg rolls in seam side down and fry until golden brown and then flip and fry the other side. Drain well on paper towels or do like my mom does and put them in a metal colander standing up on end to drain out the excess oil. Serve hot with dipping sauce of your choice. You can use store bought sweet and sour sauce, Chinese hot mustard or my favorite, soy sauce mixed with rice vinegar. In the picture, I have used sweet soy sauce (Ketsap manis) mixed about equally with rice vinegar. You can also use plain soy sauce mixed with rice vinegar, just combine to taste. It’s good with toasted sesame seeds floating on top, if you have any.

 

 

Inside of cooked eggroll

Inside of cooked egg roll

 

To Freeze Egg Rolls:

I have frozen egg rolls uncooked successfully by freezing them on a cookie sheet lined with waxed paper until hard and then putting in freezer bags. When you’re ready to eat them, thaw and fry as before. You can also fry them frozen, but that tends to get really messy and dangerous with the hot oil splattering, even if I think they are crispier that way.

My mom freezes them after she cooks them. After they are cooled, wrap them in waxed paper and put in a freezer bag. You can also freeze them on trays as described above. Thaw and fry. She says they are less soggy if you cook them first, then freeze but I haven’t done a side by side comparison.

Substitutions:

As I said above, this is a very flexible recipe. If you don’t want to use all ground beef, you can substitute some or all of it with ground pork or ground chicken. Even ground turkey, I guess but I don’t know how that would taste (I’m not a ground turkey fan). You could omit the shrimp or add more if you want a really shrimpy flavor.

For a vegetarian version you can simply omit the meat and shrimp and use vegetarian oyster sauce. I’ve made egg rolls for years without any eggs so you could omit those, too. If you want a bit of protein, you could add tofu but try to get as much moisture out as possible first. I like making tofu crumbles by freezing the tofu, thawing then wrapping it in a clean, lint free cloth and squeeze out all the water. Put it in a bowl and break into crumbles with a fork. You could also use baked or deep fried tofu cut into slivers.

The Korean sweet potato starch vermicelli is available at most Asian markets. If you can’t find it, I’ve substituted clear rice noodles in the past with good results. You could also leave them out.

Lumpia wrappers are available at most Asian markets as well and some supermarkets. I’ve only found them frozen. Regular eggroll wrappers will work, but will be much more doughy, like a Chinese food buffet egg roll. Once, in Ireland I couldn’t find lumpia wrappers and used frozen phyllo dough sheets! It worked, but the finished product tasted a bit floury – still good but if you can get them, use the lumpia wrappers.

I have no idea where egg rolls end and spring rolls and proper lumpia begin. I think it’s all good.

If you are making a ton of egg rolls for a large event, my mom used to fry them and drain them very well and then stack them in one of those large rectangular chafing dishes to keep warm. They are best right out of the pan, of course, but are still very good for quite a while after cooking. I am not expert in food safety, so use your common sense in how long to keep them at room temperature. Any leftovers are perfectly acceptable to eat heated in the microwave the next day, although not as crispy.

Please note if you omit any ingredients, the volume of mixture will be less and the recipe won’t yield as many egg rolls.

If you liked this recipe, please feel free to share it on Facebook, Stumble Upon or Twitter. Thanks and stay tuned for more great recipes from my mom’s visit!

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  • Macabe

    I’m finally getting around to making these so many months later. But I can’t use oyster sauce because my daughter is allergic to soy. Is there any substitution you could recommend that does not contain soy or dairy? I don’t think I’ve ever had oyster sauce so I’m not even sure what I’m trying to substitute for. I do have some fish sauce that is non-dairy but it’s pretty fishy. Maybe something like beef broth? Sweet and sour sauce? Duck sauce?

    • http://ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy

      Hi Macabe, sorry for my delay in responding. You could simply omit the oyster sauce and use a bit of extra salt and pepper. The oyster sauce adds a savory component that’s delicious but they will still be good without it. I’ve never tried it, but I imagine you could used dried Asian mushrooms, dehydrated and chopped very fine to add the same sort of savory element.

      • Macabe

        Great! Thanks so much. I’ll be back to let you know how they turn out.

  • Macabe

    I’m finally getting around to making these so many months later. But I can’t use oyster sauce because my daughter is allergic to soy. Is there any substitution you could recommend that does not contain soy or dairy? I don’t think I’ve ever had oyster sauce so I’m not even sure what I’m trying to substitute for. I do have some fish sauce that is non-dairy but it’s pretty fishy. Maybe something like beef broth? Sweet and sour sauce? Duck sauce?

    • http://ihatemymessageboard.com Tracy

      Hi Macabe, sorry for my delay in responding. You could simply omit the oyster sauce and use a bit of extra salt and pepper. The oyster sauce adds a savory component that’s delicious but they will still be good without it. I’ve never tried it, but I imagine you could used dried Asian mushrooms, dehydrated and chopped very fine to add the same sort of savory element.

      • Macabe

        Great! Thanks so much. I’ll be back to let you know how they turn out.

  • http://www.meganandstefan.com/ Stefan Petersen

    Hmm, this recipe alone may be the start of demise. Looks delicious.
    .-= Stefan Petersen´s last blog ..Telstra Velocity =-.

  • http://www.meganandstefan.com Stefan Petersen

    Hmm, this recipe alone may be the start of demise. Looks delicious.
    .-= Stefan Petersen´s last blog ..Telstra Velocity =-.

  • Dennis

    If only everything in life was explained as well as this recipe…I can’t wait to try it. Thank you.

  • Dennis

    If only everything in life was explained as well as this recipe…I can’t wait to try it. Thank you.

  • Sally

    I made them and they were wonderful!! This is my go-to recipe because they are the best I’ve ever made. Thanks for all the “insider” tips. :-)

  • Sally

    I made them and they were wonderful!! This is my go-to recipe because they are the best I’ve ever made. Thanks for all the “insider” tips. :-)

  • Mira

    This looks a lot like my mom’s egg roll recipe, except she uses bean sprouts instead of the noodles. While I’m sure this one is delish, I do love my bean sprouts!

  • Mira

    This looks a lot like my mom’s egg roll recipe, except she uses bean sprouts instead of the noodles. While I’m sure this one is delish, I do love my bean sprouts!

  • Pipenta

    I stumbled across your page, and then scrolled down with a bit of curiosity to see what I’d find.

    Recipes on teh intrawebs r funny. It’s such an egalitarian place, the internet. Recipes by cook enamored of Velveeta, who think french fries are one of the four basic food groups of days of yore, who wouldn’t recognize real raw vegetables if you pelted them with ‘em, sit cheek by BBQed jowl with professional chefs who are artists of taste, and those garden variety food freaks who will drive across three states to eat a legendary pizza and the home cooks who count Calvin Trillin as their patron saint, and who have named a family pet after M.F.K. Fisher. Online, all have equal weight, if not equal web design budgets. And I guess that is a cool thing. It’s been so deliciously wild west, this exploding internet of ours. I loved it decades before any of my neighbors and coworkers were even touching it, and now my mother contemplates a facebook page. It is a cliché, I know, yet still it sends me reeling.

    But I digress, the point is your food. The point of my above ramble is this, I do not assume much of anything about food and cooking on the internet. So, with this skepticism in mind, I scrolled down the page to see about this “world’s best eggroll recipe.” . Glancing at the list of ingredients I spied “ground beef” and I simultaneously gagged and sneered (a high-degree of difficulty move that, if I am not mistake, was pioneered by Anthony Bourdain himself) a feat I would not have thought myself capable of before this.

    Know that I have read Nicols Fox’s book “Spoiled” and own a copy of Sue Coe’s “Dead Meat”, the one literary nonfiction exposé of the public health ramifications of the abuses by the beef industry and the meat industry in vivid particular, the other a collection of raw, haunting and brutal woodcuts about ethics and animal abuse in, you guessed it, the beef industry. I have read them and I have also gotten a “memorable” infection from E. coli O157:H7, which is what is known as an enterohemorrhagic bacteria. The name says it all, and I will spare you the details of my prolonged symptoms save to repeat enterohemorrhagic indeed. And mine was a very mild case. I have energy aplenty to type these words. Many others not so lucky.

    I am not currently a vegetarian. I know too much of biology to take that path. But I do not eat much meat and when I do eat it, it had better be something special. The thought of a McDonald’s hamburger, or the WalMart extralean chuck makes my throat constrict, it truly does. I don’t that crap, I just don’t. Do not eat burgers ANYWHERE. Do not cook recipes that call for ground beef. It’s too vile to contemplate!

    So I saw that “ground beef” gagged, sneered, and kept reading in order to enjoy the thrill of being absolutely horrified by what I saw. Only…only, it looked good. It looked amazingly good.

    I, like everyone else in the world, had been experimenting with variants on what is offered in many Vietnamese restaurants in the US as “springrolls”. Suffice to say, various vegetables and proteins with lightly-marinated noodles rolled in a rice paper wrapped and perhaps fried, or perhaps not. I have been on a springroll kick for oh, six, nine, months, before I utterly burned myself out on them.

    The last thing I figured I’d ever do was to make homemade eggrolls. Surely eggrolls hadn’t been able to tempt me since the late nineteen seventies?

    And yet, and yet… I read your recipe and it just screams REAL. I might have to make these (though I’ll probably cop out on the burger and put in something else.)

    Tofu crumbles AHOY!

    • http://ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy

      Hi Pipenta, I’m so sorry to hear about your experience with e-coli and am glad you’ve recovered.

      I do think its a good idea for everyone to eat less beef and pay close attention to where their meat comes from. Of course, this blog is more about the extremes of what people will eat!

      That said, this recipe works beautifully without any meat at all or with tofu crumbles. It’s more of a special occasion food, as it’s fried. These are much lighter than the ones you get at most restaurants.

      I love the spring/summer rolls!

  • Pipenta

    I stumbled across your page, and then scrolled down with a bit of curiosity to see what I’d find.

    Recipes on teh intrawebs r funny. It’s such an egalitarian place, the internet. Recipes by cook enamored of Velveeta, who think french fries are one of the four basic food groups of days of yore, who wouldn’t recognize real raw vegetables if you pelted them with ‘em, sit cheek by BBQed jowl with professional chefs who are artists of taste, and those garden variety food freaks who will drive across three states to eat a legendary pizza and the home cooks who count Calvin Trillin as their patron saint, and who have named a family pet after M.F.K. Fisher. Online, all have equal weight, if not equal web design budgets. And I guess that is a cool thing. It’s been so deliciously wild west, this exploding internet of ours. I loved it decades before any of my neighbors and coworkers were even touching it, and now my mother contemplates a facebook page. It is a cliché, I know, yet still it sends me reeling.

    But I digress, the point is your food. The point of my above ramble is this, I do not assume much of anything about food and cooking on the internet. So, with this skepticism in mind, I scrolled down the page to see about this “world’s best eggroll recipe.” . Glancing at the list of ingredients I spied “ground beef” and I simultaneously gagged and sneered (a high-degree of difficulty move that, if I am not mistake, was pioneered by Anthony Bourdain himself) a feat I would not have thought myself capable of before this.

    Know that I have read Nicols Fox’s book “Spoiled” and own a copy of Sue Coe’s “Dead Meat”, the one literary nonfiction exposé of the public health ramifications of the abuses by the beef industry and the meat industry in vivid particular, the other a collection of raw, haunting and brutal woodcuts about ethics and animal abuse in, you guessed it, the beef industry. I have read them and I have also gotten a “memorable” infection from E. coli O157:H7, which is what is known as an enterohemorrhagic bacteria. The name says it all, and I will spare you the details of my prolonged symptoms save to repeat enterohemorrhagic indeed. And mine was a very mild case. I have energy aplenty to type these words. Many others not so lucky.

    I am not currently a vegetarian. I know too much of biology to take that path. But I do not eat much meat and when I do eat it, it had better be something special. The thought of a McDonald’s hamburger, or the WalMart extralean chuck makes my throat constrict, it truly does. I don’t that crap, I just don’t. Do not eat burgers ANYWHERE. Do not cook recipes that call for ground beef. It’s too vile to contemplate!

    So I saw that “ground beef” gagged, sneered, and kept reading in order to enjoy the thrill of being absolutely horrified by what I saw. Only…only, it looked good. It looked amazingly good.

    I, like everyone else in the world, had been experimenting with variants on what is offered in many Vietnamese restaurants in the US as “springrolls”. Suffice to say, various vegetables and proteins with lightly-marinated noodles rolled in a rice paper wrapped and perhaps fried, or perhaps not. I have been on a springroll kick for oh, six, nine, months, before I utterly burned myself out on them.

    The last thing I figured I’d ever do was to make homemade eggrolls. Surely eggrolls hadn’t been able to tempt me since the late nineteen seventies?

    And yet, and yet… I read your recipe and it just screams REAL. I might have to make these (though I’ll probably cop out on the burger and put in something else.)

    Tofu crumbles AHOY!

    • http://ihatemymessageboard.com Tracy

      Hi Pipenta, I’m so sorry to hear about your experience with e-coli and am glad you’ve recovered.

      I do think its a good idea for everyone to eat less beef and pay close attention to where their meat comes from. Of course, this blog is more about the extremes of what people will eat!

      That said, this recipe works beautifully without any meat at all or with tofu crumbles. It’s more of a special occasion food, as it’s fried. These are much lighter than the ones you get at most restaurants.

      I love the spring/summer rolls!

  • BF

    i think the internet ate your recipe

  • BF

    i think the internet ate your recipe

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  • http://theviciousvegetarian.com/ Tyler

    Alright, I know what I'm attempting this weekend. I appreciate this recipe, but I'm afraid I'll need to give it my own vegetarian flair, as meat's out of the question :)

    Thanks for sharing, I look forward to it!

  • http://twitter.com/aytularikan aytul arikan

    this is a good idea..i love it and im hungry :P :) ))

  • J. T.

    WOW! I made these tonight, and everyone that had them complimented me. I substituted the ground beef for whole fryer chickens boiled and then separated the meat. I made 50 with spring roll wrappers because I couldn't find the lumpia where I am at. It turned out awesome

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    That sounds really good! I'm glad you enjoyed them. I'm thinking of trying to make some with some ground chicken I have in the freezer.

  • http://beetle-blog.com/ babs (beetle)

    Now I'm hungry! I want egg rolls! We call them 'Spring Rolls' though.

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    Hi Babs! I'm not sure why we call them egg rolls rather than spring rolls.
    In the States it seems like spring rolls are usually smaller and thinner but
    egg rolls can either be like this or those more rectangular ones with the
    thicker wrapper.

    They are all good though!

  • http://beetle-blog.com/ babs (beetle)

    Oh they ARE all good, and I am really hungry now. It's dinner time in
    the UK and we have Spaghetti Bolognese tonight. That helps make up for
    the lack of egg/spring rolls!

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    We're having the same!

    That's another difference, in the states hardly anyone calls it spaghetti
    bolognese unless they are trying to be fancy. That's pretty much what we
    mean when we say we're having spaghetti for dinner.

    I could go for some bangers and egg and toast right about now. I haven't
    been able to find the banger style sausage here except via very expensive
    mail order.

  • http://beetle-blog.com/ babs (beetle)

    Ha ha! I had spaghetti but Mo is just finishing off her bangers, bacon & egg on toast!!! That's weird ;)

  • http://howtobecomeacatladywithoutthecats.blogspot.com CatLadyLarew

    This is so cool, Tracy! I love egg rolls! Can't wait to try them sometime.

  • Pete

    Egg rolls end with the thickness of the wrapper. You just gave an excellent recipe for Lumpia/spring rolls. (Same thing) Egg roll wrappers are thick. I love those paper thin wrappers. I use chopped turkey and clear bean thread (Some call them cellophane) noodles along with the veggies. Yeah, I make them in batches of about 200 at a time, bag them in about 12 per bag, and freeze them. I follow about the same rules you do but seal the last wrap with just a touch of raw scrambled egg. The best thing about a properly made lumpia is that they are so light, you can eat them like popcorn. They never fill you up. Learned this from my Thai wife.

  • Pete

    WTF are you venting about??? This site is not about your problems, just recipes,,,

    • Joan

      Hahahahhahahahahhaa. Pete you got trolled son! Pipenta, wherever you are, may angels sing you to sleep on a thick bed of moss, only to wake up to find John Lovitz licking your earlobe and ranting on about having New York salted pretzels for breakfast.

      Also I would probably feel bad if I didn’t say those eggrolls look amazing and I’m gonna make ‘em.

  • Pete

    After fish sauce is cooked it loses the fishy aroma and mellows. Very subtle,, Make a dipping sauce using Catalina salad dressing as a base with wasabi and whatever else you want.

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    I love the savory flavor fish sauce adds. A tiny bit really makes
    thinks have great depth of flavor.

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    Let me know if you do! My mom loves hearing about it!

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    You know Pete, I think we've just always called them eggrolls because way back when my mom started making them people pretty much only knew eggrolls, not spring rolls, lumpia, etc. They would have just about fainted at the notion of summer rolls!

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  • http://www.chasingthedish.blogspot.com Emily Martin

    Oh! Not fair at all. I don't remotely want to eat the dinner that's cooking in the oven right now. I want to rush out and buy all the ingredients so I can make them NOW!

    I am bookmarking this post for the not-too-distant future!

  • Hez

    I've read this recipe so many times, and I really need to try it someday. They look really, really tasty!!

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    Thanks Hez! I know I link it a lot but I'm so proud of my mom for making
    such a great recipe!

  • http://twitter.com/nandoism nandoism®

    honey, I now know what's for dinner! (just egg rolls, yeah!)

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    Awesome! Let me know how they turn out! I am so proud of my mom's recipe
    being so popular!

  • Gregersenchump14

    DOOD my mom makes egg roles the same way woot !!! there amazing

  • http://www.ihatemymessageboard.com/ Tracy O'Connor

    That's awesome! You should spoil your mother rotten for making you such
    great eggrolls.

  • Procrastinate4ever

    these are actually spring rolls, in case no one has pointed that out yet.

  • http://www.benspictureoftheday.com Ben

    That's gooooood shieet.

  • http://www.benspictureoftheday.com Ben

    That's gooooood shieet.

  • bright_tapestries

    Filipino, nah?

  • evimdentatlar.com

    its look so delicious =)

    im waiting you to own website =)

    http://www.evimdentatlar.com

  • http://www.victoriarecipes.com Boscony

    Awesome recipe and one of my favorite appetizers!

  • Dick

    We call them Loempias

  • Penchef1

    I think this was a perfect post full of anecdote and yummy food, with the recipe given in great detail. Well done!

  • Dicristina14

    ooooh i like it! sounds just like my moms lumpia. except dip it in vinegar with a little salt/pepper, hotsauce and garlic mixed in. mmmmmmmm true philipino!

  • Roflcopter

    Damn you StumbleUpon!!! Why do you always have to make me so hungry?!

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