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Wikipedia

Lumpia

Lumpia are various types of spring rolls from Indonesia[1] and the Philippines.[2] Lumpia are made of thin paper-like or crepe-like pastry skin called "lumpia wrapper" enveloping savory or sweet fillings.[3] It is often served as an appetizer or snack, and might be served deep-fried or fresh (unfried). Lumpia are Indonesian and Filipino adaptations of the Fujianese rùnbǐng and Teochew popiah, usually consumed during Qingming Festival.[4][5]

Lumpia
Top: Fried and unfried lumpia Semarang from Indonesia
Bottom: Fresh lumpiang ubod made with heart of palm from the Philippines
Alternative namesLoempia, loenpia, ngohyong
CourseMain course or snack
Place of originIndonesia, Philippines
Region or stateIndonesia, Philippines, Netherlands, and Belgium, and Suriname
Serving temperaturehot or room temperature
Main ingredientsWrapper, meat, vegetables
VariationsFried or fresh
  •   Media: Lumpia

In Indonesia, lumpia has become a favorite snack,[6] and is known as a street hawker food in the country.[7] Lumpia was introduced by Chinese settlers to Indonesia during colonial times possibly in the 19th century.[8]

In the Philippines, lumpia is one of the most common dishes served in gatherings and celebrations.[9]

In the Netherlands and Belgium, it is spelled loempia, the old Indonesian spelling, which has also become the generic name for "spring roll" in Dutch.[6]

Etymology edit

The name lumpia, sometimes spelled as lunpia, was derived from Hokkien spelling /lun˩piã˥˧/ (潤餅), lun (潤) means "wet/moist/soft", while pia (餅) means "cake/pastry", thus lun-pia means "soft cake".[10] It is referred to as rùnbǐng (潤餅) or báobǐng (薄餅) in Mandarin, and also as bópíjuǎn (薄皮卷).

In neighboring Malaysia and Singapore, lumpia is known in its variant name as popiah, from the Chaoshan dialect pronounced as /poʔ˩piã˥˧/ (薄餅),[11] which means "thin wafer."

History edit

Lumpia was introduced by Chinese settlers of Fujian origin to the Dutch East Indies, possibly in the 19th century.[8] It was derived from Fujianese rùnbǐng, thus lumpia was derived from Hokkien dialect lunpia.

According to local tradition circulated in Semarang, Central Java, lumpia was introduced by a Chinese settler named Tjoa Thay Yoe, a migrant from China who settled in Semarang by the end of the 19th century. At that time, Tjoa was selling a variety of foods made from pork and also bamboo shoots at Pasar Johar, Semarang. It was then that he met Wasih, a native Javanese woman food vendor who sold food made from shrimp and potato. Thay Yoe and Wasih eventually got married, and subsequently they created and sold food together by removing the pork element to cater for local consumers that mostly are Muslims. The food that was created was lumpia Semarang which is known to this day. The couple then had a daughter named Tjoa Po Nio, who continued her parents' business by selling lumpia Semarang spring rolls.[8]

Varieties edit

Indonesia edit

 
Lumpia in Indonesia might be served in various dipping sauces, from sweet palm sugar sauce, savoury tauco or peanut sauce, to popular chili sauce. This one is served with sweet hot and spicy sambal chili sauce.

Chinese influence is evident in Indonesian cuisine, such as bakmi, mie ayam, pangsit, mie goreng, kwetiau goreng, nasi goreng, bakso, and lumpia.[12] Throughout the country, spring rolls are generally called lumpia; however, sometimes an old Chinese Indonesian spelling is used: loen pia.[10]

In Indonesia lumpia is associated with Chinese Indonesian cuisine and commonly found in cities where significant Chinese Indonesian settles. Although some local variants exist and the filling ingredients may vary, the most popular variant is Lumpia Semarang, available in fried or unfried variants. In Indonesia, lumpia variants usually named after the city where the recipe originates, with Semarang as the most famous variant. It represents creativity and the localisation of lumpia recipes according to locally available ingredients and local tastes.[10]

Unlike its Philippines counterpart, Indonesian lumpia rarely uses minced pork as a filling. This was meant to cater to the larger Muslim clientele, thus popular fillings are usually chicken, shrimp, egg and vegetables. Indonesian lumpia is commonly filled with seasoned chopped rebung (bamboo shoots) with minced chicken or prawns, served with fresh baby shallots or leeks in sweet tauco (fermented soy) based sauce. In addition to being made at home, lumpia is also offered as street food sold by traveling vendor on carts, sold in foodstalls specializing on Lumpia Semarang, or sold in traditional marketplaces as part of kue (Indonesian traditional snack) or jajan pasar (market munchies). Simpler and cheaper lumpia is sold as part of gorengan (Indonesian fritters). Indonesians are noted for their fondness of hot and spicy food, and therefore spicy hot sambal chili sauce or fresh bird's eye chili are usually added as a dipping sauce or condiment.

Lumpia Semarang edit

 
Lumpia Semarang, specialty of Semarang city, Central Java.

Named after the capital city of Central Java in Indonesia, Semarang, where significant Chinese Indonesian have settled, lumpia Semarang is perhaps the most popular lumpia variant in Indonesia. It has become associated with the city, and the spring rolls are often sought by the visitors in Semarang as food gift or souvenir. Originally made by Chinese immigrants, this lumpia is filled with bamboo shoots, dried shrimp, chicken, and/or prawns. It is served with a sweet chili sauce made from dried shrimp (optional), coconut sugar, red chili peppers, bird's eye chili peppers, ground white pepper, tapioca starch, water, and baby shallots. Lumpia Semarang is served either deep-fried or unfried, as the filling is already cooked.[7] Other variants of lumpia Semarang is filled with goat or crab meat.[13]

Lumpia Jakarta edit

Named after Indonesian capital city, Jakarta, this lumpia is usually being deep fried and sold as gorengan fritter snack. Unlike popular Semarang lumpia that uses rebung or bamboo shoots, Jakarta lumpia uses bengkuang or jicama, and served with typical Indonesian sambal kacang or spicy peanut sauce as a dipping sauce.[10]

Lumpia Bogor edit

Named after Bogor, a city in West Java, this lumpia filling is almost similar with Jakarta lumpia; uses jicama, and added with tofu and ebi dried shrimp. Unlike other regions that are fried, Bogor lumpia are usually grilled on hot iron, giving off a distinctive aroma. In addition, Bogor lumpia is usually shaped rectangle like a pillow and quite large in size.[10]

Lumpia Bandung edit

Named after the city of Bandung in West Java, it is a variant of lumpia basah or fresh and wet lumpia that is not being deep fried. However, unlike common rolled elongated fresh lumpia, lumpia Bandung is not served in spring roll form, but the lumpia skin is spread, topped with fillings, stacked and folded square just like an envelope. Unlike Semarang style lumpia that uses bamboo shoots and minced chicken, Bandung style lumpia filling uses julienned jicama, beansprout, scallion, garlic, chili, and scrambled egg, with palm sugar sauce.[14]

Lumpia Surabaya edit

Named after the city of Surabaya in East Java, where this lumpia was originally made. It is made of mostly the same ingredients of lumpia semarang, but much less sweet in taste.[15] Lumpia Surabaya might uses bamboo shoots, corn, or slices of sausages as fillings, and served with sambal chili sauce and tauco fermented soybean paste as dipping sauce.[16]

Lumpia Yogyakarta edit

Although Yogyakarta is quite close to Semarang city, Yogyakarta also has a different type of lumpia. Yogya typical lumpia usually contain jicama, bean sprouts, carrots, and minced chicken meat; and sometimes stuff like boiled quail eggs and glass noodles are added as fillings. Yogya lumpia is usually served with acar pickles, chilies, and toppings made from crushed garlic and jicama. The generous use of garlic and pickles as garnishing was meant to refresh and neutralize the otherwise oily deep-fried lumpia.[10]

Lumpia Medan edit

Originated from Medan city of North Sumatra, this lumpia version is more akin to popiah of neighboring Malaysia and Singapore, thus in Medan lumpia is more commonly called as popiah. Medan popiah or lumpia is a large fresh unfried spring roll, consumed not as a snack, but as a main meal. This was because Medan lumpias are made in large sizes with rich fillings, including bamboo shoots, scrambled eggs, peanuts, shrimp, crabs, etc.[10]

Lumpia goreng edit

 
Smaller size deep fried lumpia served with sambal hot sauce, sold as a snack in Purwokerto Train Station, Central Java

Lumpia goreng is a simple fried spring roll filled with vegetables; the spring roll wrappers are filled with chopped carrots cut into matchstick-size, shredded cabbage, and sometimes mushrooms. Although usually filled only with vegetables, the fried spring rolls might be enriched with minced beef, chicken, or prawns.[17] There is also a common, cheap and simple variant of fried lumpia, eaten not as a single dish but as part of assorted gorengan (Indonesian fritters) snack, sold together with fried battered tempeh, tofu, oncom, sweet potato and cassava. It is only filled with bihun (rice vermicelli) with chopped carrots and cabbages, and is usually eaten with fresh bird's eye chili pepper. The sliced lumpia goreng is also the ingredient of soto mie (noodle soto).

Lumpia basah edit

 
Lumpia basah (fresh, unfried lumpia)

It literally means "wet spring roll", or often translated as "fresh spring roll" which means spring roll without frying. It is similar to the Vietnamese spring roll with bean sprouts, carrots, shrimp and/or chicken, and served with sweet tauco (another Hokkien word for salted soybeans) sauce.[18]

Lumpia ayam edit

This popular appetizer in Indonesia is chicken lumpia, with fillings including shredded chicken, sliced carrot, onion and garlic; and seasoned with sugar, salt and pepper.[19] In Yogyakarta, there is a popular chicken lumpia variant called Lumpia Mutiara, sold in front of Mutiara Hotel in Malioboro street.[20]

Lumpia sayur edit

Vegetarian lumpia, usually filled with glass noodles, shredded cabbage, lettuce, julienned carrots, minced garlic and celery, seasoned with soy sauce and sweet chili sauce.[21] Most of cheaper lumpia sold as part of Indonesian gorengan (fritters) are lumpia sayur or vegetables lumpia, that contains only bits of carrots and bihun rice glass noodles.

Lumpia mercon edit

 
Lumpia mercon (lit. firecracker lumpia) traveling vendor mounted on a motorcycle, Sidoarjo, East Java

The name lumpia mercon (lit. firecracker lumpia) implies that this lumpia is extra hot and spicy, filled with slices of cabe rawit or bird's eye chili, a small type of chili that is very spicy and much hotter than a common jalapeño. This lumpia demonstrates the Indonesian fondness for extra hot and spicy food.[22]

Lumpia mini edit

This is a bite size smaller lumpia snack, a skin pastry crepe the same as with common lumpia; however, it is filled only with abon (beef floss) or ebi (dried prawn floss).[23]

Lumpia duleg edit

Lumpia duleg, also known as lumpia delanggu or sosis kecut (sour sausages) is a simple and cheap lumpia snack from Delanggu subdistrict, Klaten Regency, Central Java, a town located between Yogyakarta and Semarang. It is a small finger-sized lumpia filled with mung bean sprouts (tauge) with slightly sour flavour.[24][25]

Lumpia tahu edit

Another vegetarian lumpia in Indonesia is lumpia tahu or tofu lumpia. It is filled with tofu and diced carrot, lightly seasoned, and deep-fried. Usually, its size is smaller than common lumpia, and consumed as a snack. Sometimes beaten egg and chopped scallion might be added to the filling mixture.[26]

Lumpia telur edit

This simple and cheap street food is a popular snack among Indonesian school children. Lumpia telur is an egg lumpia, which is lumpia skin placed upon a hot flat pan, topped with beaten egg and chopped scallion, folded, and fried with cooking oil. Sometimes slices of sausages are added. The shape is not cylindrical like a common spring roll, but rather a flat half-circle, drizzled with kecap manis sweet soy sauce and chili sambal. It is often regarded as a hybrid between lumpia and egg martabak.[27]

Lumpia jantung pisang edit

Lumpia with filling made of jantung pisang (lit. banana's heart) which refer to banana blossom bud, mixed with eggs, seasoned with shallot, garlic, turmeric and pepper, served in hot sambal chili sauce.[28]

Lumpia pisang edit

 
Lumpia pisang, a snack specialty from Bojonegoro

Lumpia pisang or abbreviated as lumpis is a sale pisang, a processed banana made by drying and smoking processes and dried in the sun, wrapped in lumpia wrapper.

Lumpia udang mayones edit

Seafood lumpia, filled with shrimp, diced carrots, scallions, garlic and mayonnaise.[29] Actually, the popularity of mayonnaise-filled snack was started by another Indonesian popular snack called risole. Risole is quite similar to lumpia, with the difference in skin texture – in which risoles' skin is thicker, softer, and breaded. This novelty risole recipe with mayo flavor then spin-off using lumpia skin to become a new lumpia variant.

Piscok edit

 
Pisang Cokelat, choco-banana spring roll

Piscok is an abbreviation of pisang cokelat (banana chocolate in Indonesian).[30] It is a sweet snack made of pieces of banana with chocolate syrup, wrapped inside lumpia skin and being deep fried.[31] Pisang cokelat is often simply described as "choco banana spring rolls".[30] It is often regarded as a hybrid between another Indonesian favourites; pisang goreng (fried banana) and lumpia (spring roll).

The type of banana being used is similar to pisang goreng; preferably pisang uli, pisang kepok or pisang raja sereh.[32] Pisang cokelat is almost identical to Philippines turon, except in this Indonesian version chocolate content is a must.

Sumpia edit

 
Sumpia, a finger-sized small lumpia, as a snack

The much smaller and drier lumpia with similar beef or prawn floss filling is called sumpia. Its diameter is about the same as human finger. In Indonesia, the most common filling for sumpia is ebi or dried shrimp floss, spiced with coriander, lemon leaf, garlic and shallot.[33] These miniature lumpias are deep fried in ample of palm oil until golden brown and crispy. Sumpia has a more crunchy and drier texture and is often consumed as a savory kue snack.

Philippines edit

 
Fresh lumpiang ubod made with heart of palm

Lumpia was introduced to the Philippines during the pre-colonial period by early Hokkien immigrants and traders from Fujian between 900 and 1565 AD. The name is derived from Hokkien, a language that originated in southeastern China: "lun" means wet, moist, or soft, and "pia" means cake or pastry. They have been thoroughly nativized to Philippine cuisine and are found throughout the islands. They use various fillings inspired by local ingredients and dishes, and the later cuisines of Spain, China, and the United States.[34][35][36]

Filipino lumpia can be differentiated from other Asian spring roll versions in that they use a paper-thin wrapper made from just flour, water, and salt. They were also traditionally slender and long, with a shape roughly similar to that of cigars or cigarillos, though modern versions can come in various shapes and sizes. The thinness of the crêpe and the shape of the lumpia give them a relatively denser wrapping that nevertheless remains flaky and light in texture. They are also traditionally dipped in agre dulce (sweet and sour sauce), vinegar-based sauces, banana ketchup, or sweet chili sauce. Fresh lumpia, however, have wrappers that are more crêpe-like and thicker due to the addition of eggs (though still thinner than other Asian versions). They are closer in texture to the original Chinese versions and were traditionally made with rice flour which makes them chewier. Various kinds of lumpia, fried or fresh, are ubiquitous in Filipino celebrations like fiestas or Christmas.[34][35][36]

 
Turón halayá made with mashed ube (purple yam)

Filipino lumpia also have a unique and extremely popular dessert subcategory, the turón. These lumpia variants are either cooked with a glazing of caramelized sugar, sprinkled with granular sugar, or drizzled in latík (coconut caramel), a syrup, or honey. Turón are traditionally filled with ripe saba bananas and jackfruit, but they can also be made with a wide variety of other sweet fillings, from sweet potato to ube.[37][36]

Daral edit

Another dessert lumpia, Daral (called Balolon among the Maranao) originates from the Tausūg people in Mindanao. The wrapper is made from unsweetened, ground glutinous rice and coconut milk (galapóng), and is filled with sweetened coconut meat (hinti).[38][39]

Dinamita edit

 
Dinamita stuffed with a whole siling haba (long chili pepper).

Dinamita or "dynamite lumpia" is a deep-fried variant stuffed with a whole chili pepper wrapped in a thin egg crêpe. The stuffing is usually giniling (ground beef or pork), cheese, and spices, but it can also be adapted to use a wide variety of other ingredients, including tocino, hamón, bacon, and shredded chicken. It is commonly eaten as an appetizer or as a companion to beer.[40][41]

Lumpiang adobo edit

A type of lumpia filled with shredded meat that has been cooked adobo style.[42]

Lumpiang gulay edit

Lumpiang gulay ("vegetable spring roll") usually consists of various chopped vegetables and a small amount of pork or shrimp. The types of vegetables can vary greatly, and is a fried version.[43] It is not vegetarian by default, but vegan and vegetarian versions can be made from the basic recipe.[44]

Lumpiang hubád edit

 
Lumpiang hubád, a salad made of the fillings of fresh lumpia.

Lumpiang hubád ("naked spring roll") is lumpiang sariwà (fresh lumpia) served without the crêpe wrapping. The lack of a wrapper technically does not make lumpia, but is an alternative way of serving fresh lumpia's traditional fillings.

Lumpiang isdâ edit

Lumpiang isdâ ("fish lumpia") is filled primarily with fish flakes and fried. It is also known as lumpiang galunggóng (blackfin scad), lumpiang bangús (milkfish), lumpiang tulingán (yellowfin tuna), etc., depending on the type of fish used.[45][46][47][48] A common version of this combines fish flakes with malunggay (moringa) leaves.[42]

Lumpiang keso edit

 
Lumpiang keso, a lumpia appetizer filled with cheese and served with mayonnaise and banana ketchup

Lumpiang keso, more commonly known as "cheese lumpia" or "cheese sticks", is deep-fried lumpia with a slice of cheese (often cheddar) as filling. It is usually served with a dipping sauce made of banana ketchup and mayonnaise.[49]

Lumpiang labong edit

Lumpiang labóng is similar to lumpiang ubód but is made with labóng (bamboo shoot), rather than heart of palm, making it more like the Indonesian lumpia rebung. It can be eaten fresh or fried.[50][51]

Lumpiang prito edit

Lumpiang prito ("fried spring roll"), is the generic name for a subclass of lumpia that is fried. It usually refers to lumpiang gulay or lumpiang togue. They can come in sizes as small as lumpiang shanghai or as big as lumpiang sariwà. It is usually eaten with vinegar and chili peppers, or a mixture of soy sauce and calamansi juice known as toyomansî.

Lumpiang sariwà edit

 
lumpiang sariwà (fresh lumpia) with peanut sauce

Lumpiang sariwà (Tagalog: "fresh spring roll") or "fresh lumpia", consists of minced vegetables and/or various pre-cooked meat or seafood and jicama (singkamás) as an extender, encased in a double wrapping of lettuce leaf and a yellowish egg crêpe. An egg is often used as a binding agent for the wrap. The accompanying sauce is made from chicken or pork stock, a starch mixture, crushed and roasted peanuts, and fresh garlic. This variety is not fried and is usually around five centimeters in diameter and 15 centimeters in length. It is derived from the original Chinese popiah.

Lumpiang Shanghai edit

 
Lumpiang Shanghai at a buffet

Lumpiang Shanghai is regarded as the most widespread type of lumpia and the most commonly served in Filipino gatherings. It is characteristically filled with sautéed ground pork, minced onion, carrots, and spices, with the mixture sometimes held together by beaten egg. It has numerous variants that contain other ingredients like green peas, kintsáy (Chinese parsley) or raisins. Lumpiang Shanghai is commonly served with agre dulce, but ketchup (tomato or banana) and vinegar are popular alternatives. This variant is typically smaller than other lumpia. Despite the name, it did not originate in Shanghai or China.[52][53][54]

Lumpiang singkamás edit

Lumpiang singkamás is similar to lumpiang ubod, but it is made primarily with julienned strips of jicama rather than heart of palm. It can be eaten fresh or fried.[55]

Lumpiang togue edit

This version of lumpiang gulay is filled primarily with bean sprouts (togue) and various other vegetables such as string beans and carrots. Small morsels of meat, seafood, or tofu may be added. Though it is the least expensive of the variants, the preparation  the cutting of vegetables and meats into small pieces and pre-cooking these  can be taxing and labor-intensive. It is a fried version.[56]

Lumpiang ubód edit

Lumpiang ubód is a variation made of julienned ubód (heart of the coconut tree) as the main ingredient. They can be fried or served as lumpiang sariwà. It originates from Silay, Negros Occidental, where a variant, lumpiang Silay, is still popular.

Lumpiang pancit edit

A type of lumpia where the filling consists of pancit, a popular Filipino noodle dish. Most likely created from the turo-turo or karinderias that have leftover pancit, often the sótanghon (mung bean noodle) or bihon (rice noodle varieties, as fillers within the lumpia.[57]

Ngohiong edit

Ngohiong is a variant of lumpia distinctively seasoned with five-spice powder. It is derived from the Hokkien dish ngo hiang (kikiám in the Philippines) and originated in Cebu City.[58]

Turón edit

 
Turón, a dessert lumpia with saba bananas

Turón, also known as lumpiang saging, banana lumpia, or banana rolls, is a golden-brown snack that is usually made of sliced saba bananas and jackfruit or cheese in a lumpia wrapper, sprinkled with brown sugar, and deep-fried. It is sometimes paired with ice cream or pancake syrup.[59] This snack is sold in the streets of most cities in the country alongside maruya, banana cue, and camote cue. Different variants have emerged using different ingredients: such as manggáng turón (mango), kamote turon (sweet potato), turón de maní (peanut), chocolate turón, and ube turon or turón halayá (mashed purple yam).[60][61]

The Netherlands edit

 
Indo loempia as part of assorted gorengan fritter snacks, sold in a toko Asian shop in Amsterdam

In the Netherlands, lumpia is called loempia, an old Indonesian spelling. It was introduced to the Netherlands through its former colonization of Indonesia. In the Netherlands, loempia is described as a large Indonesian version of Chinese spring rolls, stuffed with minced meat, bean sprouts, and cabbage leaves, and flavored with soy sauce, garlic, and green onion.[6] Loempia is one of the popular snacks sold in the Dutch snack bars or eetcafé.

Vietnamese loempia edit

The Vietnamese loempia is a variant of the loempia introduced by Vietnamese refugees during the mid-1980s.[62] Vietnamese loempia's are typically sold in mobile Vietnamese snack bars known as loempiakramen and are typically served with a special sauce known as loempiasaus, this special sauce was invented for the Dutch consumer because in Vietnam they are typically served with fish sauce.[62] In contrast to the Chinese loempia the Vietnamese loempia is typically long and narrow.[62]

Loempidel edit

 
Loempidel in the Netherlands

The loempidel (or Vietnamese frikandel) is a variant of the loempia introduced in March 2019 by the Dutch food company Vanreusel, its name is a portmanteau of "loempia" and "frikandel". The snack consists of a frikandel with sweet sauce wrapped in a coat of phyllo, the phyllo coat being similar to that of another Dutch snack known as the Vietnamese loempia.[63]

Lumpia wrapper edit

Philippines edit

 
Filipino lumpia wrappers being fried on a heated plate
 
Filipino lumpia wrappers being made with modern machinery

Filipino lumpia wrappers generally come in two variants. The most common variant used mostly for fried lumpia is made from just flour, water, salt, and optionally cornstarch. This type of wrapper is characteristically paper-thin, much thinner than other spring roll wrappers. The ingredients are mixed into a wet dough, then left to sit for a few hours before cooking. A ball of dough is taken with one hand and smeared into a heated large flat metal plate greased with oil until a very thin circular film of it adheres to the pan and fries. It is cooked for a few seconds then quickly taken out and left to dry.[64][65]

For "fresh" (non-fried) lumpia, the wrappers are usually made with egg in addition to the other basic ingredients (and it may use rice flour). This essentially turns it into a thin egg crêpe. It is still thinner than other spring roll variants, but much thicker and softer than variants made from just flour and water.[64]

In modern mass production, Filipino lumpia wrappers are generally made by automated assembly-line machines similar to those used to make spring roll wrappers, differing only in the recipe and the thickness of the wrapper. It uses a revolving drum.[66]

Vegan versions of the wrapper exclude eggs, and is instead just made with flour, salt, and water, which results in a thinner translucent wrap. These are also sealed with water, not an egg wash.[67][68]

Popularity edit

 
Filipino-inspired lumpia from Lumpia Shack in New York City

Lumpia have such enduring popularity that one can see at least one variant in almost any set of Filipino or Indonesian festivities. Despite its Chinese origin, in the United States, lumpia is associated with Filipino cuisine, while in Europe, especially in the Netherlands, it is associated with Indonesian cuisine, owed to their shared colonial links. The distinct taste and ease of preparation (the Shanghai variant at least) have caused lumpia to be one of the staple food products on the menus of many Filipino restaurants in the United States and around the world.[69]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Foodspotting (March 18, 2014). The Foodspotting Field Guide. Chronicle Books LLC. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-4521-3008-8.
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External links edit

  • Lumpia Semarang Recipe (Semarang Style Springroll)

lumpia, polish, village, Łumpia, various, types, spring, rolls, from, indonesia, philippines, made, thin, paper, like, crepe, like, pastry, skin, called, lumpia, wrapper, enveloping, savory, sweet, fillings, often, served, appetizer, snack, might, served, deep. For the Polish village see Lumpia Lumpia are various types of spring rolls from Indonesia 1 and the Philippines 2 Lumpia are made of thin paper like or crepe like pastry skin called lumpia wrapper enveloping savory or sweet fillings 3 It is often served as an appetizer or snack and might be served deep fried or fresh unfried Lumpia are Indonesian and Filipino adaptations of the Fujianese runbǐng and Teochew popiah usually consumed during Qingming Festival 4 5 LumpiaTop Fried and unfried lumpia Semarang from IndonesiaBottom Fresh lumpiang ubod made with heart of palm from the PhilippinesAlternative namesLoempia loenpia ngohyongCourseMain course or snackPlace of originIndonesia PhilippinesRegion or stateIndonesia Philippines Netherlands and Belgium and SurinameServing temperaturehot or room temperatureMain ingredientsWrapper meat vegetablesVariationsFried or fresh Media LumpiaIn Indonesia lumpia has become a favorite snack 6 and is known as a street hawker food in the country 7 Lumpia was introduced by Chinese settlers to Indonesia during colonial times possibly in the 19th century 8 In the Philippines lumpia is one of the most common dishes served in gatherings and celebrations 9 In the Netherlands and Belgium it is spelled loempia the old Indonesian spelling which has also become the generic name for spring roll in Dutch 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Varieties 3 1 Indonesia 3 1 1 Lumpia Semarang 3 1 2 Lumpia Jakarta 3 1 3 Lumpia Bogor 3 1 4 Lumpia Bandung 3 1 5 Lumpia Surabaya 3 1 6 Lumpia Yogyakarta 3 1 7 Lumpia Medan 3 1 8 Lumpia goreng 3 1 9 Lumpia basah 3 1 10 Lumpia ayam 3 1 11 Lumpia sayur 3 1 12 Lumpia mercon 3 1 13 Lumpia mini 3 1 14 Lumpia duleg 3 1 15 Lumpia tahu 3 1 16 Lumpia telur 3 1 17 Lumpia jantung pisang 3 1 18 Lumpia pisang 3 1 19 Lumpia udang mayones 3 1 20 Piscok 3 1 21 Sumpia 3 2 Philippines 3 2 1 Daral 3 2 2 Dinamita 3 2 3 Lumpiang adobo 3 2 4 Lumpiang gulay 3 2 5 Lumpiang hubad 3 2 6 Lumpiang isda 3 2 7 Lumpiang keso 3 2 8 Lumpiang labong 3 2 9 Lumpiang prito 3 2 10 Lumpiang sariwa 3 2 11 Lumpiang Shanghai 3 2 12 Lumpiang singkamas 3 2 13 Lumpiang togue 3 2 14 Lumpiang ubod 3 2 15 Lumpiang pancit 3 2 16 Ngohiong 3 2 17 Turon 3 3 The Netherlands 3 3 1 Vietnamese loempia 3 3 2 Loempidel 4 Lumpia wrapper 4 1 Philippines 5 Popularity 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe name lumpia sometimes spelled as lunpia was derived from Hokkien spelling lun pia 潤餅 lun 潤 means wet moist soft while pia 餅 means cake pastry thus lun pia means soft cake 10 It is referred to as runbǐng 潤餅 or baobǐng 薄餅 in Mandarin and also as bopijuǎn 薄皮卷 In neighboring Malaysia and Singapore lumpia is known in its variant name as popiah from the Chaoshan dialect pronounced as poʔ pia 薄餅 11 which means thin wafer History editLumpia was introduced by Chinese settlers of Fujian origin to the Dutch East Indies possibly in the 19th century 8 It was derived from Fujianese runbǐng thus lumpia was derived from Hokkien dialect lunpia According to local tradition circulated in Semarang Central Java lumpia was introduced by a Chinese settler named Tjoa Thay Yoe a migrant from China who settled in Semarang by the end of the 19th century At that time Tjoa was selling a variety of foods made from pork and also bamboo shoots at Pasar Johar Semarang It was then that he met Wasih a native Javanese woman food vendor who sold food made from shrimp and potato Thay Yoe and Wasih eventually got married and subsequently they created and sold food together by removing the pork element to cater for local consumers that mostly are Muslims The food that was created was lumpia Semarang which is known to this day The couple then had a daughter named Tjoa Po Nio who continued her parents business by selling lumpia Semarang spring rolls 8 Varieties editIndonesia edit nbsp Lumpia in Indonesia might be served in various dipping sauces from sweet palm sugar sauce savoury tauco or peanut sauce to popular chili sauce This one is served with sweet hot and spicy sambal chili sauce Chinese influence is evident in Indonesian cuisine such as bakmi mie ayam pangsit mie goreng kwetiau goreng nasi goreng bakso and lumpia 12 Throughout the country spring rolls are generally called lumpia however sometimes an old Chinese Indonesian spelling is used loen pia 10 In Indonesia lumpia is associated with Chinese Indonesian cuisine and commonly found in cities where significant Chinese Indonesian settles Although some local variants exist and the filling ingredients may vary the most popular variant is Lumpia Semarang available in fried or unfried variants In Indonesia lumpia variants usually named after the city where the recipe originates with Semarang as the most famous variant It represents creativity and the localisation of lumpia recipes according to locally available ingredients and local tastes 10 Unlike its Philippines counterpart Indonesian lumpia rarely uses minced pork as a filling This was meant to cater to the larger Muslim clientele thus popular fillings are usually chicken shrimp egg and vegetables Indonesian lumpia is commonly filled with seasoned chopped rebung bamboo shoots with minced chicken or prawns served with fresh baby shallots or leeks in sweet tauco fermented soy based sauce In addition to being made at home lumpia is also offered as street food sold by traveling vendor on carts sold in foodstalls specializing on Lumpia Semarang or sold in traditional marketplaces as part of kue Indonesian traditional snack or jajan pasar market munchies Simpler and cheaper lumpia is sold as part of gorengan Indonesian fritters Indonesians are noted for their fondness of hot and spicy food and therefore spicy hot sambal chili sauce or fresh bird s eye chili are usually added as a dipping sauce or condiment Lumpia Semarang edit Main article Lumpia semarang nbsp Lumpia Semarang specialty of Semarang city Central Java Named after the capital city of Central Java in Indonesia Semarang where significant Chinese Indonesian have settled lumpia Semarang is perhaps the most popular lumpia variant in Indonesia It has become associated with the city and the spring rolls are often sought by the visitors in Semarang as food gift or souvenir Originally made by Chinese immigrants this lumpia is filled with bamboo shoots dried shrimp chicken and or prawns It is served with a sweet chili sauce made from dried shrimp optional coconut sugar red chili peppers bird s eye chili peppers ground white pepper tapioca starch water and baby shallots Lumpia Semarang is served either deep fried or unfried as the filling is already cooked 7 Other variants of lumpia Semarang is filled with goat or crab meat 13 Lumpia Jakarta edit Named after Indonesian capital city Jakarta this lumpia is usually being deep fried and sold as gorengan fritter snack Unlike popular Semarang lumpia that uses rebung or bamboo shoots Jakarta lumpia uses bengkuang or jicama and served with typical Indonesian sambal kacang or spicy peanut sauce as a dipping sauce 10 Lumpia Bogor edit Named after Bogor a city in West Java this lumpia filling is almost similar with Jakarta lumpia uses jicama and added with tofu and ebi dried shrimp Unlike other regions that are fried Bogor lumpia are usually grilled on hot iron giving off a distinctive aroma In addition Bogor lumpia is usually shaped rectangle like a pillow and quite large in size 10 Lumpia Bandung edit Named after the city of Bandung in West Java it is a variant of lumpia basah or fresh and wet lumpia that is not being deep fried However unlike common rolled elongated fresh lumpia lumpia Bandung is not served in spring roll form but the lumpia skin is spread topped with fillings stacked and folded square just like an envelope Unlike Semarang style lumpia that uses bamboo shoots and minced chicken Bandung style lumpia filling uses julienned jicama beansprout scallion garlic chili and scrambled egg with palm sugar sauce 14 Lumpia Surabaya edit Named after the city of Surabaya in East Java where this lumpia was originally made It is made of mostly the same ingredients of lumpia semarang but much less sweet in taste 15 Lumpia Surabaya might uses bamboo shoots corn or slices of sausages as fillings and served with sambal chili sauce and tauco fermented soybean paste as dipping sauce 16 Lumpia Yogyakarta edit Although Yogyakarta is quite close to Semarang city Yogyakarta also has a different type of lumpia Yogya typical lumpia usually contain jicama bean sprouts carrots and minced chicken meat and sometimes stuff like boiled quail eggs and glass noodles are added as fillings Yogya lumpia is usually served with acar pickles chilies and toppings made from crushed garlic and jicama The generous use of garlic and pickles as garnishing was meant to refresh and neutralize the otherwise oily deep fried lumpia 10 Lumpia Medan edit Originated from Medan city of North Sumatra this lumpia version is more akin to popiah of neighboring Malaysia and Singapore thus in Medan lumpia is more commonly called as popiah Medan popiah or lumpia is a large fresh unfried spring roll consumed not as a snack but as a main meal This was because Medan lumpias are made in large sizes with rich fillings including bamboo shoots scrambled eggs peanuts shrimp crabs etc 10 Lumpia goreng edit Main article Lumpia goreng nbsp Smaller size deep fried lumpia served with sambal hot sauce sold as a snack in Purwokerto Train Station Central JavaLumpia goreng is a simple fried spring roll filled with vegetables the spring roll wrappers are filled with chopped carrots cut into matchstick size shredded cabbage and sometimes mushrooms Although usually filled only with vegetables the fried spring rolls might be enriched with minced beef chicken or prawns 17 There is also a common cheap and simple variant of fried lumpia eaten not as a single dish but as part of assorted gorengan Indonesian fritters snack sold together with fried battered tempeh tofu oncom sweet potato and cassava It is only filled with bihun rice vermicelli with chopped carrots and cabbages and is usually eaten with fresh bird s eye chili pepper The sliced lumpia goreng is also the ingredient of soto mie noodle soto Lumpia basah edit nbsp Lumpia basah fresh unfried lumpia It literally means wet spring roll or often translated as fresh spring roll which means spring roll without frying It is similar to the Vietnamese spring roll with bean sprouts carrots shrimp and or chicken and served with sweet tauco another Hokkien word for salted soybeans sauce 18 Lumpia ayam edit This popular appetizer in Indonesia is chicken lumpia with fillings including shredded chicken sliced carrot onion and garlic and seasoned with sugar salt and pepper 19 In Yogyakarta there is a popular chicken lumpia variant called Lumpia Mutiara sold in front of Mutiara Hotel in Malioboro street 20 Lumpia sayur edit Vegetarian lumpia usually filled with glass noodles shredded cabbage lettuce julienned carrots minced garlic and celery seasoned with soy sauce and sweet chili sauce 21 Most of cheaper lumpia sold as part of Indonesian gorengan fritters are lumpia sayur or vegetables lumpia that contains only bits of carrots and bihun rice glass noodles Lumpia mercon edit nbsp Lumpia mercon lit firecracker lumpia traveling vendor mounted on a motorcycle Sidoarjo East JavaThe name lumpia mercon lit firecracker lumpia implies that this lumpia is extra hot and spicy filled with slices of cabe rawit or bird s eye chili a small type of chili that is very spicy and much hotter than a common jalapeno This lumpia demonstrates the Indonesian fondness for extra hot and spicy food 22 Lumpia mini edit This is a bite size smaller lumpia snack a skin pastry crepe the same as with common lumpia however it is filled only with abon beef floss or ebi dried prawn floss 23 Lumpia duleg edit Lumpia duleg also known as lumpia delanggu or sosis kecut sour sausages is a simple and cheap lumpia snack from Delanggu subdistrict Klaten Regency Central Java a town located between Yogyakarta and Semarang It is a small finger sized lumpia filled with mung bean sprouts tauge with slightly sour flavour 24 25 Lumpia tahu edit Another vegetarian lumpia in Indonesia is lumpia tahu or tofu lumpia It is filled with tofu and diced carrot lightly seasoned and deep fried Usually its size is smaller than common lumpia and consumed as a snack Sometimes beaten egg and chopped scallion might be added to the filling mixture 26 Lumpia telur edit This simple and cheap street food is a popular snack among Indonesian school children Lumpia telur is an egg lumpia which is lumpia skin placed upon a hot flat pan topped with beaten egg and chopped scallion folded and fried with cooking oil Sometimes slices of sausages are added The shape is not cylindrical like a common spring roll but rather a flat half circle drizzled with kecap manis sweet soy sauce and chili sambal It is often regarded as a hybrid between lumpia and egg martabak 27 Lumpia jantung pisang edit Lumpia with filling made of jantung pisang lit banana s heart which refer to banana blossom bud mixed with eggs seasoned with shallot garlic turmeric and pepper served in hot sambal chili sauce 28 Lumpia pisang edit nbsp Lumpia pisang a snack specialty from BojonegoroLumpia pisang or abbreviated as lumpis is a sale pisang a processed banana made by drying and smoking processes and dried in the sun wrapped in lumpia wrapper Lumpia udang mayones edit Seafood lumpia filled with shrimp diced carrots scallions garlic and mayonnaise 29 Actually the popularity of mayonnaise filled snack was started by another Indonesian popular snack called risole Risole is quite similar to lumpia with the difference in skin texture in which risoles skin is thicker softer and breaded This novelty risole recipe with mayo flavor then spin off using lumpia skin to become a new lumpia variant Piscok edit Main article Pisang cokelat nbsp Pisang Cokelat choco banana spring rollPiscok is an abbreviation of pisang cokelat banana chocolate in Indonesian 30 It is a sweet snack made of pieces of banana with chocolate syrup wrapped inside lumpia skin and being deep fried 31 Pisang cokelat is often simply described as choco banana spring rolls 30 It is often regarded as a hybrid between another Indonesian favourites pisang goreng fried banana and lumpia spring roll The type of banana being used is similar to pisang goreng preferably pisang uli pisang kepok or pisang raja sereh 32 Pisang cokelat is almost identical to Philippines turon except in this Indonesian version chocolate content is a must Sumpia edit Main article Sumpia nbsp Sumpia a finger sized small lumpia as a snackThe much smaller and drier lumpia with similar beef or prawn floss filling is called sumpia Its diameter is about the same as human finger In Indonesia the most common filling for sumpia is ebi or dried shrimp floss spiced with coriander lemon leaf garlic and shallot 33 These miniature lumpias are deep fried in ample of palm oil until golden brown and crispy Sumpia has a more crunchy and drier texture and is often consumed as a savory kue snack Philippines edit nbsp Fresh lumpiang ubod made with heart of palmLumpia was introduced to the Philippines during the pre colonial period by early Hokkien immigrants and traders from Fujian between 900 and 1565 AD The name is derived from Hokkien a language that originated in southeastern China lun means wet moist or soft and pia means cake or pastry They have been thoroughly nativized to Philippine cuisine and are found throughout the islands They use various fillings inspired by local ingredients and dishes and the later cuisines of Spain China and the United States 34 35 36 Filipino lumpia can be differentiated from other Asian spring roll versions in that they use a paper thin wrapper made from just flour water and salt They were also traditionally slender and long with a shape roughly similar to that of cigars or cigarillos though modern versions can come in various shapes and sizes The thinness of the crepe and the shape of the lumpia give them a relatively denser wrapping that nevertheless remains flaky and light in texture They are also traditionally dipped in agre dulce sweet and sour sauce vinegar based sauces banana ketchup or sweet chili sauce Fresh lumpia however have wrappers that are more crepe like and thicker due to the addition of eggs though still thinner than other Asian versions They are closer in texture to the original Chinese versions and were traditionally made with rice flour which makes them chewier Various kinds of lumpia fried or fresh are ubiquitous in Filipino celebrations like fiestas or Christmas 34 35 36 nbsp Turon halaya made with mashed ube purple yam Filipino lumpia also have a unique and extremely popular dessert subcategory the turon These lumpia variants are either cooked with a glazing of caramelized sugar sprinkled with granular sugar or drizzled in latik coconut caramel a syrup or honey Turon are traditionally filled with ripe saba bananas and jackfruit but they can also be made with a wide variety of other sweet fillings from sweet potato to ube 37 36 Daral edit Main article Daral food Another dessert lumpia Daral called Balolon among the Maranao originates from the Tausug people in Mindanao The wrapper is made from unsweetened ground glutinous rice and coconut milk galapong and is filled with sweetened coconut meat hinti 38 39 Dinamita edit Main article Dinamita nbsp Dinamita stuffed with a whole siling haba long chili pepper Dinamita or dynamite lumpia is a deep fried variant stuffed with a whole chili pepper wrapped in a thin egg crepe The stuffing is usually giniling ground beef or pork cheese and spices but it can also be adapted to use a wide variety of other ingredients including tocino hamon bacon and shredded chicken It is commonly eaten as an appetizer or as a companion to beer 40 41 Lumpiang adobo edit A type of lumpia filled with shredded meat that has been cooked adobo style 42 Lumpiang gulay edit Main article Lumpiang gulay Lumpiang gulay vegetable spring roll usually consists of various chopped vegetables and a small amount of pork or shrimp The types of vegetables can vary greatly and is a fried version 43 It is not vegetarian by default but vegan and vegetarian versions can be made from the basic recipe 44 Lumpiang hubad edit nbsp Lumpiang hubad a salad made of the fillings of fresh lumpia Lumpiang hubad naked spring roll is lumpiang sariwa fresh lumpia served without the crepe wrapping The lack of a wrapper technically does not make lumpia but is an alternative way of serving fresh lumpia s traditional fillings Lumpiang isda edit Lumpiang isda fish lumpia is filled primarily with fish flakes and fried It is also known as lumpiang galunggong blackfin scad lumpiang bangus milkfish lumpiang tulingan yellowfin tuna etc depending on the type of fish used 45 46 47 48 A common version of this combines fish flakes with malunggay moringa leaves 42 Lumpiang keso edit Main article Lumpiang keso nbsp Lumpiang keso a lumpia appetizer filled with cheese and served with mayonnaise and banana ketchupLumpiang keso more commonly known as cheese lumpia or cheese sticks is deep fried lumpia with a slice of cheese often cheddar as filling It is usually served with a dipping sauce made of banana ketchup and mayonnaise 49 Lumpiang labong edit Lumpiang labong is similar to lumpiang ubod but is made with labong bamboo shoot rather than heart of palm making it more like the Indonesian lumpia rebung It can be eaten fresh or fried 50 51 Lumpiang prito edit Lumpiang prito fried spring roll is the generic name for a subclass of lumpia that is fried It usually refers to lumpiang gulay or lumpiang togue They can come in sizes as small as lumpiang shanghai or as big as lumpiang sariwa It is usually eaten with vinegar and chili peppers or a mixture of soy sauce and calamansi juice known as toyomansi Lumpiang sariwa edit nbsp lumpiang sariwa fresh lumpia with peanut sauceLumpiang sariwa Tagalog fresh spring roll or fresh lumpia consists of minced vegetables and or various pre cooked meat or seafood and jicama singkamas as an extender encased in a double wrapping of lettuce leaf and a yellowish egg crepe An egg is often used as a binding agent for the wrap The accompanying sauce is made from chicken or pork stock a starch mixture crushed and roasted peanuts and fresh garlic This variety is not fried and is usually around five centimeters in diameter and 15 centimeters in length It is derived from the original Chinese popiah Lumpiang Shanghai edit Main article Lumpiang Shanghai nbsp Lumpiang Shanghai at a buffetLumpiang Shanghai is regarded as the most widespread type of lumpia and the most commonly served in Filipino gatherings It is characteristically filled with sauteed ground pork minced onion carrots and spices with the mixture sometimes held together by beaten egg It has numerous variants that contain other ingredients like green peas kintsay Chinese parsley or raisins Lumpiang Shanghai is commonly served with agre dulce but ketchup tomato or banana and vinegar are popular alternatives This variant is typically smaller than other lumpia Despite the name it did not originate in Shanghai or China 52 53 54 Lumpiang singkamas edit Lumpiang singkamas is similar to lumpiang ubod but it is made primarily with julienned strips of jicama rather than heart of palm It can be eaten fresh or fried 55 Lumpiang togue edit Main article Lumpiang togue This version of lumpiang gulay is filled primarily with bean sprouts togue and various other vegetables such as string beans and carrots Small morsels of meat seafood or tofu may be added Though it is the least expensive of the variants the preparation the cutting of vegetables and meats into small pieces and pre cooking these can be taxing and labor intensive It is a fried version 56 Lumpiang ubod edit Main article Lumpiang ubod Lumpiang ubod is a variation made of julienned ubod heart of the coconut tree as the main ingredient They can be fried or served as lumpiang sariwa It originates from Silay Negros Occidental where a variant lumpiang Silay is still popular Lumpiang pancit edit A type of lumpia where the filling consists of pancit a popular Filipino noodle dish Most likely created from the turo turo or karinderias that have leftover pancit often the sotanghon mung bean noodle or bihon rice noodle varieties as fillers within the lumpia 57 Ngohiong edit Main article Ngohiong Ngohiong is a variant of lumpia distinctively seasoned with five spice powder It is derived from the Hokkien dish ngo hiang kikiam in the Philippines and originated in Cebu City 58 Turon edit Main article Turon food nbsp Turon a dessert lumpia with saba bananasTuron also known as lumpiang saging banana lumpia or banana rolls is a golden brown snack that is usually made of sliced saba bananas and jackfruit or cheese in a lumpia wrapper sprinkled with brown sugar and deep fried It is sometimes paired with ice cream or pancake syrup 59 This snack is sold in the streets of most cities in the country alongside maruya banana cue and camote cue Different variants have emerged using different ingredients such as manggang turon mango kamote turon sweet potato turon de mani peanut chocolate turon and ube turon or turon halaya mashed purple yam 60 61 The Netherlands edit nbsp Indo loempia as part of assorted gorengan fritter snacks sold in a toko Asian shop in AmsterdamIn the Netherlands lumpia is called loempia an old Indonesian spelling It was introduced to the Netherlands through its former colonization of Indonesia In the Netherlands loempia is described as a large Indonesian version of Chinese spring rolls stuffed with minced meat bean sprouts and cabbage leaves and flavored with soy sauce garlic and green onion 6 Loempia is one of the popular snacks sold in the Dutch snack bars or eetcafe Vietnamese loempia edit The Vietnamese loempia is a variant of the loempia introduced by Vietnamese refugees during the mid 1980s 62 Vietnamese loempia s are typically sold in mobile Vietnamese snack bars known as loempiakramen and are typically served with a special sauce known as loempiasaus this special sauce was invented for the Dutch consumer because in Vietnam they are typically served with fish sauce 62 In contrast to the Chinese loempia the Vietnamese loempia is typically long and narrow 62 Loempidel edit nbsp Loempidel in the NetherlandsThe loempidel or Vietnamese frikandel is a variant of the loempia introduced in March 2019 by the Dutch food company Vanreusel its name is a portmanteau of loempia and frikandel The snack consists of a frikandel with sweet sauce wrapped in a coat of phyllo the phyllo coat being similar to that of another Dutch snack known as the Vietnamese loempia 63 Lumpia wrapper editPhilippines edit nbsp Filipino lumpia wrappers being fried on a heated plate nbsp Filipino lumpia wrappers being made with modern machineryFilipino lumpia wrappers generally come in two variants The most common variant used mostly for fried lumpia is made from just flour water salt and optionally cornstarch This type of wrapper is characteristically paper thin much thinner than other spring roll wrappers The ingredients are mixed into a wet dough then left to sit for a few hours before cooking A ball of dough is taken with one hand and smeared into a heated large flat metal plate greased with oil until a very thin circular film of it adheres to the pan and fries It is cooked for a few seconds then quickly taken out and left to dry 64 65 For fresh non fried lumpia the wrappers are usually made with egg in addition to the other basic ingredients and it may use rice flour This essentially turns it into a thin egg crepe It is still thinner than other spring roll variants but much thicker and softer than variants made from just flour and water 64 In modern mass production Filipino lumpia wrappers are generally made by automated assembly line machines similar to those used to make spring roll wrappers differing only in the recipe and the thickness of the wrapper It uses a revolving drum 66 Vegan versions of the wrapper exclude eggs and is instead just made with flour salt and water which results in a thinner translucent wrap These are also sealed with water not an egg wash 67 68 Popularity edit nbsp Filipino inspired lumpia from Lumpia Shack in New York CityLumpia have such enduring popularity that one can see at least one variant in almost any set of Filipino or Indonesian festivities Despite its Chinese origin in the United States lumpia is associated with Filipino cuisine while in Europe especially in the Netherlands it is associated with Indonesian cuisine owed to their shared colonial links The distinct taste and ease of preparation the Shanghai variant at least have caused lumpia to be one of the staple food products on the menus of many Filipino restaurants in the United States and around the world 69 See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Philippines portal nbsp Indonesia portalPopiah Bakpia Hopia Crepe Egg roll Spring roll Turon Daral Gỏi cuốn Chả gio Javanese cuisine Chinese Indonesian cuisine Filipino Chinese cuisine List of stuffed dishesReferences edit Tony Tan Indonesian spring rolls Lumpia Gourmet Traveller Australia Retrieved February 25 2016 Foodspotting March 18 2014 The Foodspotting Field Guide Chronicle Books LLC p 46 ISBN 978 1 4521 3008 8 Amy Besa Romy Dorotan 2014 Memories of Philippine Kitchens Abrams ISBN 9781613128084 照過來 清明到呷潤餅 Picture it Qingming Festival to lunpia TVBS in Chinese March 31 2017 Retrieved May 24 2020 清明吃润饼你知道来历吗 美味润饼菜咋做 Do you know the origin of Qingming eating lunpia 闽南网 Minnan Net in Chinese April 1 2016 Retrieved May 24 2020 a b c Koene Ada Henne 2006 Food Shopper s Guide to Holland Eburon Uitgeverij B V p 140 ISBN 9789059720923 Lumpia Indonesian spring rolls a b Nasution Pepy February 18 2010 Lumpia Semarang Recipe Semarang Style Springroll Indonesia Eats Retrieved February 16 2016 a b c Aida Nur Rohmi January 21 2023 Mengenal Sejarah dan Cara Membuat Lumpia Semarang Knowing the History and How to Make Lumpia Semarang KOMPAS com in Indonesian Retrieved April 12 2023 Abby November 28 2012 Lumpiang Shanghai Filipino Spring Rolls Manila Spoon a b c d e f g Prasetyowati Novita Desy August 19 2018 Mengenal 5 Jenis Lumpia di Berbagai Wilayah Indonesia Ada yang Dibakar www grid id in Indonesian Retrieved April 26 2020 Wu Olivia January 10 2011 Full moon feast The San Francisco Chronicle Heinz Von Holzen 2014 A New Approach to Indonesian Cooking Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd p 15 ISBN 9789814634953 Retrieved February 16 2016 Purbaya Angling Adhitya Lumpia Kambing dan Kepiting Varian Baru Lumpia Raih Penghargaan detik com in Indonesian Retrieved May 27 2023 VIVA PT VIVA MEDIA BARU February 11 2019 RESEP Lumpia Basah Bandung Kudapan Sehat Bikin Ngiler www viva co id in Indonesian Retrieved April 16 2020 Snack Box in Indonesian PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama p 33 ISBN 9789792245325 Retrieved February 16 2016 Jajaran Lumpia di Surabaya Camilan Enak untuk Ganjal Perut Saat Jelajah Traveling Yuk in Indonesian March 14 2019 Retrieved April 26 2020 Sri Owen 2014 Sri Owen s Indonesian Food Pavilion Books ISBN 9781909815476 Retrieved February 16 2016 Yuen Dina 2013 Indonesian Cooking Satays Sambals and More Tuttle Publishing ISBN 9781462908530 Retrieved February 16 2016 Lumpia Ayam Tasty Indonesian food Christina Andhika Setyanti April 11 2016 Lumpia Mutiara Lumpia Legendaris dari Malioboro CNN Indonesia in Indonesian Lumpia Sayur Vegetarian Spring Rolls or Egg Rolls Indonesian Cooking 101 Resep Lumpia mercon oleh Dapur macio Cookpad in Indonesian Retrieved April 16 2020 Yuyun A 2010 38 Inspirasi Usaha Makanan Minuman untuk Home Industry Modal di Bawah 5 Juta in Indonesian AgroMedia ISBN 9789790062719 Retrieved February 16 2016 4 Lumpia istimewa ciri khas berbagai kota di nusantara tak cuma dari Semarang merdeka com in Indonesian November 12 2017 Retrieved April 26 2020 Lumpia Duleg Lumpia Mini Khas Klaten yang Lezat jatengprov go id Government of Central Java Province p Indonesian Retrieved April 12 2023 Mencicipi Lumpia Tahu Wortel Camilan Renyah Paling Enak Dimakan Pakai Rawit iNews ID in Indonesian August 7 2019 Retrieved April 17 2020 Resep Lumpia Telur Jajanan SD oleh vnsachta Cookpad in Indonesian Retrieved April 17 2020 Indoculinaire Hunter September 15 2019 Resep lumpia jantung pisang gurih dan krispy banana blossom recipe www youtube com Archived from the original on November 18 2021 Retrieved April 27 2020 Resep Seafood Lumpia Udang Mayones detikfood in Indonesian Retrieved April 17 2020 a b Easy Chocolate Banana Spring Rolls Much Butter September 9 2019 Retrieved April 17 2020 5 Cara Membuat Pisang Coklat Lumer Enak dan Gampang Banget merdeka com in Indonesian February 13 2020 Retrieved April 17 2020 Tri Hagung September 21 2013 Membuat Piscok Pisang Coklat Kompasiana in Indonesian Retrieved April 17 2020 Trademarks PT Ajinomto Indonesia All Sumpia Ebi Dapur Umami Retrieved April 16 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Filipino Lumpia Recipe Chef Pablo s Retrieved December 30 2018 a b Dwyer A E June 11 2018 Everything you need to know about Asian egg rolls The Takeout Retrieved December 30 2018 a b c Santanachote Perry Beyond Egg Rolls 9 Spring Rolls Everyone Should Know About Thrillist Retrieved December 30 2018 Turon Filipino Fried Banana Rolls The Little Epicurean February 20 2018 Retrieved December 30 2018 Madarang Rhea Claire May 27 2018 Sweet tradition A peek at Tausug treats Rappler Retrieved January 15 2020 Polistico Edgie December 28 2012 daral Philippine Food Illustrated Retrieved January 15 2020 Polistico Edgie June 18 2011 Barako finger dynamite chili stick Philippine Food Illustrated Retrieved December 22 2018 Dinamita Dynamite Spring Rolls Pinoy Kusinero Retrieved December 22 2018 a b Love Lumpia These Lumpia Recipes Are All You Need Yummy ph Retrieved January 8 2019 Merano Vanjo Lumpiang Gulay Vegetable Egg Roll Recipe Panlasang Pinoy Retrieved January 8 2019 Filipino Lumpia recipe the vegetarian version of the original ghetto meat filled spring roll vegetarian yums Retrieved January 13 2019 Fish Lumpia Tulingan with Malunggay Yummy Recipes Retrieved January 8 2019 Lumpiang Isda Fish Spring Roll Recipe FilipinoFoodRecipes org Retrieved January 8 2019 RECIPE Lumpiang bangus with singkamas ABS CBN News August 25 2018 Retrieved January 8 2019 Lumpiang Galunggong Kawaling Pinoy March 24 2017 Retrieved January 8 2019 Filipino Cheese Sticks The Not So Creative Cook October 16 2015 Retrieved December 24 2018 Veneracion Connie Lumpiang labong bamboo shoots spring rolls Casa Veneracion Retrieved January 8 2019 Lumpia Stuffed Wrappers Lumpia Labong Genius Kitchen Retrieved January 8 2019 Gapultos Marvin 2013 The Adobo Road Cookbook A Filipino Food Journey Tuttle Publishing ISBN 9781462911691 Besa Amy Dorotan Romy 2014 Memories of Philippine Kitchens Abrams ISBN 9781613128084 Lumpiang Shanghai Filipino Spring Rolls Manila Spoon November 28 2012 Retrieved December 24 2018 Lumpiang Singkamas Recipe PinoyRecipe net Retrieved January 8 2019 Lumpiang Togue Bean Sprout Spring Rolls Recipe FilipinoFoodRecipes org Retrieved January 8 2019 How to Make Pancit Lumpia Food Business Recipe January 31 2020 Ngo Yong or Ngohiong Cebu Style Lumpia with Five Spice Powder a la Marketman Market Manila April 20 2012 Retrieved May 9 2019 Authentic Turon Recipe tasteatlas Retrieved September 12 2020 Kamote Turon Lumpiang Kamote Sweet Potato Roll Recipe Savvy Nana s Retrieved January 8 2019 Savage Emilou Ube Halaya Lumpia Filipino Purple Yam Dessert Spring Rolls Colorado Springs Independent Retrieved January 8 2019 a b c NPO Kennis Tien wereldgerechten hoe kwamen ze in onze keuken terecht in Dutch Nederlandse Publieke Omroep NPO Retrieved January 2 2023 Ellen den Hollander March 8 2019 Loempidel ligt straks tussen de kroketten en de frikandellen in Dutch Algemeen Dagblad Retrieved January 23 2020 a b Marketman s Quest For The Thinnest Lumpia Wrappers Market Manila August 25 2010 Retrieved December 24 2018 Lumpia Wrappers Spring Roll Wrappers ChefLolasKitchen October 8 2018 Retrieved April 16 2020 Filipino Spring Rolls Special Made From Jollibee Ready Market Online Anko Food Machine Co Ltd Retrieved December 24 2018 Vegetable Lumpiang Shanghai Simply Bakings October 3 2019 Retrieved April 9 2020 Enriquez Richgail The Happy Home Cook Vegetable Lumpiang Shanghai Positively Filipino Retrieved April 9 2020 Carey Jones March 14 2016 9 Filipino Dishes You Need to Know Zagat Google Inc Retrieved May 18 2017 Paolo Espanola October 14 2016 How To Navigate A Filipino Restaurant Menu Thrillist Group Nine Media Inc Retrieved May 18 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe module on Chicken Lumpia nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lumpia Lumpia Semarang Recipe Semarang Style Springroll Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lumpia amp oldid 1217636627 Lumpia wrapper, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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