Spring rolls are made with raw vegetables wrapped in rice paper and are a great way to get your family to eat veggies.

Spring rolls are made with raw vegetables wrapped in rice paper and are a great way to get your family to eat veggies.

Spring rolls use whatever fresh ingredients are available

  • By Barbara Damrosch Special to The Washington Post
  • Tuesday, March 15, 2016 3:02pm
  • Life

A cook needs a collection of multi-vegetable recipes that celebrate whatever’s fresh. An omelet, a stir-fry, a pot of minestrone — all of these dishes take their cue from what’s at hand.

One of my favorites is the spring roll — not the deep-fried type, but the kind where a piece of edible paper made from rice and/or tapioca is wrapped around fresh, raw ingredients, then dipped in a savory sauce.

These rolls are great any time of year, but spring is the season when young lettuce leaves are succulent and hot weather has not yet given arugula and mustard greens too fierce a bite. Baby bok choy and tatsoi — any tender Asian greens, really — would be fine additions. So would baby spinach or claytonia.

The rolls are easy. The wrappers are usually round, translucent disks that come stacked in a plastic bag and are virtually nonperishable, so you can keep a good supply around. When you take one out, it’s stiff and brittle, so moisten it before adding the filling. Most modern brands don’t need to be soaked but merely swiped quickly under lukewarm water from the tap. Placed one at a time on a smooth countertop or flat ceramic plate, they will soften as you arrange your filling.

If you have all of the items ready, this can be done quickly. I make a line that more or less fills the bottom third of the circle, striking a balance between soft greens and crunchier vegetables such as carrots and radishes. Herbs are important for flavor, try chives, cilantro, shiso or dill.

I roll the wrapper from the bottom up, like a cigar, tucking everything in. The moist wrapper adheres to itself as you roll, so it’s not apt to fall apart. Some people fold over the ends, but I like to see the greens poking out a bit. I cut my rolls into thirds so they’re roughly bite-size and easy to handle and don’t have to be double-dipped.

Come summer, there’s plenty of basil, mint, scallions and tender young leaves of Swiss chard. For crunchies, there’s peppers, celery and cucumbers, all cut in thin strips.

In the fall and winter, along with cold-weather greens such as kale, you might tuck in some thinly cut baby turnips, kohlrabi, savoy cabbage and whatever herbs you’ve been able to coax along on the windowsill. You can also add avocado and cooked ingredients such as shrimp.

The dipping sauce you use is very much a matter of taste. Try a plum sauce or peanut sauce. Whatever you use, it should be thin enough for easy dipping.

I can’t think of a better way to get a family to eat vegetables than these rolls — light, healthy and delicious, whatever the season.

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