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A delicious, crispy egg roll is a phenomenal treat. Unfortunately, if you don’t eat them all in one sitting, the oil in the wrapper and the moisture in the fillings can cause the fried rice paper wrapping to become soggy and unappealing. If you’re making them from scratch, the best way to keep egg rolls crispy and delicious is to avoid unnecessary oils and remove the excess moisture in the ingredients. For store-bought egg rolls, there are several ways to keep the oil and moisture from getting out of hand.

Method 1
Method 1 of 4:

Cooking Your Egg Rolls

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  1. After washing your veggie fillings, wipe all of the water off with a paper towel before cutting the vegetables. Once cut, wrap your fillings in another paper towel and squeeze them to wring the moisture out. If you’re using any meat fillings, squeeze the moisture out with a paper towel after cooking and cutting the ingredients. [1]
    • The more moisture you can remove from the ingredients, the more likely the egg roll wrapper will stay dry when cooking and storing the egg rolls.
  2. For frozen rolls, there is almost always enough oil in the wrapper already. Do not add any sesame oil, soy sauce, or vegetable oil to your egg rolls before cooking them. This may feel counterintuitive, but egg roll wrappers have plenty of oil built into them to begin with and adding more can lead to soggy egg rolls.

    Tip: This can also be relevant for homemade egg rolls. While you do need to use some oils to make them, try to keep the liquids to a minimum. If you’re deep-frying them, they’ll be submerged in oil anyway, so there’s no need to add more.

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  3. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Regardless of whether you air fried, deep-fried, or baked your egg rolls, do not let them cool on a paper towel or plate. Instead, use a pair of tongs to set the egg rolls on a raised cooling rack with a baking sheet underneath it. This way, the oils won’t build up at the base of the egg roll and will drip freely to the baking sheet below. [2]
    • If the oils build up in the base of the wrapper, your egg rolls will only feel partially crispy and the wrapper at the bottom of each egg roll will feel soggy.
  4. Do not douse your egg rolls in sauce before serving them. Instead, let people dip their egg rolls as they desire. Storing egg rolls that already have sauce on them is exceptionally hard and the sauce is extremely likely to make them soggy when you reheat them. [3]
    • If you’re storing any sauces for your egg rolls and you’re putting the rolls in the fridge, do not package them together. The rolls may absorb some of the moisture from the sauces.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 4:

Storing Your Egg Rolls Correctly

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  1. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    You should not use an airtight container to store your egg rolls in the fridge since the moisture inside of each roll needs air to dissipate. Get a well-ventilated container for your egg rolls. Line the bottom of your storage container with 2-3 paper towels to absorb any oil from your egg rolls. [4]
    • A takeout container or Styrofoam container with 3-5 holes punched it in is perfect for this.

    Variation: If you don’t have a good container for this, use an airtight storage container and don’t close the lid all the way. Leave a 1 2 –1 in (1.3–2.5 cm) gap between the container and the lid to give the rolls room to breathe.

  2. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Do not stack your egg rolls and leave as much space between the individual rolls as possible. Lay your egg rolls flat on the bottom of your container. [5]
    • The more room your egg rolls have, the more evenly the egg rolls will dry out in the fridge.
  3. You can keep your egg rolls in the refrigerator for 2-3 days before they start to go bad. The earlier you can eat them, the better. The filling won’t be nearly as crispy after 1-2 days. [6]
    • You cannot store cooked egg rolls in the freezer without turning them into a soggy mess. You can store uncooked egg rolls in the freezer, though!
    • The refrigerator is really the only option when it comes to storing cooked egg rolls. Unfortunately, they just aren’t great dishes when it comes to long-term storage.
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    If you’re making egg rolls from scratch and you prepared too many of them, you can store them in the freezer for 2-3 months. Get an airtight plastic food container and sprinkle flour or cornstarch along the bottom of the container. Add your uncooked rolls in a sequence of parallel rolls and columns. Sprinkle more flour or cornstarch on top before adding another layer. Close the container and set it in your freezer.
    • You can only do this if your egg rolls do not have meat in them. When you thaw the egg rolls or cook them, the meat won’t come out particularly well since it’s already been cooked.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 4:

Reheating Egg Rolls on a Skillet

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  1. Get a clean, nonstick skillet and set it out on your stove. Heat the skillet for 5-10 minutes to warm the skillet up. The goal here is to cook your egg rolls as quickly as possible to avoid giving the moisture and oils time to soak into the wrapper as the rolls reheat, so a warm skillet will help this process along. [7]

    Warning: There is no faster way to ruin perfectly good egg rolls than to reheat them in the microwave. The wrapper will become a strange combination of soggy and brittle. Do not reheat rolls in the microwave!

  2. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Take your egg rolls out of the refrigerator and place them flat on the bottom of your skillet. If your egg rolls don’t feel oily or slick, pour 1 teaspoon (4.9 mL) of olive oil into your warm pan. Arrange your egg rolls in a single layer on the skillet. [8]
    • If you hear a little sizzling, this is a good sign that you’re on the right track towards reheated rolls with a crispy snap to them.
  3. Let your egg rolls heat on one side for 3-5 minutes. If you see the egg rolls start to smoke in the pan, rotate them and turn them over to keep them from burning. Egg rolls aren’t particularly thick, so they don’t need a ton of time on the skillet to reheat. [9]
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Use a pair of tongs to grab each egg roll and flip them over to cook on the opposite side. Reheat the second side for 3-5 minutes before transferring your egg rolls to a plate. If you like really crispy egg rolls, rotate them again 2 additional times for 1-2 minutes each before plating your egg rolls. [10]
    • If the egg rolls look like they absorbed too much oil, set them on a paper towel to dry them off before plating them.
    • To tell if the egg rolls are done, poke them with your tongs. If the skin is hard but there’s a slight give to the rolls, they’re done
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Method 4
Method 4 of 4:

Warming Egg Rolls up in the Oven

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  1. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Your egg rolls will come out perfectly crispy in the oven as well. Set your oven to 350 °F (177 °C). While you’re waiting for the oven to preheat, line a baking sheet with aluminum foil. Set the egg rolls on top of the baking sheet so that no egg roll is overlapping. [11]
    • You do not need to line the aluminum foil with cooking spray. The fried wrapper shouldn’t stick to the pan when you pull them out. The egg rolls will be less crispy if you do this as well.
  2. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Once your oven is preheated, slide the baking sheet into the center rack. Set the timer for 10-15 minutes depending on how cold the egg rolls were when you took them out of the fridge. If they were hard and really cold to the touch, 15 minutes is likely appropriate. If they were only moderately cold, 10 minutes should get the job done. [12]
    • You can cook them a little longer if you like your egg rolls extra crispy!
  3. Watermark wikiHow to Keep Eggrolls Crispy
    Once the egg rolls have reheated, put on an oven mitt and slide the pan out of the oven. Set it on top of your stove and use tongs to lift the egg rolls off and set them on a plate. [13]
    • If they look oily or moist, set the egg rolls down on a paper towel and blot them dry with a separate paper towel to remove the excess oil.
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      Tips

      • If you need to reheat egg rolls within 2-3 hours after you finish making them, arrange them on a wire rack with a baking sheet underneath, then place them in the oven on the lowest heat setting for 15-20 minutes. [14]
      • Don't reheat egg rolls in the microwave if you want to keep them crispy, since the microwave will cause the wrapper to absorb moisture from the fillings while the natural oils in the wrapper dissipate.
      • These methods will work for egg rolls as well, although spring wells tend to be crispier if you reheat them on a skillet.
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      Things You’ll Need

      Cooking Egg rolls Differently

      • Paper towels
      • Wire rack

      Storing Your Egg rolls Correctly

      • Storage container
      • Paper towel
      • Cornstarch or flour

      Reheating Egg Rolls on a Skillet

      • Non-stick skillet
      • Tongs
      • Plate
      • Paper towel (optional)

      Warming Egg Rolls up in the Oven

      • Baking sheet
      • Aluminum foil
      • Tongs
      • Paper towel (optional)

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