Yeasty buns filled with savory meats and veggies, they are steamed to perfection and can be eaten whenever you want! In China, baozi are commonly eaten for breakfast, although I have eaten baozi at every hour of the day. Now that I live in Georgia and baozi are not as easily accessible as they were in Beijing [shoutout to that baozi man that made amazing baozi!], I begged my grandmother who has always made the best, delicious baozi to show me how to make them!
There are two major parts in making these baozi. The filling and the dough - it takes forever!
The filling is composed of chopped bokchoy, pork, clear noodles, green onion, shitake mushrooms that have been stirfried with onion. The bokchoy is washed and soaked in salt before it is strained of moisture and chopped and diced. Shitake mushroom diced and stirfried with onion to bring out the flavor before all three are combined with the raw pork. The clear noodles need be chopped into small bits. The purpose of the clear noodles are to soak up the excess moisture inside the bun when it steams so that the inside isn't soupy. Soupy buns are delicious, but dry ones can be just as tasty without being excessively fatty. Soupy buns can also explode all over your shirt and ruin clothes - maybe that's just me? It should look something like this as it's waiting to be wrapped!
The dough is a simple flour and water plus yeast that mostly just takes time (4 hours) to rise. Then, you cut and roll the dough out into small flat circles that are about 4 inches in diameter with centers that are slightly thicker than around, so that the meat won't wa. I raced my grandmother in being able to roll the dough out faster than she could wrap it.
After they're wrapped, we put them in a waiting zone because we could only steam 10 at a time for 25 mins each.
After their 25 mins sauna experience, they become big and puffy marshmellow poofy cuties! This is them right out of the steamer!:
We put them in a rack and let them cool before eating them.
Here is the inside of one of the experimental batches. The more we made, the bigger and fluffier the baozi became! I hope you enjoyed looking at these pictures because I enjoyed making 50 of these baozi in an all day food-speriment with my grandmother... and eating these yum baozis.
click to ZOOM!
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