Steamed Buns with Dipping Sauce
Submitted by mpuzin
Soft steamed buns filled with mushrooms, water chestnuts, bell pepper, and hoisin sauce, served with a soy-chili dipping sauce. Homemade Chinese bao that freeze beautifully for later.
YIELD
16 bunsPREP
30 minCOOK
40 minREADY
80 minMaking steamed buns from scratch is one of those kitchen projects that feels intimidating until you actually do it. Then it becomes addictive.
These bao are filled with a savory mix of marinated mushrooms, water chestnuts, red bell pepper, scallions, and hoisin sauce, all wrapped in pillowy dough and steamed until puffy and tender. The soy-vinegar dipping sauce with a hit of chili oil and fresh cilantro ties everything together.
Fair warning: the first few you fold might look rough. By number four or five, you’ll be twisting them shut like a pro.
Kitchen Tips
- Chop the filling ingredients small so they fit neatly inside the dough rounds
- Leave at least an inch between buns in the steamer since they puff up as they cook
- Line your steamer with cheesecloth, wax paper, or cabbage leaves to prevent sticking
- These freeze well after cooling; reheat by steaming for about 5 minutes straight from the freezer
- Cook the filling until most of the liquid evaporates so it doesn’t make the dough soggy
Ingredients
finely chopped, (both white and green parts, reserve 1 teaspoon for dipping sauce)
Directions
In large non-stick saucepan, add bell pepper, scallions, and garlic, and cook, stirring constantly, until peppers are soft, 5 to 8 minutes.
Chop mushrooms (the pieces need to be fairly small to go in the dumplings) and add, with marinade, to peppers.
Add water chestnuts and hoison sauce; cook until most of liquid has evaporated, 3 to 4 minutes.
Cover and refrigerate until ready to use.
Sprinkle work surface with flour.
Turn bun dough out onto prepared surface, knead 1 minute and roll into a log, about 16 inches long and 1½ inch wide.
Cut dough into 16 equal pieces and roll each into a ball.
Flatten each ball with the palm of your hand into a 3 inch diameter circle.
Place a heaping teaspoon of filling mixture in center of each dough round, and gather up edges to enclose filling, twisting edges together and pressing to seal.
Repeat with remaining dough and filling, covering buns with plastic wrap.
WARNING: This takes a little practice, so I’d recommend that you plan on not serving the first 2 or 3 you make to company.
Line steamer rack with cheesecloth or wax paper (I used cabbage leaves).
Place in large shallow saucepan or wok; add 2 inches water, cover and bring to rolling boil.
Arrange 8 of the buns at least 1inch apart on prepared steamer rack; cover and steam until puffy, tender and cooked through, 15 to 20 minutes.
Repeat with remaining buns, adding water to pan as necessary.
(I did this in my Black and Decker steamer, which only allowed for 4 dumplings at a time. I filled the water to the highest water mark, refilling after steaming 8 dumplings.)
Meanwhile, prepare dipping suace: In small bowl, combine soy sauce, 1 tablespoon water, the reserved scallions, the vinegar, the reserved garlic, and the hot chili oil, if using; sprinkle with cilantro, if using.
Serve freshly steamed buns immediately, with dipping suace on the side, or cool and freeze for later use.
(To reheat, thaw until soft and steam until warmed through, 5 minutes.)
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