- Chicken Recipes
- Beef Recipes
- Pork Recipes
- Lamb Recipes
- Seafood Recipes
- Pasta Recipes
- Chili Recipes
- Pizza Recipes
- Cake Recipes
- Cheesecake Recipes
- Cookie Recipes
- Pie Recipes
- American
- Soul Food
- Asian
- Cajun/Creole
- Caribbean
- Central/South American
- Chinese
- Eastern Europe
- English/Scottish
- Filipino
- French
- German
- Greek
- Indian
- Indonesian
- Irish
- Italian
- Japanese
- Jewish
- Mediterranean
- Mexican
- Middle Eastern
- Moroccan
- Scandinavian
- Southwestern
- Spanish
- Thai
- Vietnamese
Baked Char Siu Bao - Buns With Minced BBQ Pork
![]() |
|
|
Prep Time: 3+ hours | Cook Time: 3+ hours | Serves: 8
Appetizers » Pork » ChineseVisual Recipe By: kiteless Click Here To Print Recipe Using Selected Print Style | Click On Images To Enlarge
| |
|
Ingredients: If you know what Char Siu Bao is, you already know how delicious these hot little buns are. They can be baked or steamed, but both have soft, slightly sweet, pillowy dough wrapped around a savory and sweet filling of thick sauce and minced BBQ’d pork. |
|
Step 1: Line a large roasting pan with foil. Mix up all ingredients except the pork and set aside. |
|
|
Step 2: Cut your pork into 1"x1" strips, trimming away excess fat. Place in the roasting pan and pour the sauce over the top. |
|
|
Step 3: When ready to cook, put your oven rack on the second closest position to the broiler and preheat the oven with the broiler for a few minutes. Broil pork for 20-30 minutes. Turn and baste at 8 minute intervals. Pork is done when the thickest section is cooked all the way through (no pink). Watch for burning sugar, and some of the edges will and should get a little crispy. If your pan turns dry (mine didn’t), add a little water a few TB at a time. Looks like this when done: |
|
|
Step 4: Make the filling |
|
Step 5: Mix oyster sauce through sesame oil and set aside. |
|
|
Step 6: Get a wok or sauté pan hot and put in the oil. Add onions, lower heat to low, and cook until onions start to turn brown, just a few minutes. Add pork and raise heat to medium-high, stir-frying for a few more minutes until pork is heated through, about one minute. |
|
|
Step 7: Remove from heat and put in bowl. Let cool to room temp then refrigerate for 4 hours or up to overnight (yes, again!) You can make the dough while you let this cool and rest in the fridge. |
|
|
Step 8: Make the Dough! |
|
|
Step 9: After rising (you can see where I poked and lifted the dough with my fingers). |
|
|
Step 10: Making the bao! |
|
|
Step 11: Roll the pieces into balls, and put back what you’re not using at the moment in the bowl under the cloth. Make a well into your dough ball, like this: |
|
|
Step 12: Stretch/press to make a little bit bigger and make the edges thinner, and spoon a scant tablespoon or so of filling into the well. Hold bao in one hand, and with the other, pinch two sides shut. |
|
|
Step 13: Turn the bao a 1/4 turn, and pinch the opposite two sides shut. |
|
|
Step 14: Now pull the other open corners shut together. You’ll be pinching a total of 4 times. Then do a final pinch, and kinda twist the whole bottom together to make sure it’s sealed. |
|
|
Step 15: Place you bao sealed-side down on a wax paper square. Repeat for all your bao. |
|
|
Step 16: Let rest in a warm spot for about an hour, or until they’ve risen a bit. A puffy, risen bao: |
|
|
Step 17: Your patience is rewarded with a tray of golden brown, perfectly cooked bao: |
|
|
Step 18: Let cool for a few minutes before ripping into! The finished product: |
|
User Comments for Baked Char Siu Bao - Buns With Minced BBQ Pork:
You must be a registered user and logged in to post a comment





















TOP RECIPES