Bao buns with braised shortrib and pickled daikon

Rich, tender beef shortrib is balanced by sharp pickles in this authentic bao bun recipe by Erchen Chang, co-founder of London restaurant Bao. Try preparing them for a special occasion, such as Chinese New Year.

This recipe is a labour of love – see the bao buns take shape in pictures with Erchen’s bao bun masterclass.

 

 

 

  • Makes about 32 buns
  • Hands-on time 1 hour, oven time 3-3½ hours, plus resting, rising and proving

Nutrition

Calories
204kcals
Fat
9.4g (2.8g saturated)
Protein
6.9g
Carbohydrates
22.3g (5.1g sugars)
Fibre
1.2g
Salt
0.6g

delicious. tips

  1. This makes lots of buns and filling, but it freezes so well that it’s ideal to keep leftovers in the freezer – a timesaver meal for another night.
    The traditional snowy white look of bao buns comes from bleached Asian flour – find it in Chinese supermarkets.
    These doughs are wet, sticky and hard to knead. If you have a stand mixer with a dough hook, use that for steps 1 and 2. If not, a dough scraper is helpful.
    When shaping the dough balls, avoid cold surfaces such as metal or marble, as the dough sticks to them. A large wooden chopping board is good.
    The buns start to become firm and bouncy if you leave them for too long after steaming – it’s best to stuff and eat them as you go.

  2. Freeze the combined, uncooked dough (step 2) in an airtight freezer bag for up to 1 week. Bring back to room temperature before shaping. Freeze the cooked, cooled (unfilled) buns in airtight bags for up to 1 month. Defrost completely, then re-steam for 2-3 minutes. Chill the cooked meat in the unreduced sauce for up to 3 days, then reheat on the hob, slice the meat and reduce the sauce. Freeze the meat in the reduced sauce for up to 1 month. Defrost and reheat until piping hot in a microwave.

  3. Bao buns use ‘old’ dough, which has been left to ferment and rise for a good while, combined with a freshly risen ‘new’ dough to give the buns complex flavours.

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