I have been dying to try these in the steam oven after reading Dan Lepard’s excellent article in Good Food here. Actually I have been crazy about these new ‘fashionable’ type of steamed bao after eating them in a few restaurants recently. There are a few recipes around but I thought I would convert Dan’s recipe as it sounds the most authentic and also cook a version of his pork filling in the combi oven here :).
I have taken the bao recipe straight from the article but changed the cooking method. SO much easier than a bamboo basket over a wok. To be honest it would be a nightmare to cook these at home without a steam oven. Remember, cooking in a steam oven gives you accurate temperature control. The recipe made 16, slightly larger than usual bao. You could seriously only fit 6 into a large bamboo steamer basket so that’s a lot of stacking, checking water levels and three woks; too hard!
The texture was so light and fluffy, better than the ones I have eaten in restaurants. I used one large solid steamer tray and one small but probably two large would be ideal as they were touching slightly after the final rise. If you have a narrow depth steam oven then use three trays.
A little bit of effort with the three resting times but worth it, they were absolutely delicious 🙂
Ingredients:
300ml warm water, about 25°C
20g castor sugar
50g rice or potato starch (available in Asian supermarkets)
one 7g sachet dry yeast
450g white bread flour
flour and oil to finish
Method:
- Put the warm water in a mixing bowl, whisk in the sugar, rice starch and yeast until dissolved then add the flour and mix to a dough. Cover and leave for 10 minutes then lightly knead the dough until smooth.
- Grease the bowl with a little oil so it will be easier to remove the dough each time.
- Repeat this cover-leave-and-knead routine twice more, then divide the dough into 16 small pieces. Roll these firmly into neat balls, cover and leave for 10 minutes.
- Roll each ball into a disc about 1cm thick with a little flour, brush the top of each disc with oil then fold in half. Cover two large solid trays with non-stick parchment and place them over the tray, spaced without touching. Dust with flour, cover loosely and leave until doubled. This took the longest time, about 30 minutes. They need to be as thick as you want to serve them as they don’t puff up anymore in the cooking process.
- Place the risen bao in the steam oven and Steam @ 100°C for 12 minutes. It is no problem if you have multiple trays, that is the beauty of a steam oven! Either serve immediately, or cool, bag and freeze for later. To reheat, steam @ 100°C again for 1 minutes. They were perfect, no problem to reheat which is what I will be doing when cooking them again for a party.
Serve with my version of the Chinese pulled pork here, hoi sin sauce, cucumber strips and spring onion. Yum, yum & yum!
Could this dough be made in a bread maker? (Lazy, I know!)
Hi Megan,
I guess so provided you can knead and rise three times!
Regards Trudy
Hi Trudy
Thanks for this recipe – we are addicted to these buns after eating David Chang’s Momofuku version in New York a few years ago. Have made a combi-steamed pork belly to go inside them on several occasions but always resorted to buying the buns from our Asian grocery store! Obviously it’s high time I tried the real thing myself. 😉
Is there an alternative than using rice/potato starch please?
You could try cornflour. Let me know how it goes.
Regards Trudy