Gua Bao (割包) or Kong Bak Bao (扣肉包)

These originated from Fuzhou (福州) a city in Fujian (福建). It literally means to cut a bun. I’d call this the Chinese sandwich, because it works like one. However, I didn’t choose to make it that way. What I do is to brush oil when folding the bun.
Since many Fujian people migrated to many parts of the world, these sandwich-like bun can be seen anywhere in the world! Very often, they are served with pork belly, and therefore sometimes called the pork belly bun.
In Singapore, we call it Kong Bak Bao (扣肉包). In Taiwan, Gua Bao (割包 or 刈包) and I saw that in Vietnam, it is open-faced Banh bao.
This is a standard recipe I have created for all yeast steamed buns. It is really easy. 70C hot water – Flour ratio is 1:2. Then add a teaspoon of salt, a tablespoon of sugar, and a teaspoon of yeast. Knead until smooth or maximum of about 10 minutes.
For the pork belly, cook whatever way you like, I think 0.5cm is a maximum width to cut them. You can barbeque, braise, deep fry, anything! In this recipe, I braised mine. Then, add any sauce you like! Soya sauce, chillies, sweet and sour, even BBQ sauce. And then add any condiment you like: lettuce, coriander leaves, chopped chilies, green onions, onions…. and hm… maybe even coleslaw : that one I have not tried.
These are so flexible and so yummy. I do mine in exactly 1 hour. The secret is in the order I do things. So read on…

Dough kneaded and starting to proof

Pork belly should preferably not be more than 0.5 cm thick.

Roll the dough to a longish circle and brush it with oil

You can use whatever condiments and sauce that you like!

Get your diners to assemble the bao themselves. They can put whatever they like, and you can provide a number of different options in filings too!
Gua Bao or Kong Bak Bao
- 准备
- 0 分钟
- 烹饪
- 0 分钟
- 总计
- 0 分钟
- 份量
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材料
- 500 gHong Kong Flour, or plain flour, but it won't be as pretty
- 270 gwater at 70C
- 1 tspinstant yeast
- 1 tspsalt
- 1 Tbspsugar
- 1 tspbaking powder, optional
- Some oil for brushing, do not add into the dough!
- 1 kgpork belly at room temperature
- 1/2 cupdark soya sauce
- 1 Tbspsugar
- 1/4 cupcooking wine or sherry
- 1 tspsalt, to taste
- 1 tsppepper, to taste
- 1 tspcumin or 5 spice powder
- 3 clovesof garlic
- 1/2big onion
- 5thin slices of ginger
做法
- Bun
- 01Mix everything and knead for a maximum of 10 minutes or until the dough is smooth. If your dough is dry, use a bit more water. The dough should not be sticky.
- 02Put the dough into a ziplog bag or cover it with a wet cloth. Never expose the dough before it is steamed to air/wind. Leave until it is doubled, or about 15 minutes. If your dough does not rise at this point, throw it out and check that your yeast has not lost its efficacy, restart.
- 03When proving, cook the pork belly.
- 04After the dough is proved for the first time and the pork belly is in the pot cooking, divide the dough into 20 balls. Try to be as equal as you can, or use a weighing machine. Each piece is 40g.
- 05Always cover the dough after and before cutting.
- 06After dividing all the dough, start with the first dough ball made. Roll it out into an oval-like circle: more oval than circle.
- 07Brush oil over it, then fold over.
- 08Place the bun onto a steamer that is lined with grease proof paper.
- 09Leave it to proof at 30 to 35C for another 15 to 20 minutes, not more or your bun will not be smooth.
- 10Go back to check your pork belly. Should be almost done. Adjust the taste.
- 11Prepare the condiments: wash lettuce, cut cilantro etc.
- 12When the 20 minutes is up, set your steamer for 8 minutes and steam.
- 13Get your table ready to serve!
- Pork Belly
- 14Cut the pork belly into 1/2 cm slices.
- 15Scald the meat with piping hot water: just pour the water over the pork and drain it dry.
- 16Place all the meat into a pot with all the other ingredients.
- 17Set it cook for about 30-45 minutes at medium heat. (cook longer if you want your pork softer)
- 18Serve with buns and condiments.