Special edition recipe post today, featuring mama Aoki :)
What better chef to learn from than your own mama? And my mama certainly knows how to cook! She is the best cook I know! Everytime I bring in lunch to work, I always get compliments from my work colleagues about how good my food smells- Well what can I say, I have been well taught- only from mama's best! <3
This BBQ pork bun recipe has been developed alot and this recipe I am posting today is her most recent rendition of it!
Ingredients
- 1/2 pint of water
- 1/2 pint of milk (skimmed)
- 5 Big Tbsp of Coffee Mate (roughly 50g)
- 7g (x2) Sachets of Easy Bake Yeast
- 5 Tbsp granulated sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 bag (1kg) + 1 bowl of Bapao wheat flour (normal Chinese rice bowl)
- 2 Tbsp Oil
- 2 Tbsp Soft Sponge Flour
Directions
1. Mix together 1/2 pint of milk, (my mama used skimmed milk cause shes a health buff, but any milk will do!) 1/2 pint of water and heat up on the pan until it is warm.
2. Pour into a container with a lid and add in 2 Tbsp of granulated sugar and the 14g of yeast and shake up.
This was the container we used to shake up the yeast mixture, leave this to the side.
3. In a large bowl add together the wheat flour, coffee mate, 3 tbsp of sugar and 2 tbsp of oil and stir together.
4. By this point your yeast mixture should have nicely frothed up in your container.
Pour this yeast mixture into the flour mixture.
5. Stir and knead the combined ingredients together until it forms a dough.
6. Cover the dough with a damp cloth and leave in a warm place for a hour.
We left ours in the oven heated up then switched off.
7. While you are waiting for Mr Yeast to do its thang, go ahead and make the filling!
We went with the traditional Char Sui meat here, the filling is mainly of onions and char sui. I'm not going to write the recipe on that here as I am much too lazy, but if you do need any help with it, please feel free to drop a comment!
8. 1 hour later... POOF... Mr Yeast, like the tooth fairy of the baking world, made magic in my kitchen!
Drop me food instead of money! Oh yeah!
9. Add 2 tbsp of soft sponge flour and knead the dough for a bit.
10. Cover back up and leave for another 15 minutes in a warm place to rest again.
11. 15 minutes later, now we are ready to get folding the little buns together. Get your table set up!
12. Pull a piece of dough that can fit into your fingertips off. Roll this up into a ball and squash out till it turns into a circle, you may use a rolling pin for this, make sure the inner part is a bit thicker than the outer part of the dough.
13. Pleat the dough circle and fill with a tablespoon of the filling.
14. Squish the ends together.
15. Repeat till all the dough is used.
16. Get the steamer ready by boiling the water till it is ready to steam.
17. Steam the buns for around 15 minutes.
18. Eat away!
My mum wraps bao so beautifully, you can tell which ones are the one's she's wrapped against mine easily! My bun looks like the ugly little duckling! At least the duckling taste nice still huh!
We easily made over 30 buns with this recipe, and we even had a tower steamer, yes one heavy piece of machinery to steam buns in batches!
I am lucky now I have traveled back to my home in London, I have a bunch of these bao's in my freezer ready to steam when I am looking for a quick snack! They take 20 minutes to steam from frozen. Have 2 or 3 buns in the morning and this will make a great breakfast! Coupled with an English tea of course! Delicious!
Make sure you pinch your buns tightly or they will expand and open like this!
I can't leave this post without the all important close off rip off inspection!
It was sooo fluffy and soft!! My mum said that this has been her best developed recipe yet! And me being a sucker for bao's, i'm enticed by every bao that is put on my plate. This recipe is defo one of her top 2! The other one was batch no 359?? I have lost count how many fixes she does to the recipe!
Little bit of interesting information for you all to end the post. My mum told me that her buns are not as white as the one's you would see in the restaurant as the one's that are sold have ammonium added in them, this makes the bao's whiter and fluffier. But seeing as ammonium is bad for you and causes cancer, lets stick to mama's home cooked version :)