Do What I Like

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Chinese Steamed Mantou

Chinese steamed mantou/bun (饅頭) is a kind of steamed bread bun originating from China. They are somewhat similar in nutritional values and eating qualities to the white bread of the West. Mantou is a staple carbohydrates of the Northern Chinese diet.

Instead of just plain bun, you can wrap in sweet fillings like red bean paste, lotus seed paste (lin yoong) or sesame paste and for the savoury fillings like pork or beef can be used. Steamed buns with fillings are normally know as baozi (包子).

Nowadays, these kind of buns or mantous are easily available frozen from supermarkets or served deep-fried/steamed in Chinese Dim Sum restaurants.

I liked those deep-fried ones served in Peking restaurants. They go really well dipped in some of those spicy sauce in the "Kung Po Prawns" dish but my kids loved them dipped in condensed milk.

I am lazy, so I used my bread maker to do all the mixing and kneading. Making full use of my bread machine.

Steamed plain mantou and black sesame paste baozi.
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Texture of mantou - soft and fluffy inside even when cold.
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Final proving - 45 minutes.
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Ingredients:
Dough Starter
150g cake flour
50g plain flour
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp yeast
110g water

Method:
I put all these into my bread maker on the dough cycle. When the dough cycle is completed, remove 70g for use and keep the rest in a freeze bag and chill in the vegetable compartment for use thereafter. The whole process is about 1 hour 20 minutes.

*** If you don't have a bread maker, you have to knead the dough manually till it is smooth then prove the dough in a covered bowl for at least 45 minutes.

Main Dough
175ml skim milk
70g sugar
200g plain flour
100g cake flour
5g yeast
70g dough starter
1 tbsp corn oil

Method:
1. Put in all the ingredients except the oil into the bread maker, use the dough cycle. When the dough gathers into a ball, add in the oil and let the machine do its kneading till smooth. The whole process should be about 15 - 20 minutes depending on your bread maker.
2. Remove dough from bread maker, roll into a flat sheet then roll it up swiss roll style.
3. Cut into pieces of about 50g each and put it on a piece of square greaseproof paper. Place them in a steamer, make sure you leave enough room between each mantou for expansion during its final prove.
4. Prove for 45 minutes before steaming on medium heat for 12 minutes.

*** If you don't have a bread maker, knead the dough manually till smooth before dividing and shaping.

Notes:

I have added black sesame paste to some part of my dough to create the black/grey and white spiral swirl.
Some of the mantous you see there are wrapped with black sesame paste filling.

References:
CL & TPC

Labels:

34 Comments:

At 20 April, 2007 00:36, Blogger silverrock said...

Looks good... but i don't have a bread machine. Do you have a method of preparing these delicious buns w/o the machine? Thanks.

 
At 20 April, 2007 09:10, Blogger Florence said...

silverrock,
Don't have bread machine then you have to use your hands to knead lor!

 
At 20 April, 2007 13:38, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hi, can i check with u what r the rest of the starter dough suppose to do. thank

 
At 16 May, 2007 14:24, Anonymous jiji said...

Florence

I had tried this using the bread machine to do all the work, I must thanks you for sharing this great recipe. Though I have made a mistake by using all the starter dough instead of 70 gm but the end result is very good. Thank you ......

 
At 16 May, 2007 15:14, Blogger Florence said...

Hi jiji,
Glad to know you like it. :D

 
At 27 September, 2007 07:24, Anonymous Stephanie said...

Florence, what did you you do with the rest of the dough starter (ie the rest that went into the fridge)?

Thanks!

 
At 28 September, 2007 22:05, Anonymous Stephanie said...

Florence

I tried your receipe! Very very successful! :))) I understand what you mean by the dough that gets stored in the fridge now.

I will make cha siu and kai bau tomorrow using the left over dough.

 
At 09 July, 2008 21:50, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hi florence, can i use all hk or pau flour for this recipe? will i hve to adjust the amt of water then?

 
At 28 August, 2008 09:51, Anonymous Jaydub Porsche said...

The recipe that was given is actually missing some ingredients.

You also need to include 1 tablespoon of baking powder. Combine baking powder (not baking soda) and flour together as first step. This will produce an improved elastic bun. Adding yeast alone will only cause the dough to rise and be spongy, while including the baking powder assists in elasticity.

You also need to add 2 tablespoons of shortening (vegetable oil may be substituted). This will improve the outside texture and also improve elasticity. Doing this will allow the bun to better retain it's shape and texture when pressing on it. During the steaming process of the bun the texture will improve because of the shortening. While eating the bun you will notice the authentic Mantou flavor.


In Short:
Mix one 1 tablespoon of baking powder to flour as first step and include 2 tablespoons of shortening.

Your taste buds and tummy will thank you for it! Hope you enjoy them, I know I do.

 
At 14 February, 2009 12:49, Blogger Carol said...

Hi
I love your site. I am new to baking and i have some questions. I can only find All Purpose Flour in US. What should i do or how do i sub to this recipe?
Thanks

 
At 24 February, 2009 16:51, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence,
I would like to try your recipe, but I would like to make deep fried mantou, do I have to steam them first?
Thanks,
Helen

 
At 07 April, 2009 13:39, Blogger Fatin said...

Hi Florence
I just love the recipes that you've posted in your blog.
I'm planning on making steamed mantou with red bean paste. In terms of texture and how u roll the mantou like a Swiss roll, will it be ok to use red bran paste instead of the black sesame paste u suggested?
Thanks.

Fatin (Brunei)

 
At 08 April, 2009 18:16, Blogger Florence said...

Fatin,
If you were to wrap the red bean paste into the mantou dough as a bun, you do not need to roll it up swiss-roll style.
But if you do it as the traditional mantou style then you do the rolling up in swiss-roll style.
You can refer to my Spiral Curry Puff rolling guide to see the swiss-roll style.
You can use the red bean paste to replace the black sesame paste but the paste must not be too wet otherwise it will ooze out from all sides.

 
At 01 May, 2009 10:57, Anonymous ltb2 said...

Tried your mantou recipe and I must say it turned out very good.I substituted 1 tbsp of shortening for the vegetable oil as I had leftover shortening from previous recipes.Thanks for sharing your recipes...they are always failproof and good!

 
At 19 June, 2009 20:49, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hey florence, i tried your recipe today and it was a huge success! the buns were fluffy and soft even after refrigerating. thanks for sharing all your wonderful recipes (:

 
At 20 June, 2009 18:09, Blogger Florence said...

Hi,
So glad the mantous turned out very nicely for all of you. :)

 
At 21 June, 2009 21:17, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence :)

I was wondering if i have to maintain the dough starter, by adding more dough to it? Or do i just use it up after a while? Thanks! I love your blog! (I failed so many times before your recipes came along. Even my mom laugh at me and said that i am a mantou disaster. :) Not any more!)

 
At 21 June, 2009 21:18, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence :)

I was wondering if i have to maintain the dough starter, by adding more dough to it? Or do i just use it up after a while? Thanks! I love your blog! (I failed so many times before your recipes came along. Even my mom laugh at me and said that i am a mantou disaster. :) Not any more!)

 
At 24 June, 2009 20:43, Blogger Florence said...

Hi,
Just use up the dough starter as and when you need it. Don't feed it, too troublesome to take care of this baby.

 
At 31 August, 2009 10:29, Anonymous fallgirl said...

I loved the recipe! I've been looking at different mantou recipes that I found, but none seem to really jump out at me until I got to yours. I made them today..plain and with egg custard in the middle and they are fabulous. My kids loved them and even my husband, whose grandfather was a mantou shi-fu, gave it a 2 thumbs up. I don't have a bread maker, so I just added all the ingredients into my kitchenaid mixer and let it do the mixing and kneading for me. first I made the starter the night before and just popped it into the fridge. Then I made the dough the next AM and popped it into the fridge as well until I had time to work with it. I used virgin coconut oil instead of corn oil and the aroma was wonderful. Thanks for sharing the recipe. I esp. appreciate that all the measurements were in weights which made for a fool proof recipe.

 
At 21 October, 2009 12:55, Blogger mushroom banana said...

Thanks for sharing this recipe with us. I love mantou and I've tried many other recipes but have always failed. I tried yours today and it worked! So happy right now. Great blog you have, thanks again!

 
At 31 January, 2010 21:22, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey, Does anyone know how to make the mantou with muli-colored strands of spaghetti-thin dough? My daughter and I had them in a Nanning hotel, and never saw them again. hjshealy@hotmail.com

 
At 27 May, 2010 03:24, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hi, the missing ingredients go into the starter dough or main dough?

thx

 
At 19 February, 2011 14:16, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Florence~Thank you for sharing all your wonderful recipes.
I used the mantou recipe but made it a solid chocolate and added mini chocolate chip. It was very flavorful.

I also made your mantou and my Chinese friends loved it.
It is easy to buy all the Chinese ingredients because in Southern Califorina we have many Asian supermarkets.
Happy New Year~ Rabbit year!
Thanks again
regards Bella

 
At 09 June, 2011 03:56, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have used your recipe but have tried to tweak it up a bit by adding baking powder and shortening as per Mr. Porsche's suggestion and also, used whole milk instead of skim.The buns turned out soooo pillowy soft. It was really restaurant-grade mantou. Thank you for sharing this recipe! This was really to die for!

 
At 07 September, 2011 06:25, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good Day Florence

U mentioned that u had added sesame paste to create the spiral swirl.

Could u let me know the paste mentioned here is as in lotus paste we use in mooncake filling or is the paste like the pandan paste which we only added one tsp of it to pandan chiffon cake for the aroma? I am so confuse whenever the "word" paste is mentioned in recipes.

Also, what is the quantity (how many tsp or gm) of the sesame paste to add.

Blessings
Priscilla Poh

 
At 07 September, 2011 09:06, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence

Are u able to enlighten me on the dough starter which are:
a) If I make the dough starter one day in advance, should I leave it at the chiller? Do I need to proof it too or just go straight into the fridge after kneading?
b) How long can the dough starter last?
c) Do u hv the recipe for making sesame paste from scratch?

I am thinking of incorporate some pumpkin puree into the dough. Is this OK?

Blessings again
Priscilla Poh
Singapore

 
At 08 September, 2011 06:56, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence

Can I use pau flour instead of combination of cake and plain flour as in ur recipe for steamed chinese mantao recipe? And if so, do I need to adjust liquid quantity?

Blessings
Priscilla Poh
Singapore

 
At 09 September, 2011 18:18, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Florence

I hv posted questions but I don't seem to rec ur reply.

Kindly if u cud let me know whether for the Chinese Steamed Mantou, is it OK if I use pau or HK flour. And if yes, do I need to tweak liquid quantity and what wud the right amount of pau flour.

Peace
Priscilla Poh
Singapore

 
At 12 September, 2011 18:28, Blogger Florence said...

Priscilla,
Use 200g flour regardless, but dont't add in all the liquid in one go. If dough too dry add a little more water at a time till you get the right consistency.

 
At 12 September, 2011 21:46, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thnx Florence for ur reply. U said to use 200gm flour regardless, are u referring to starter dough or main dough?

Thanks again.
Priscilla Poh

 
At 14 September, 2011 20:04, Blogger Florence said...

priscilla,
200g is for starter dough.
Same for the main dough just use whatever flour you have except bread flour.

 
At 13 October, 2011 16:20, Anonymous cecilia said...

Hi,like to know the weight of this dough starter.Thank you.

 
At 13 October, 2011 21:39, Blogger Florence said...

Cecilia,
Weight for dough starter should be around 300g.

 

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