This 花卷 is a northern Chinese bun used in place of noodles and rice, unlike southern Chinese cuisine. There are several ways of rolling the bun but the ingredients and method are pretty similar. However, I've not had good experience with the standard 包 method so I prefer to use the revolutionary recipe I've found except the pleats may not come out so nicely.
Here are several video recipes I've found with bun rolling techniques and also standard recipes.
1. Deliholic: Three different ways of cutting or rolling the buns
2. Revy loves big apple: cautions that adding soda to spring onion can ensure the colour stays green but the powder stains the bun yellow.
: cautions against buns that aren't well-rested won't roll into nice flowers but will tear.
: Combine then rest 10 minutes while preparing the scallions, knead 5 minutes and rest 10 minutes, roll into buns then rest until buns have proved to twice their size (no time given), steam 15 minutes.
3. Magic ingredients: Most comprehensive video
: says that no special flour or yeast
: Combine then knead 10 minutes or rest 15 minute before kneading if the bun is too 'tight'. Rest 1.5 hours and prepare scallions. Pan fry the onions with salt and cool. After proving, knead for 3 minutes before rolling into buns. This 3-minute kneading can be omitted but will result in smoother buns. However, this will cause the buns to tighten up again, which will require 15 minutes resting before forming the buns. If the buns prove too hard to form into the flower shape, rest 5 minutes. Prove 1 hour. Steam 15 minutes but let steam escape 5 minutes.
: nothing really special about this except the use of salt and pepper or other taste to the bun and fold 4 times rather than 3.
: highlights that you know the buns have proofed correctly when they feel light rather than dense
Ingredients (makes 12 to 14)
Followed this recipe but increased to 500g of flour in total
Starter
250g bao flour
2 tsp yeast
1 tbsp sugar
200ml warm water
1. Mix sugar with water until dissolved.
2. Add bao flour and mix. Sticky batter. Cover and allow to rise for 2.5 hours in a warm place.
Filling
1 spring onion, finely chopped
2 tbsp oil
2 tsp sesame seeds (optional)
salt and pepper to taste (or 5 spice powder)
When the starter is proofing, chop up 1 spring onion finely. Add a pinch of baking soda and fry in 2 tbsp oil until just fragrant. Add optional 2 tsp sesame seeds. Set aside to cool.
Main bao
250g bao flour
3 tbsp sugar
2.5 tsp baking powder
3 to 4 tbsp of water (just enough to bring dough together)
1 tbsp + 2 tsp lard or veg oil
¼ tsp salt
1. Mix the flour, sugar, baking powder and combine.
2. To the starter, add the lard and water. Combine. It will be very sticky and wet.
3. Add the dry mixture and mix well. Beat (if using KA) until it cleans the side of the bowl. If using hand, mix in the bowl until the bowl comes clean. Transfer onto flour surface and knead for 10 minutes. Shape into a ball. Allow to rest, covered, for 10 minutes before shaping if the dough is too taut.
4. Roll out the dough until about 1cm thick and rectangular. Layer on the spring onion oil. Less is more! Sprinkle on salt and pepper. Fold on the long edge 3-4 times (width of each fold should be length of index finger) and pat down after each fold.
5. Cut strips, about 2cm wide alternated with 1.5cm wide. Lay the thinner strip on top of the thicker strip. Pull both ends then twist around a chopstick twice (watch the video). Lay the rosette down on the table and hold it between third and fourth fingers, pin down the seams and carefully withdraw the chopstick.
6. Let the buns rest in a covered steamer for 10 minutes. You know they're ready when you pick them up and they feel light rather than dense. Heat up the water from cold with the buns on top. Once the water starts to boil, steam for 10 to 12 minutes.
7. Turn off the fire and open a side slit to let the steam escape. After 5 minutes of resting, serve.
Recipe feedback
- Less really is more with the filling. Following one blogger, I chopped up the spring onions as much as I could. Also, following another blogger, I tried to spread a very thin layer of oil but still was too enthusiastic. This meant the bun was very hard to twist (because it was oily and going everywhere) and form into a nice tight rosette. However it kept the 'petals' fairly separate and pretty.
- It's important to salt the bun either in the mixture or in the bun itself.
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