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生煎包
shēng jiān bāo

Pan-Fried Soup Buns

Quick Info

Flavor
Juicy, savory, and rich with a concentrated pork broth burst. Like a cross between a dumpling and a slider — meaty, soupy, and deeply satisfying.
Texture
Crispy, golden-brown bottom with a soft, fluffy dough top, filled with juicy pork and a rush of hot soup
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Jiangsu 苏菜
Cooking
Pan-fried
Main Ingredients
Pork

Ingredients

Wheat flour doughGround porkPork aspic (gelatin that melts into soup)Soy sauceGingerScallionsSesame seedsSesame oilSugarVegetable oil

Allergens

Confirmed

GlutenSoySesameallergen.pork

The Story

If xiaolongbao are Shanghai’s elegant soup dumplings, shengjianbao are their rowdy, more generous cousin. These pan-fried buns have been a Shanghai breakfast and lunch staple since the early 1900s, sold at corner shops and street stalls across the city. The key innovation is cooking them in a large, flat pan with a lid — the bottoms fry to a golden crisp in oil while the tops steam to fluffy softness, giving you two textures in every bite.

The soup inside comes from pork aspic mixed into the filling — solid gelatin at room temperature that melts into rich, hot broth when cooked. This is the same trick used in xiaolongbao, but shengjianbao are bigger, bolder, and topped with sesame seeds and chopped scallions.

What to Expect

Four to six round buns arrive on a plate, each about the size of a small fist, with golden-brown crispy bottoms, white fluffy tops, and a sprinkle of black sesame seeds and green scallion. They are heavier and more substantial than dumplings.

Bite into one carefully (there is very hot soup inside) and you get the crunch of the fried bottom, the pillowy softness of the steamed top, and then a gush of rich, savory pork broth that fills your mouth. The meat filling is juicy and well-seasoned. The whole experience is wonderfully messy and enormously satisfying.

Tips

Be very careful with the first bite — the soup inside is scalding hot and will burn your mouth if you rush. The technique is: bite a small hole in the side, let the steam escape, sip the soup, then eat the rest. Dip in Zhenjiang black vinegar mixed with shredded ginger, which is always provided at shengjianbao shops. Order four per person as a snack, or eight if this is your whole meal.

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