In the picture above, I secretly mixed 1 real orange in my mandarin orange buns, can you tell which one is the real orange?
Mandarin oranges 橘子 and steamed buns 蒸包子 are two traditional Chinese new year foods, with meanings of good luck(大吉大利), wealth, and thriving (蒸蒸日上). This recipe teaches you how to combine these two lucky foods together, and make steamed buns with a 100% mandarin orange looking! They are so realistic, you can even peel them just like peeling a mandarin orange.
Traditional Chinese New Year Foods
Instead of on January 1st, Chinese people celebrate new year on Lunar New Year, which is also known as Spring Festival 春节.
Some fun traditional Spring Festival rituals include setting off fireworks, giving out red envelopes with lucky money, visiting temple fairs, and most important, eating lucky foods!
Each Chinese New Year food has a different lucky meaning, which is based on its pronunciation or appearance.
For example, Chinese elders always say that “the more dumplings you eat during Spring Festival, the more money you can make in the New Year.”
It’s because the shape of dumplings looks like the shape of Chinese golden ingots. See how I made golden ingot shape dumplings.
Today’s recipe is the longest one I’ve ever made! I spent 3 whole days adjusting the recipe, and made about 50 steamed buns, and finally adjusted every ingredient to the idealist amount.
When I opened the lid and saw these 100% realist perfect mandarin orange steamed buns, I literarily cried! I can’t wait to show you how I made them.
And please feel free to leave a comment for me if you have any questions about this recipe.
I hope everyone can have fun making these cute orange steamed buns, and have a lucky, wealthy, and thriving new year!
How to Make Orange Steamed Buns
Equipment:
- Steamer (The one I used was from Buydeem)
- Kitchen scale
- Rolling Pin
- Stand mixer (Optional)
- Silicone Pastry Mat (Optional)
Ingredients:
– Orange color dough:
- 160 g Carrot about 1 large carrot
- 4 drop Red icing color Optional (* See note1)
- 35 g Warm water (* See note2)
- 30 g Sugar
- 2.5 g Yeast
- 250 g All purpose flour
– White color dough
- 55 g Warm water (* See note2)
- 10 g Sugar
- 1 g Yeast
- 100 g All purpose flour
Step-by-step Instructions:
1. Peel a carrot, cut into slices. Pour boiling water into the steamer pot, steam 160g carrot slices over medium high heat for 20 minutes.
2. Once carrots are tender, remove pot from heat and allow carrots to a cool a bit.
3. In a small bowl, dissolve 30g sugar in 35g warm water (*see note 2). Sprinkle 2.5g yeast over top of the liquid and allow the mixture to sit for ten minutes.
4. Transfer carrots to a blender. Do not add water at this step. The steamed carrots contain enough water. Puree carrots. I got 150g carrot puree for total. You can use 150g canned carrot puree if you want to skip the steaming step
5. Add yeast sugar liquid into the carrot puree. Optionally add some red food color (see note 1). Blend at low speed for 10 seconds to mix well.
6. Put 250g all purpose flour in a large bowl, add the carrot puree to the flour, and stir using two chopsticks or a rubber spatula.
7. Knead with hands (or with a stand mixer) for about 5 minutes until all the ingredients are evenly mixed. It’s okay if the dough doesn’t look perfectly smooth at this moment. It will turn smoother after fermentation.
8. Shape the dough into a ball, cover it with a plastic wrap or a bowl to rest for 20 minutes.
9. While the orange dough is resting, make a white dough with similar steps: dissolve 10g sugar in 55g warm water, sprinkle 1g yeast over top of the liquid and allow the mixture to sit for ten minutes. Add the yeast mixture to 100g flour, knead the dough, shape into a ball, and let it rest.
10. While the white dough is resting, knead the orange dough with your hands or a stand mixer for 5 more minutes, until the surface is smooth. Cut and weigh out the orange dough (about 480g) into 2 portions (320g and 160g). Cut, weigh, and roll the 320g portion into 8 big balls (40g each). Then cut, weigh, and roll the 160g portion into 8 small balls (20g each). Set aside and cover with a plastic wrap.
11. Knead the white dough with your hands or a stand mixer for 5 more minutes, until the surface is smooth. Cut, weigh, and roll the white dough (about 160g) into 8 small balls (20g each). Set aside and cover with a plastic wrap.
12. Optionally, vertically cut across the center of a 40g orange ball for 3 times into 6 pieces. Shape the 6 pieces into a ball, so that it looks like an orange fruit. Repeat for the rest of the orange balls (40g ones).
13. Take a small ball (20g), use a rolling pin to roll it into a 3-inch-diameter circle wrap. Repeat until all 16 small balls (8 orange, 8 white) are rolled into 3-inch-diameter circle wraps.
14. Use a comb to print hundreds of holes on each orange wrap.
15. Flip each orange wrap so that the smooth side is facing up. Brush a thin layer of water on the smooth side of each orange wrap.
16. Place a white wrap on the top, gently press to stick them together. Brush a thin layer of cooking oil on each white wrap, so that the “orange peel” can be peeled off easily after we steam the buns.
17. Place a 40g orange ball in the middle of a wrap. You can cut the orange ball into 6 portions, roll each portion into a garlic shape, then stick them together. Use your thumb and index finger to pull up a corner of the wrap, fold, pleat, and go anticlockwise until you reach the end. Pinch to seal.
18. Cut a parchment paper into 4 inch squares. Place each bun on a square of parchment. Place the buns into the steamer, which you’ve just used to steam carrots. It provides a nice warm and humid place for buns to ferment. Place a toothpick in the middle of each bun. Keep the steamer’s lid covered, let the buns ferment for 30 minutes.
19. 30 minutes later, use the steamer to steam buns over medium heat for 20 minutes.
20. 20 minutes later, open up the lid immediately to exposure the buns to cold air, so that the peels will shrink a bit, which makes our buns look more like real mandarin oranges.
21. Remove the toothpicks, and substitute with real orange steams and leaves.
22. Store your leftover mandarin orange buns in a food storage bag, and keep in the freezer. They will stay good for 6 months.
Mandarin Orange Buns Notes:
1. To make my orange buns look redder, I used a toothpick to dip 4 times into a bottle of Wilton icing color (Christmas Red) and dissolved the color into the carrot puree. You can totally skip this step, and your buns’ color will be light orange instead of reddish orange.
2. The ideal water temperature for active the dry yeast 105°F – 110°F. I don’t have a thermometer, so I just test with my finger. Gradually add hot water into a bowl of cold water, dip a finger into the cold water bowl, when you’re able to feel the warmth and it’s not hot, it should be the right temperature.
My other Chinese Food Recipes you will also like:
Mandarin Orange Buns
Equipment
- Steamer
- Kitchen scale
- Rolling Pin
- Stand mixer Optional
- Silicone Pastry Mat Optional
Ingredients
Orange color dough
- 160 g Carrot about 1 large carrot
- 4 drop Red icing color Optional * See note1
- 35 g Warm water * See note2
- 30 g Sugar
- 2.5 g Yeast
- 250 g All purpose flour
White color dough
- 55 g Warm water * See note2
- 10 g Sugar
- 1 g Yeast
- 100 g All purpose flour
Instructions
- Peel a carrot, cut into slices. Pour boiling water into the steamer pot, steam 160g carrot slices over medium high heat for 20 minutes.
- Once carrots are tender, remove pot from heat and allow carrots to a cool a bit.
- In a small bowl, dissolve 30g sugar in 35g warm water (*see note 2). Sprinkle 2.5g yeast over top of the liquid and allow the mixture to sit for ten minutes.
- Transfer carrots to a blender. Do not add water at this step. The steamed carrots contain enough water. Puree carrots. I got 150g carrot puree for total. You can use 150g canned carrot puree if you want to skip the steaming step.
- Add yeast sugar liquid into the carrot puree. Optionally add some red food color (see note 1). Blend at low speed for 10 seconds to mix well.
- Put 250g all purpose flour in a large bowl, add the carrot puree to the flour, and stir using two chopsticks or a rubber spatula.
- Knead with hands (or with a stand mixer) for about 5 minutes until all the ingredients are evenly mixed. It's okay if the dough doesn't look perfectly smooth at this moment. It will turn smoother after fermentation.
- Shape the dough into a ball, cover it with a plastic wrap or a bowl to rest for 20 minutes.
- While the orange dough is resting, make a white dough with similar steps: dissolve 10g sugar in 55g warm water, sprinkle 1g yeast over top of the liquid and allow the mixture to sit for ten minutes. Add the yeast mixture to 100g flour, knead the dough, shape into a ball, and let it rest.
- While the white dough is resting, knead the orange dough with your hands or a stand mixer for 5 more minutes, until the surface is smooth. Cut and weigh out the orange dough (about 480g) into 2 portions (320g and 160g). Cut, weigh, and roll the 320g portion into 8 big balls (40g each). Then cut, weigh, and roll the 160g portion into 8 small balls (20g each). Set aside and cover with a plastic wrap.
- Knead the white dough with your hands or a stand mixer for 5 more minutes, until the surface is smooth. Cut, weigh, and roll the white dough (about 160g) into 8 small balls (20g each). Set aside and cover with a plastic wrap.
- Optionally, vertically cut across the center of a 40g orange ball for 3 times into 6 pieces. Shape the 6 pieces into a ball, so that it looks like an orange fruit. Repeat for the rest of the orange balls (40g ones).
- Take a small ball (20g), use a rolling pin to roll it into a 3-inch-diameter circle wrap. Repeat until all 16 small balls (8 orange, 8 white) are rolled into 3-inch-diameter circle wraps.
- Use a comb to print hundreds of holes on each orange wrap. Flip each orange wrap so that the smooth side is facing up.
- Brush a thin layer of water on the smooth side of each orange wrap, place a white wrap on the top, gently press to stick them together.
- Brush a thin layer of cooking oil on each white wrap, so that the "orange peel" can be peeled off easily after we steam the buns.
- Place a 40g orange ball in the middle of the wrap. Use your thumb and index finger to pull up a corner of the wrap, fold, pleat, and go anticlockwise until you reach the end. Pinch to seal.
- Cut a parchment paper into 4 inch squares. Place each bun on a square of parchment. Place the buns into the steamer, which you've just used to steam carrots. It provides a nice warm and humid place for buns to ferment. Place a toothpick in the middle of each bun. Keep the steamer's lid covered, let the buns ferment for 30 minutes.
- 30 minutes later, use the steamer to steam buns over medium heat for 20 minutes.
- 20 minutes later, open up the lid immediately to exposure the buns to cold air, so that the peels will shrink a bit, which makes our buns look more like real mandarin oranges.
- Remove the toothpicks, and substitute with real orange steams and leaves.
- Store your leftover buns in a food storage bag, and keep in the freezer. They will stay good for 6 months.
Video
Notes
- To make my orange buns look redder, I used a toothpick to dip 4 times into a bottle of Wilton icing color (Christmas Red) and dissolved the color into the carrot puree. You can totally skip this step, and your buns’ color will be light orange instead of reddish orange.
- The ideal water temperature for active the dry yeast 105°F – 110°F. I don’t have a thermometer, so I just test with my finger. Gradually add hot water into a bowl of cold water, dip a finger into the cold water bowl, when you’re able to feel the warmth and it’s not hot, it should be the right temperature.
I love the look of these!! Could you share how to make without carrots? Any tips? Thanks very much!
Hi JJ. You can substitute the 150 carrot puree with the same amount of pumpkin or sweet potato puree. You can either use homemade puree or store-bought canned puree.
But the pumpkin or sweet potato puree’s color is lighter than carrot puree. You may need to add a little bit more orange food coloring to make the buns look more like real oranges.
Why is there chunks of carrots in my orange dough
Probably your blender wasn’t powerful enough? You can strain the carrot puree with a sifter to get rid of large carrot chunks before using it.
I’m gonna make this, wonder how deliciou it would be!
How would It taste like, can i add any paste to it? like red bean
I just made this and it tastes AMAZING AF!!!