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黄山烧饼
huáng shān shāo bǐng

Huangshan Sesame Cake — Mountain Hiking Fuel

Quick Info

Flavor
Savory, porky, and nutty with a hint of sweetness from the caramelized pork fat. Like a flaky, sesame-crusted meat pie the size of a hockey puck — imagine a croissant had a baby with a pork sausage roll.
Texture
Flaky, layered pastry crust coated in toasted sesame seeds, encasing a deeply savory filling of rendered pork fat, dried plum vegetables, and green onions
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Anhui 徽菜
Cooking
Baked
Main Ingredients
Pork

Ingredients

Wheat flourLardSesame seedsDried preserved mustard greens (méi gān cài)Pork fatGreen onionsSugarSaltFive-spice powder

Allergens

Confirmed

GlutenSesameallergen.pork

The Story

These golden, sesame-crusted cakes are the signature snack of Huangshan (Yellow Mountain), one of China’s most spectacular natural landmarks. For centuries, they’ve been the fuel of choice for hikers, porters, and travelers heading into the mountains. They’re dense, calorie-rich, shelf-stable, and — crucially — absolutely delicious. What began as practical trail food evolved into a beloved snack sold at bakeries and street stalls throughout Anhui province.

The filling uses méi gān cài (dried preserved mustard greens), a quintessential Anhui pantry ingredient that shows up across the region’s cooking. When combined with rendered pork fat and baked until everything caramelizes, it creates a uniquely savory, slightly sweet, wonderfully porky filling.

What to Expect

Each cake is roughly the size of your palm and about an inch thick, with a golden-brown, sesame-seed-encrusted exterior. Pick one up and you’ll notice it’s heavier than it looks — these are dense little things, packed with filling. The crust shatters satisfyingly when you bite through it, revealing dozens of paper-thin flaky layers (similar to a rough puff pastry) wrapped around a dark, fragrant filling.

The filling is intensely savory — rendered pork fat has melted through the dried mustard greens, creating something that tastes like the best parts of a breakfast sausage combined with tangy, slightly sweet pickled vegetables. The sesame seeds on the outside add a nutty, toasty aroma that ties everything together. One cake is a snack; two is a meal.

Tips

Buy these from bakeries or street vendors where you can see them being made fresh — they’re dramatically better warm than cold, though they’re still good at room temperature. They travel well, so grab a few extra for later. If you’re hiking Huangshan, these are the ideal trailside snack. They’re sold individually and are very cheap, so try one from different vendors to find your favorite. Some versions are slightly sweeter than others.

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