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小笼包
xiǎo lóng bāo

Soup Dumplings — Xiaolong Bao

Quick Info

Flavor
Savory and delicate. Thin-skinned dumplings filled with seasoned pork and rich, hot broth — subtly sweet with ginger and soy notes.
Texture
Impossibly thin, translucent wrapper encasing juicy pork filling and a burst of hot, savory soup
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Jiangsu 苏菜
Cooking
Steamed
Main Ingredients
Pork

Ingredients

Pork fillingPork skin jelly (becomes soup)Flour wrapperGingerSoy sauceSesame oilSugarGreen onionsShaoxing rice wine

Allergens

Confirmed

Glutenallergen.porkSoySesame

The Story

Originating from the Jiangnan region (around Shanghai and Jiangsu), xiǎolóngbāo literally means “small steamer basket buns.” The magic is in the soup inside — chefs mix solidified pork skin jelly into the filling, which melts into hot broth during steaming. This ingenious technique creates a dumpling that is simultaneously solid food and soup. You’ll find them in dumpling shops across Chengdu, a testament to how beloved they are nationwide.

What to Expect

A bamboo steamer basket arrives with delicate dumplings sitting on a bed of cloth or cabbage leaf. Each dumpling has a carefully pleated top and a translucent skin through which you can see the filling and sloshing broth. They’re incredibly hot inside — the soup can scald you if you’re not careful. The combination of thin wrapper, savory pork, and hot broth in a single bite is unforgettable.

Tips

There’s a proper technique: pick up the dumpling with chopsticks, place it on a spoon, bite a small hole in the side, and sip the soup first. Then dip in black vinegar with shredded ginger and eat the rest. Never bite into a whole one — the scalding soup will burn your mouth. The unit “笼” (lóng) means one steamer basket, usually 6-10 dumplings.

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