Jian Duy
Photo: Jenny Richards
Ingredients
Preparation
Tools
About
On the dim sum carts, you’ll see fried sesame balls, and sometimes other deep-fried pastries filled with pork and black mushrooms. The outsides are crispy, but the dough is chewy, almost akin to mochi, if you know what that is. Well this pastry uses the same dough and it’s deep-fried too, but instead of being filled with red bean or lotus seed or meat, it’s actually hollow and inflated like a balloon before it’s fried. When it actually hits the hot oil, the air trapped inside expands and it inflates, thinning the walls of the pastry to form a still-chewy but not-so-gummy structure.
This recipe and technique came from my grandmother. She'd only made it once in the past 30 years and I was afraid my generation wouldn't know how to do this once her generation was gone. This recipe is used for very special occasions, and I'm told that to get the shape wrong spells bad luck, so that's why she didn't make it very often.