Steamed Pork Cake 香碗 Xiang Wan
In my village, nobody picks up their chopsticks until this bowl hits the table. This is the Head Bowl. The one that tells everyone whether the cook knows what she...
In my village, nobody picks up their chopsticks until this bowl hits the table. This is the Head Bowl. The one that tells everyone whether the cook knows what she...
In my village, nobody picks up their chopsticks until this bowl hits the table. This is the Head Bowl. The one that tells everyone whether the cook knows what she is doing.
The meat has to be soft. The broth has to be clear. The egg skin on top has to be golden. If this one is ugly, the whole banquet is a failure. So no pressure, right?
The secret is in the technique. You stir the meat in one direction only — never go back. My grandma was very serious about this. And you brush the egg yolk twice. The first layer sinks into the meat for flavor. The second layer sits on top and gives you that beautiful golden crust.
Underneath the meat cake, there is a hidden layer of wood ear mushrooms, day lilies, peas, and some crispy pork. In Sichuan, we call this Dian Di (垫底) — it means a solid foundation. You want a solid year? Start with a solid base.

For the meat cake:
For the bottom layer (Dian Di):
Why stir in one direction? Stirring in one direction aligns the protein fibers in the meat, creating a smooth, bouncy texture. If you go back and forth, you break those fibers and the meat cake will be crumbly instead of silky.
Why brush the egg twice? The first coat soaks into the surface of the meat and adds flavor. The second coat sits on top and creates the golden crust that everyone sees. One layer is not enough — it will look pale and sad.
Why cool completely before cutting? If you cut the meat cake while it is still hot, it falls apart. Be patient. Let it cool all the way down, then your slices will be clean and even.
Watch full 9 Bowls recipes here:
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