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Posted

I’ve said this before and I’ll likely say it again because it bugs me. If you are coming to China for any reason and are partial to the occasional sandwich, unless you are in Beijing or Shanghai, you will be out of luck.

 

Most Chinese don’t know what bread is, They think they do but are very mistaken. What passes for bread here is 99% of the time cake. Bread shaped cake. Breadalike.

 

China’s breads are almost all steamed rather than baked. So I’d like to introduce you to some of what I can buy anywhere but never do (and a few exceptions).

 

_20250727103527.thumb.jpg.793f1a422614ef251c52ba54d2971798.jpg

 

I’ll start with 馒头 (mán tou), probably the most common. This is a steamed roll made from the same dough as 包子 (bāo zi), bao buns, but unfilled and often sweetened with sugar.

 

Occasionally, they are coloured using vegetable (or artificial) dyes. depending on what colouring agent is used, these may or mat not taste any different from the plain ones.

 

_20250727103512.thumb.jpg.2504d348308eaf4225bf4780614f74c8.jpg

 

Images from Meituan online shopping app,

 

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

Like slice of toast with your breakfast? You could use your phone translation app to ask for toast in a restaurant. You won’t get it though unless you are in a hotel breakfast room or restaurant catering to foreigners.

 

All the translation apps translate toast as 土司 (tǔ sī). This, as you can see, is a sound-alike loanword from the English toast. Except it doesn’t mean toast at all. It is what linguists call ‘a false friend’. Sort of like when French learners guess ‘travail’ means ‘travel’, when it means ‘work’.

 

It simple means 'sliced bread'. 

 

Some joker saw sliced bread and assumed it was that mysterious thing he’d heard of but never seen – toast. Misnamed it and it stuck. So, that's what you’ll get. Dreadful, low-quality blotting paper slices of CWP ‘bread’. Often sweet, too.

 

toast.thumb.jpg.45c65adb0070b0d5fc53835841ba7ec2.jpg

土司 (tǔ sī) - 'toast'?

 

Here’s a tip. Instead of asking for 土司 (tǔ sī), try asking for 烤面包 (kǎo miàn bāo) . This is a more accurate translation and translates as ‘broiled / grilled bread’.

 

However they will in 99% of cases take some of the blotting paper and broil that then serve it cold.

 

 

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted
10 hours ago, liuzhou said:

Most Chinese don’t know what bread is, They think they do but are very mistaken. What passes for bread here is 99% of the time cake. Bread shaped cake. Breadalike.

 

I've seen this in a few places in Indonesia also - but always in places that are serving foreigners, almost exclusively - like dive resorts whose clientele is mainly European or Australian (and the odd American or two).  Otherwise there's nothing resembling bread at all.  Unless, of course, you're in a cafe or higher class hotel in Jakarta, in which case all bets are off.  It could be just like a French boulangerie in those places!

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Posted
10 hours ago, liuzhou said:

 

_20250727103527.thumb.jpg.793f1a422614ef251c52ba54d2971798.jpg

 

I’ll start with 馒头 (mán tou), probably the most common. This is a steamed roll made from the same dough as 包子 (bāo zi), bao buns, but unfilled and often sweetened with sugar.

 

Is fried mantou a thing there?  I've seen that in Singapore...

Posted
44 minutes ago, KennethT said:

Is fried mantou a thing there?  I've seen that in Singapore...

 

Yes.

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

Can you get strong flour and yeast to bake your own? (although I seem to remember that ovens aren't exactly common, at least in HK, so it might not do you much good anyway)

Posted
6 minutes ago, Ddanno said:

Can you get strong flour and yeast to bake your own? (although I seem to remember that ovens aren't exactly common, at least in HK, so it might not do you much good anyway)

 

Yes, I can easily get the necessary. In fact, I used to make my own regularly. In a large toaster oven. However serious health issues over the last few years put an and to that. I'm no longer physically able to.

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
Mark Twain
 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted
3 minutes ago, liuzhou said:

 

Yes, I can easily get the necessary. In fact, I used to make my own regularly. In a large toaster oven. However serious health issues over the last few years put an and to that. I'm no longer physically able to.

Ah that sucks. Sorry. 

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Posted

However dire, offerings are, there are a few honourable exceptions, top of which I give you (náng). This is a speciality of China’s huge far-western province of Xinjiang which borders Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Russia and Mongolia.

 

Xinjiang is predominantly populated by the Muslim Uyghur people and has a very district cuisine. (náng) comes from there. In the Uyghur language, they call it نان (nan), meaning bread.. This in turn comes from the identical Persian word for bread.

 

The main type of Xinjiang bread is of course, what is now known in the west as naan, although it was spelled ‘nan’ in English until around the 1970s. This I can find in many of the popular Xinjiang style restaurants found all over China.

 

Again, seldom baked in homes, in Xinjiang it is sold in the many naan bakeries in every town or village. Unlike Indian or other naan, the Xinjiang variety is usually ornately decorated.

 

.thumb.jpg.404410e9ca5e4c3d03d8a8c4e3345c62.jpg

Xinjiang nang

 

Sadly, I can also get Mission brand Indian style ‘naan’ which is foul in comparison. Sweet and cloying. Indian in appearance only.

 

_20250727195305.thumb.jpg.dba68b8172a191bdcbb83bc3eaabdb4a.jpg

 

Mission 'Indian style' naan. I'm on a mission to eradicate it.

 

 

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted (edited)

But enough good news.

 

As if the abovementioned toast wasn't bad enough, beware of this.

 

_20250728084235.thumb.jpg.1d33fd63761982fb80ce07a896257115.jpg

 

It is the dreaded 'toast' again but this time unsliced and worse. It is called 红豆吐司 (hóng dòu tǔ sī) and is flavoured with sweet red aduki bean paste. Very sweet and nasty cake; not what I call bread..

 

 

Edited by liuzhou (log)
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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted (edited)

Are croissants bread? Arguable. Wikipedia describes them as a cross between bread and flaky pastry, but Wikipedia is flaky, itself. The Chinese name is 牛角面包 (niú jiǎo miàn bāo), literally cow horn bread.

 

_20250729082802.thumb.jpg.bc16404ed1170a5f033511a2dbe587f7.jpg

 

Whatever, the vendors of these translate them as croissants which they 100% aren’t. Although hinting at being crescent-shaped but forgetting to curve, in fact, in addition to looking slightly under baked, they contain in their depths industrial ham and pink slime sausages dressed with sweet mayonnaise.

 

A hanging crime in that France.

 

 

Edited by liuzhou (log)
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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

We also get 法棍 (fǎ gùn), literally French sticks.

 

These are baguettes 🥖. Sometimes. Never great, the best come from Walmart or a Taiwan chain of restaurants here on mainland China. Those from local bakeries are highly unpredictable.

 

They aren’t anywhere close to the real French baguettes my French grandmother bought every morning, but are edible bread.

 

baguettes.jpeg.71c8b554e780afe8c03610801b3b6fa0.jpeg

Walmart China Baquettes

 

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted
11 minutes ago, liuzhou said:

We also get 法棍 (fǎ gùn), literally French sticks.

 

These are baguettes 🥖. Sometimes. Never great, the best come from Walmart or a Taiwan chain of restaurants here on mainland China. Those from local bakeries are highly unpredictable.

 

They aren’t anywhere close to the real French baguettes my French grandmother bought every morning, but are edible bread.

 

baguettes.jpeg.71c8b554e780afe8c03610801b3b6fa0.jpeg

Walmart China Baquettes

 

 

 

Well, they look convincing in the photo!

Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
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Posted (edited)

Yes, but....

 

They last for a few days, which baguettes in France (or Vietnam) don't. In France four hours at best. 

 

In Vietnam, bánh mì sellers get two or three deliveries or bake the same number of batches throughout the day.

 

In France, you have to get up early or go without. 

 

 
Edited by liuzhou (log)
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

One saving grace.

 

I’ve never met anyone in China who knows what sourdough is but I know the Chinese; it’s 酸面包 (suān miàn bāo), literally sour bread. A couple of months ago, I found this online, described by the seller as “Whole Wheat Sourdough Rubon Country Bread Multi-grain French Old Bread German Sourdough Bread”!

 

The sellers are obviously confused. Rubon county doesn’t exist and isn’t even a possible Chinese name and as far as I remember France and Germany are two different countries.

 

SourdoughLoaf.thumb.jpg.256e7a05c6f2088f31b3f5329c70c0d5.jpg

 

The bread is baked in Anhui province, 1,368 km / 850 miles from me. It takes 2-3 days to arrive, but isn’t bad, if not great. It’s also rather pricy for China at $7.25 USD for a 500 gram loaf. But needs must..

 

SourdoughLoaf2.thumb.jpg.7577dd3641f30d87ee9433fbadf495fd.jpg

 

 

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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted (edited)

… and then there’s this Wheat Mix Bread,

 

The bakery is in Beijing and doesn’t claim dual nationality, settling instead on German. However, it’s firmly Chinese and most of their goods are the same old Chinese not-bread bread.

They sell these  OK 500g loaves for $5.75 a loaf, but recently slapped on a ridiculous $5.16 delivery charge, essentially doubling the price. I had been buying them for about two years at a much lower delivery price. The sourdough above has free delivery, so these fake Germans are now off my shopping list.

 

BeijingBread1.thumb.jpg.b69894d954e20aa6ac4b4d7866809579.jpg

 

Edited by liuzhou (log)
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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted
1 hour ago, liuzhou said:

"Whole Wheat Sourdough Rubon Country Bread Multi-grain French Old Bread German Sourdough Bread”!

 

That's one of the funnier labels I've read in a while! 😀 

 

Too bad it's only "not bad". It looks great in the photos.

Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
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Posted

 

 

30 minutes ago, Smithy said:

 

That's one of the funnier labels I've read in a while! 😀 

 

Too bad it's only "not bad". It looks great in the photos.

 

The label is about normal around here.

 

I found toasting improves it.

 

 

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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

What Smithy said. Looks like a decent bread, shame it doesn't hit the mark.

 

I'm more shocked by the prices, I would struggle to find a loaf for five quid in borough market

Posted
3 hours ago, Ddanno said:

What Smithy said. Looks like a decent bread, shame it doesn't hit the mark.

 

I'm more shocked by the prices, I would struggle to find a loaf for five quid in borough market

 

You cant really tell from the price alone. What you have to consider is also the average income in China is correspondingly low. It's no less cheap for the average Chinese person.

 

And Borough Market is expensive anyway!

 

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted
2 hours ago, liuzhou said:

 

You cant really tell from the price alone. What you have to consider is also the average income in China is correspondingly low. It's no less cheap for the average Chinese person.

 

And Borough Market is expensive anyway!

 

 

 

That's my point, a fiver for bread is unthinkable!

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