Southern-Style Beef Bao Buns

This quick and easy recipe puts a Southern twist on a Chinese staple with leftover Pot Roast and tinned buttermilk biscuits. Steaming these Southern-Style Beef Bao Buns on the stovetop only takes five ingredients and 30 minutes!

Beef Bao Buns_NCBA_19706067-g.jpeg

Southern-Style Beef Bao Buns

Southern-Style Beef Bao Buns

With Leftover Pot Roast + Buttermilk Biscuits

Beef Bao Buns_NCBA_19706067-g.jpeg

Southern-Style Beef Bao Buns

This quick and easy beef recipe puts a Southern twist on a Chinese staple with leftover Pot Roast and tinned buttermilk biscuits. Steaming these Southern-Style Bao Buns on the stovetop only takes five ingredients and 30 minutes!

Servings: 30 bao buns
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 12 oz. Cooked Beef Pot Roast
  • 1 cup spinach or Swiss chard, chopped
  • 3-4 green onions, thinly sliced
  • 1/2 cup hoisin sauce
  • 3 cans refrigerated buttermilk biscuits (about 10 biscuits per tin)
Cook’s Tip: If a stovetop steamer basket is unavailable, use a folding steamer basket in a large saucepan. You can also use lettuce leaves instead of parchment paper, if needed!

Cooking Instructions

  1. Chop or shred pot roast; place in a large microwave-safe dish. Cover, vent, and microwave until heated through, stirring occasionally. Stir in spinach and hoisin sauce. Microwave until the sauce is thickened and the beef is coated with the sauce. Set aside.
  2. Cut parchment paper to line the basket of the stove-top steamer, cutting a hole in the center as needed. Add water to the steamer, ensuring the water level is below the basket. Bring water to a boil.
  3. Meanwhile, place biscuit dough pieces on the cutting board. Flatten each piece of dough into a 3-inch square, extending the corners; press the corners onto the board with your thumbs.
  4. Place about 1 tablespoon of beef mixture in the center of each dough square. Bring two opposite corners up and over the filling and pinch together; bring the remaining two corners up and over the filling, pinching all seams and corners together to form a square bun. Repeat with the remaining dough and filling. Turn the buns over until ready to cook.
  5. Place buns into the steamer basket in batches, keeping them at least 2 inches apart. Cover and steam for 7 minutes, or until the dough reaches an internal temperature of 190°F and the filling is 165°F. Gently remove buns from the basket with long-handled tongs; cool. Repeat until all buns are steamed. Serve the bao buns with sauce as desired.
Cook’s Tip: Keep the edges of the dough free of sauce to ensure they seal properly. Flipping each bao bun over as you make them, with the sealed side down, will also help prevent the parcels from opening between cooking steps.

———

To access nutrition information for this recipe and even more mouthwatering beef recipes, please visit beefitswhatsfordinner.com.

National Beef Month Spotlight: Recipes
RFD-TV’s Tammi Arender visited ZK Ranches in Springfield, Tennessee, to cook some of their homegrown beef, including Date Night Filet Mignon!
RFD-TV’s Tammi Arender and the Tennessee Beef Council make an easy, nutritious beef recipe to add to your summer cookbook.
What better way to celebrate our beef producers than to eat a delicious burger recipe? RFD-TV’s Tammi Arender shows us a new way to dress up our burgers that will impress everyone this grilling season.
Spice up your morning with this quick, flavorful Southwest breakfast recipe! RFD-TV’s Tammi Arender and Lyndi Knowles of ZK Ranches share this hearty and flavorful breakfast idea.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

In the rolling fields and fertile lands of America’s Heartland, John Deere and Farm Rescue are nurturing a partnership protecting the rural way of life.
With 2023 projected to be a difficult year for agricultural producers, Chapter 12 filings may increase. One of the requirements to get a Chapter 12 reorganization plan approved is that be filed in “good faith.” In this blog post, RFD-TV Legal Contributor Roger A. McEowen explains exactly what farmers need to know about the process.
The failure of a grain elevator can cause large problems for farmers and for the local community it serves. A farmer who knows their rights and where they stand if an elevator fails can be in a better position than those farmers who aren’t as well informed. That is the topic of today’s blog post by RFD-TV Legal Contributor Roger A. McEowen.
Financial matters in farming can be frustratingly complicated, especially when it comes to the process of filing for bankruptcy. That is the topic tackled in today’s blog post by Farm-Legal Expert Roger A. McEowen—the definition of “insolvency” for purposes of the exclusion from income of CODI.
The “farm products rule,” and the 1985 Farm Bill modification and its application – that is the topic of today’s blog post from Agri-Legal Expert Roger McEowen.
Rural Lifestyle & Entertainment Shows
Enjoy traditional country music from modern-day troubadours The Malpass Brothers. Each episode stars the brother duo of Chris & Taylor Malpass along with a featured celebrity guest– and loads of clever humor.
Brought to you by Gus Arrendale & Springer Mountain Farms, join dynamic bluegrass duo Dailey & Vincent as they welcome scores of fabulous bluegrass, country, and gospel music acts as special guests. Loads of laughs, your favorite guests galore, and lots of good times are guaranteed. Don’t miss all the fun!
Celebrating 16 Consecutive Seasons on RFD Network! “The Penny Gilley Show,” starring “The Sweetheart of Country Music” herself, Penny Gilley.
Join popular polka performer Mollie Busta as she hosts the weekly “Mollie B Polka Party” on RFD Network! The one-hour program features the nation’s top polka bands and a wide variety of ethnic styles, recorded on location at music festivals across the country.
SharkFarmer TV is the brainchild of Rob Sharkey, a 5th-generation farmer from Illinois. He shares the stories of incredible people in agriculture—both their successes and perhaps a few blunders along the way. You’ll see aerial footage of the field just as the drone crashes into a barn—and hear the story behind it all.