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:

OHFB President Bill Patterson shares an update from Washington on the group’s policy priorities and the issues shaping agriculture ahead of the 2026 planting season.
Ben Kurtzman with American Farmland Trust discusses the growing pressure on farmland and ranchland and the steps being taken to help conserve farms and ranches across the country ,as unrest in the Middle East adds more obstacles for producers.
NRECA CEO Jim Matheson warns that rising electricity demand from AI and data centers could strain the grid and affect rural electric cooperatives if U.S. power infrastructure cannot keep up.
Tidal Grow’s AlignN delivers encapsulated nitrogen to leaves, boosting in-season response, yield gains, and farm profits.
Katie Keener with the National Women in Agriculture Association joins us to celebrate women in agriculture and spotlight programs and initiatives aimed at empowering female producers across the country.
Nationwide’s Elizabeth Duncan and Traci Via with Agriculture Future of America highlight the impact of women in agriculture and how mentorship and partnerships empower future farmers and ranchers.
Rural Lifestyle & Entertainment Shows
Richard “Red” Skelton, reigned as the virtual King of TV Variety Show Comedy throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Airing for a total of of 20 seasons, from 1951 through 1971, Red’s hilarious facial contortions and colorful cast of boneheaded personas – including indept Sheriff Deadeye, inebriated boxer Cauliflower McPugg, hillbilly Clem Kadiddlehopper, and hobo Freddie the Freeloader – kept a whole generation of Americans in stitches during the earliest decades of television. Memorable guest stars included John Wayne, Phyllis Diller, Mickey Rooney, Audrey Meadows, Michael Landon, and many more.
Follow Aumann Auctions coast to coast on a road trip adventure! Each episode of “Old Iron Adventures” highlights the challenges of hosting an auction. Plus, get behind-the-scenes looks, history lessons & meet a cast of very interesting characters along the way!
“Positively Paula,” is a nationally-syndicated lifestyle/food show that invites viewers to share a moment with their friend: Paula Deen, who we know and love.
“Green Acres” meets “Home Improvement” in this refreshing, informative unscripted lifestyle series depicting the hilarious adventures of a suburban family gone rural.
Hop in and travel with J.B. Sauceda on a road trip to discover ordinary people doing extraordinary things on the back roads of Texas. TCR’s longtime hosts Bob & Kelli Phillips have passed the keys to a new storyteller, who will continue the journey to uncover uplifting stories about oddball collectors, thought-provoking artists, and everyday heroes making the world a better place.