8 Classic Dim Sum Dishes That You Should Order At Yum Cha

When it comes to yum cha, there’s lots to choose from on the menu. From dumplings to steamed rice to buns to deep fried seafood, the choice of dim sum is endless – and there are some dishes we’ll always insist on ordering because they are our favourites.

Over the years across Asia and Australia, I’ve eaten yum cha countless of times with the folks and friends and we always order the same dishes. We love them, we order them, it feels right eating the same dishes over and over. Only occasionally we’d order something we don’t usually eat.

There's always much dim sum to eat at yum cha.

There’s always much dim sum to eat at yum cha.

Yum cha is traditionally a Cantonese brunch that involves Chinese tea and dim sum. Yum cha ( 飲茶) literally means ‘drink tea’. The meal originated in the Cantonese-speaking regions of China, and the meal can be traced back to the time when travellers on the ancient Silk Road stopped at teahouses for tea and snacks. On the other hand, dim sum (飲茶) are small serving dishes. These dishes are commonly carted around on trollies in restaurants and served in bamboo steamers or on small plates. Here are some typical, classic Cantonese-style dim sum dishes that are popular at yum cha:

1. Siu Mai / Sīu máai / Shāo mài (燒賣)

Siu Mai dumpling.

Siu Mai dumpling.

Sīu máai are bite-sized dumplings. They consist of pork and/or shrimp filling, wrapped with yellow wrapper and topped with an orange dot made out of crab roe or carrot. Scallion, ginger and mushroom are commonly mixed in with the filling, which is usually soft and chewy. I’m not a huge fan of pork but this is one dumpling I never hesitate to eat, never hesitate to order.

2. Har gow / Hā gáau ( 蝦餃)

Har gow dumpling.

Har gow dumpling.

This is also known as shrimp or prawn dumpling. It’s a simple steamed dumpling: prawn wrapped in a smooth translucent wrapper. Often oyster sauce, sesame oil, ginger and bamboo shoots are used to season the seafood. It’s usually served together with sīu máai, and together they are called hā gáausīu máai. If the two dishes happen to be served at the same time, I grab one of each dumpling right away.

3. Cheong Fun / Chéung fán / Cháng fěn (腸粉)

Cheong fun.

Cheong fun.

This rice noodle roll dish tends to be filled with chā sīu (叉燒, barbecue pork), shrimp or vegetable. Seasoned soy or sesame sauce is served together with the rolls. The English translation of chéung fán refers to intestines but this dish is not made up of intestines – it just looks like intestines. Arguably it’s one of the plainer dishes: the rice paper rolls themselves are plain and unseasoned. If made with precision, the rice noodles should be thin, soft and silky smooth – sometimes I find them slipping in between my chopsticks and almost impossible to put in mouth.

4. Lor mai fan / Nuò mǐ fàn (糯米)/ Lor mai kai / Nuò mǐ Jī (糯米)

Lor Mai Kai.

Lor Mai Kai.

This is steamed glutinous rice, served with or without chicken and wrapped in lotus leaf. The sticky glutinous rice is cooked with oyster sauce and the centre is packed with mushrooms, shrimp, scallop, peanuts, pork and laap cheong (腊肠, Chinese smoked pork sausage). As one of the more filling dim sum dishes, it’s also one that comes in a bigger serve compared to the others mentioned here.

This dish is usually a hit or miss with me. Sometimes it leaves a bitter aftertaste in my mouth, which still lingers after drinking some Chinese tea. Not the kind of taste I like. As lotus leaf is considered a bitter herb, it’s probably the reason why.

5. Lo Bak Go / Lò baahk gōu / Luó bo gāo (蘿蔔糕)

Loh Bak Go.

Loh Bak Go.

This is turnip cake, made up of radish and also known as radish cake. It’s pan-fried and served up in square pieces. It’s soft on the inside with slightly crispy outer edges and sometimes there are small pieces of laap cheong mixed in. It’s a popular dish around Chinese New Year and the Chinese believe that this savoury cake brings good luck: loh bak go is synonymous (in texture) with lin go/nián gāo (年糕 glutinous rice pudding), which in itself is synonymous to the Chinese phrase nián nián gāo shēng (年年高升) – meaning ‘higher each year’.

6. Daan taat / Dàn tǎ ()

Egg Tart.

Egg Tart.

This is sweet egg tart, consisting of bright yellow egg custard flanked by a flaky puff pastry. It’s smooth, silky, has a slightly wobbly centre and tastes slightly eggy. Interestingly enough, Macau’s egg tart resembles the Portuguese tart. Portuguese tarts look similar to egg tarts but the former has a caramelised top, doesn’t taste eggy and tastes like sweet vanilla custard.

7. Bao / Bāo () / Char siu bao / Chā sīu bāau / Chā shāo bāo (叉燒包)

Char Siew Bao.

Char Siew Bao.

This bun comes either steamed or baked. The steamed one has a soft white fluffy outside and the baked one a glazed, crispy exterior. The centre of the bun consists of soft pork, corn starch, onions, sesame oil, soy sauce and oyster sauce. Quite commonly the pork filling is red in colour and that is usually due to marinating the meat in saltpetre before cooking it.

Growing up, I watched my parents peel the outer skin of steamed baos before eating them. They claimed the outer layer is dirty and not safe for consumption. Baos are commonly left out in the open before being warmed and served. Others argue that the outside of baos are dosed with sulphur water during the steaming process to ensure they come out white. I’ve eaten baos as they are, unpeeled, and have not gotten sick eating them.

8. Wu gok (芋角)

Wu Kok.

Wu Kok.

Known as taro dumpling or yam puff, this is a deep fried delicacy. It has a savoury pork-filled centre covered with a thick layer of mashed taro, and the outer taro layer is fluffy, light and crispy. It’s one of my most-favourite yum cha dishes, and I’ve previoulsy eaten 4-5 of these in one sitting.

* * *

Other much-loved classic dishes at yum cha include: steamed Chinese broccoli, congee with century egg, chicken feet, beef tripe (cow’s stomach), fried squid, sago pudding, roast duck and ham sui gok (咸水角) which is also strangely known as football dumplings. As such, yum cha is more than just dumplings. Not all dim sum dishes are dumplings; not all dim sum dishes are bite sized. Sometimes yum cha dishes might be small meals themselves.

We all have our favourite kind of dim sum. A survey in 2015 showed that sīu máai was voted the most popular dim sum in Hong Kong while shrimp dumplings came second. In Australia, these two dishes are extremely popular as well. Perhaps some dim sum are more appealing than others: sīu máai and hā gáau are dumplings and as I wrote in this post, some dumplings remind us of familiar comfort foods that we love eating (i.e. dumplings resemble pasta and some of us love pasta).

Century Egg Congee.

Century Egg Congee.

Yum cha is a sharing affair and a meal where we want to share is a meal where we share a good time together. Translated from Cantonese, dim sum means ‘touch the heart’. At yum cha, dishes are designed to be shared: dim sum are commonly served bite-sized, one piece of dim sum and one bite for one person, pass that dish around, move on to the next dish, everyone gets to eat. Notably, while dining yum cha on a few occasions in Australia, I’ve seen Westerners eat entire dim sum dishes individually and their dining companion have their own plates of dim sum. From a Chinese perspective this comes across as odd but in the general sense there’s nothing wrong with that since all of us have different ways of consuming food.

These days where and how we eat yum cha is changing. Frozen dim sum is normally sold in grocery stores in Australia today. Vegetarian dim sum options are usually on the menu these days too (e.g. Red Ginger and Din Tai Fung). Also, it’s common for many Chinese restaurants that serve à la carte meals to also serve à la carte dim sum too. That is, in Australia one can order dim sum as a side dish to a main meal, and eat dim sum any time, all day, every day.

A few times on the weekend I’ve eaten solo at Tim Ho Wan, the cheapest Michelin-starred restaurant. While the portions here are small and I could get more dim sum for the same price elsewhere, the dim sum does taste more flavourful compared to some other yum cha places I’ve been to in Australia.

Fried BBQ Pork Buns.

Fried BBQ Pork Buns.

On one of these occasions at Tim Ho Wan, a Western couple who looked to be in their forties sat next to me. The woman beside me seemed upbeat and eager to try everything. The man in front of her on the other hand seemed restless and did not look like he was in the best mood – picking up a chopstick and fidgeting with it in his fingers, saying that he wasn’t sure what the menu (with English translation) meant and eyed the two colourfully dressed Asian girls at the next table who were chatting away in Cantonese. Rather brusquely, he said to his companion, ‘It’s like another world in here’.

He probably was open-minded enough to walk in and have a seat in a Chinese restaurant that he never tried before. He probably would remember his time at this restaurant whether he liked it or not. Having finished my dim sum, I got up, paid for my meal and left with a reflective mind – and also feeling very full, not wanting to overthink what I just heard.

Often yum cha feels like a treat. Or at the very least a meal that makes us curious enough to try it. And then want to come back for more.

Do you like eating dim sum / dining yum cha?

258 thoughts on “8 Classic Dim Sum Dishes That You Should Order At Yum Cha

  1. I may have had #4 but not familiar with it. A local cycling and shopping destination with a longish ride is to a major Chinese chain supermarket where it’s a 45 km. round trip via a very large park area by a river. At the store, I have har gow and a drink. It’s an energizer for me and cheap. 🙂

    The siu mai in the middle looks awfully pale in that photo. Is that some sort of dough covering the meat in the centre? I suggest a sticky rice packet as part of dim sum experience –either wrapped-steamed in bamboo leaf or lotus leaf. After all, when does one eat that dish outside of the dim sum in a restaurant?

    Liked by 2 people

    • That is quiet a ride to town and get some Chinese food. Good to hear it’s cheap – that means you can eat quite a few pieces of har gow 🙂

      There isn’t any dough covering the meat, the cenre of the siew mai. I’ve actually eaten quite a few siu mai that are this pale, but never paler though.

      Now that you mention it, I don’t think I’ve eaten the sticky rice and lotus leaf outside of yum cha. The closet I can think is during the Dragon Boat festival but even then, it’s different.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I read a lot of food posts, Mabel, but this one is mouth-watering 🙂

    “These dishes are commonly carted around on trollies in restaurants and served in bamboo steamers…” – I’ve seen this in a few Chinese restaurants I visited here. There’s an exotic feel to it.

    My favorite in the post is Siu Mai. I’ll go for pork filling, orange dot made out of crab roe; mushroom, ginger and scallion. Yummy. Then, Daan taat. I like tarts. This one is sweet and bright yellow egg custard cupped in a flaky puff pastry. Tempting.

    I like these two restaurants in NYC: Mimi Cheng’s Dumplings and Han Dynasty. Sichuan pickled vegetables and Taiwan pork belly buns are my cold and hot appetizer favorites.

    Deliciously yours 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Oh Wow.. what a lot of food I have not ever heard of before.. 🙂 All looking really tasty Mabel.. and I am sure each one so delicious 🙂 It looks like a lot of effort is put into your food..
    Wishing you well dear Mabel and sending you lots of love over the weekend, have a peaceful one.. Love Sue xx

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Dim sum are a favorite of mine. I am familiar with 1, 2, and 7 which in the Philippines are called siomai, hakao, and siopao, respectively. Of the three, siomai is my absolute favorite.

    I wish I can sample number 3 and the glutinous rice in lotus leaf. Alas, in our neck of the woods, it is quite difficult to find a place serving excellent common dumplings that I do not think I’ll even see the others served here. A girl, matron, rather, can dream though. 😊

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  5. Yum cha is food for my Asian soul. I gag every time I see fashionable blogs like Broadsheet promote what is essentially tourist food to the masses; there is SO MUCH MORE than the deep-fried, sweet-and-sour, salty, black-pepper rubbish that clogs your arteries: 炸兩, 牛雜, 蔥油餅, 杨枝甘露, 馬拉糕, 奶黄包, 流沙包, 煎腸粉… I could probably live on two or three different ones a day, every day.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Totally agree with your sentiments. Lemon chicken or anything with lemon sauce is also a popular dim sum or Chinese food marketed towards a broader crowd. Even the fortune cookie too.

      炸兩 and 馬拉糕 – delicious and I don’t think I could ever get bored of those.

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  6. This is absolutely perfect ~ and perfect timing for me as well, as I am in Hong Kong for a couple of weeks ~ a yum cha paradise. I am very tempted to fly you up here just so we can go out for yum-cha, and you can do all the ordering and re-create what you’ve written and shown above 😉

    The culture of yum cha is something I believe fascinates people all over the world ~ I love the loud, boisterous environments in Hong Kong which accompanies the greatest dim sum ever tasted 🙂 Cheers to a great day and coming weekend Mabel ~

    Liked by 1 person

    • I’m not one for loud and boisterous but yum cha is where I always feel right and right at home. After all these years, I’m sure you’ve gotten used to the yum cha culture and atmosphere 🙂

      Very kind of you, Randy. If time and work permitted on my end, you could certainly fly me over for yum cha. And how about a free trip to that part of the world too and the photos we can both take 😉 😂

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  7. It’s a long time since I’ve eaten dim sum, Mabel, and I can only ever remember eating it in a Chinese restaurant. I’ve always had the savoury ones and never knew about the sweet ones. As a huge lover of egg custard, I’m pretty sure that I’d enjoy the Daan taa. I don’t see them being sold in the supermarkets in the UK, but I think they make the perfect light lunch. I’m sure they are very nutritious and probably don’t contain many calories either?

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  8. This is persuaded me to go and try the dumplings at my local Sushi bar. We do not have authentic Chinese restaurant near us. There was one amazing place that offered an evening buffet. Now I realise how much I miss it! Delicious post. The prawn dumplings are making me hungry 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  9. OH dear, should this be the first post I read from you after a long absence? And so close to the holidays, too.

    You’ve hit on all the most popular dim sum dishes, in my opinion. Do you know that one of the Tim Ho Wan restaurants in Hong Kong is on the Michelin Gourmand list (at least two years in a row, I think). However, I would also like to add the CHICKEN CLAWS dish which seems a mainstay at our table, whenever I have dim sum with older relatives. But I can understand your leaving it out, for the sake of your readers with a more “delicate constitution”. 🙂

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    • Hehe. You picked the food post to read first 😀 Yes! Tim Ho Wan is a Michelin starred restaurant! Really like their dishes here in Australia, but there are also other places here that are quite good. Chicken claws? We always called them chicken feet and I think you are right in that it is popular with the older generation 😀 To me eating chicken feet is like eating mainly bones, so next please 🙂

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