Tang Yuan (Sweet Sesame Dumplings)
Updated Jan. 22, 2025

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1(2-inch) piece/65 grams fresh ginger, scrubbed and cut into ¼-inch slices
- ¾cup/155 grams rock sugar or ½ cup/100 grams granulated sugar
- ½cup/70 grams roasted black sesame seeds (see Tip)
- 3tablespoons/40 grams granulated sugar, plus more if desired
- 3tablespoons/50 grams creamy peanut butter or unsalted butter
- 1¼cups/175 grams glutinous rice flour, plus more as needed (see Notes)
- 4teaspoons grapeseed oil or other neutral oil
For the Soup
For the Filling
For the Dough
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the soup: Combine the ginger and sugar in a large saucepan with 6 cups water. Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring to dissolve the sugar, then turn the heat to the lowest setting. Let steep until ready to cook.
- Step 2
Make the filling: Process the sesame seeds in a food processor until very finely ground. Add the sugar and pulse until the mixture is as fine as sand, then pulse in the peanut butter until the mixture forms a smooth mass. Taste and add more sugar if you’d like, then pulse to incorporate.
- Step 3
Using a measuring teaspoon, scoop and pack a flat spoonful of the sesame seed mixture, then push it out of the spoon onto a rimmed baking sheet using your fingertip. Repeat with the remaining mixture and note how many pieces you get. (It should be around 24.) Press and gently squeeze each spoonful into a ball. Transfer to the freezer to firm up.
- Step 4
Make the dough: Place the flour in a medium bowl and set the bowl on a damp kitchen towel so it won’t slip. Bring ⅔ cup water to a boil in a small saucepan on the stovetop or in a heatproof liquid measuring cup in the microwave. Add the oil to the water, then pour the mixture into the flour in a slow, steady stream while stirring with chopsticks or a fork. Continue stirring until the liquid is incorporated. The mixture should look like floury pebbles. Cover with a damp towel or plastic wrap and let stand 5 minutes to cool.
- Step 5
Squeeze and gather the pebbles into a ball in the bowl. Roll onto a clean work surface and knead, flouring the dough and surface if the dough sticks, until very smooth and room temperature, 3 to 5 minutes. The dough should feel supple. Roll into a snake 1 inch in diameter and cut into the number of dough filling balls you have, dividing evenly.
- Step 6
Take the filling balls out of the freezer. Roll a piece of dough into a ball, then press the edges with your fingertips to form a 2½-inch round with a dime-size belly of thicker dough in the middle. Center a filling ball in the dough, then gather the sides around it to enclose. Pinch the seams shut and gently roll into a smooth ball. Repeat with the remaining filling and dough. (The dumplings can be frozen on a baking sheet until firm, then stored in an airtight container in the freezer for up to 3 months. Cook directly from the freezer.)
- Step 7
Bring the ginger soup to a simmer over medium heat. Add the dumplings one at a time, then simmer gently until the balls float, the dough is a little translucent and the filling is steaming hot, about 10 minutes. Divide the dumplings and soup among bowls and serve hot. (The ginger isn’t meant to be eaten.)
- If you’re starting with raw black sesame seeds, toast them in a skillet set over medium heat, swirling the pan continuously, until the seeds are aromatic and start to crackle and pop, 3 to 5 minutes. Immediately transfer to the food processor and proceed as above.
- If you can’t find glutinous rice flour, you can use sweet rice flour (such as Mochiko brand), but the dough may be stickier and require flour while kneading and shaping. The dumplings will end up chewier and not as tender after cooking.
Private Notes
Comments
You can certainly use tahini: the Soom brand (from Israel) has a good reputation. Alternatively, if you don't mind "crunchy" (as opposed to "creamy") tahini, you can make your own tahini by purchasing sesame seed in bulk from an Indian store, toasting it with a little oil until just fragrant (be vigilant- it can burn very quickly), and then process it into a paste in a dry grinder.
It's my first dumpling and it was a success! Tips are as follows: - It took me 2.5 hours, not 1 hour (with toasting of sesame seed included) - Keep a lot of flour on hand - I put a metal lid in the same size as the suggested circle as a visual guide nearby - Instead of shaping in my palm, i shaped it on the table. It helped prevent holes - My dumplings floated up a little earlier than expected (less than 5 mins)
I used a piping bag without a tip to make the sesame filling balls. (I cut a half-inch hole in the bag.) I put them in the fridge to cool before delicately rolling them into little balls to freeze them. For the rice wrappers, I rolled the pieces into balls and pressed them flat on the table with my palm between layers of parchment paper. It was much faster and didn't stick to my hands while working with them. Take the sesame balls out of the freezer in small batches to avoid melting.
To prevent tears in the dough, keep it a little stickier than dry so that the dough 'self heals' as you roll it around the filling. Tiny tears may show when freezing but that's okay as long as the filling isn't popping out.
We make these a few weeks ahead of time and freeze. Here in Denver where we are drier, I add 2T oil to the flour and make sure it's mixed through. Then add boiling water and let sit. It makes for a nice supple dough, very easy to work with if done quickly. We also make the ball mixture and let freeze overnight or longer, which helps as it stays frozen when working with the dough. We then freeze the dough wrapped balls and cook in soup. It takes about 10 minutes with frozen balls.
Can these dumplings be made, placed in individual serving bowls and then served a few hours later? Asking because this will be part of a buffet.
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