Dongbei — China's northeast, encompassing Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning — is a cold-climate kitchen shaped by Manchurian, Korean, Russian, and Han Chinese influences. The jiaozi is Dongbei's centrepiece, made larger than southern dumplings, with thicker skins for the cold and fillings generous with pork, cabbage, and spring onion. Dongbei residents will argue with conviction that their version is the original — and the evidence supports the claim that wheat dumpling culture developed first in the north, spreading south with the Han migration.
The skin: all-purpose flour with boiling water (烫面 — scalded dough), rested 20 minutes under a damp cloth. Scalding partially cooks the starch, producing a supple, pliable skin that resists tearing during pleating and becomes slightly translucent after boiling. Roll the wrapper thinner at the edge and thicker at the centre using a small rolling pin worked outward from the middle on a rotating disc. Filling: pork mince, minimum 30% fat, worked with soy, sesame oil, white pepper, and Shaoxing wine, then combined with napa cabbage that has been salted, left 10 minutes, and pressed completely dry — the liquid extraction is not optional; any remaining water in the cabbage dilutes the filling and bursts skins during boiling. Pleat: 8–10 single pleats on one side, or the double-fold ear pleat — the pleating compresses the filling and prevents burst seams under the heat of the water. Boil in salted water, adding cold water three times during cooking (三点水 — the three cold-water method) to reduce temperature, prevent skin tearing, and ensure even cooking of the filling.
Dipping sauce: aged black vinegar, thin soy, sesame oil, raw garlic, fresh ginger strips. The vinegar cuts through pork fat; the sesame grounds the flavour; the ginger brightens. Served at the New Year table, made with family, each person pleating their own — the craft is the ritual. The dumplings are not the same if no one made them together.
1. Filling completely dry — wet filling means burst skins or waterlogged dumplings; this is the single most critical variable 2. Skin thickness differential maintained — uniform thickness tears at the pleat under boiling stress 3. Three cold water additions — not optional; it controls temperature differential between skin and filling throughout the cook 4. Pork fat content minimum 30% — lean pork filling is dry and bland; fat provides both moisture and sweetness 5. Served immediately from the water — jiaozi held in a colander stick together and the skin toughens within minutes Sensory tests: - visual: Boiled jiaozi plump, slightly translucent, and intact; burst seams indicate wet filling or under-sealed edges - texture: Skin should have a slight bite — not mushy; the inside of the skin should be slightly starchy and silky - sound: When bitten, the skin gives a faint, clean resistance before yielding; mushiness means the skin was too thin or the water too gentle - aroma: The filling aroma should release immediately on the first bite — pork sweetness, sesame, and cabbage in a burst of steam
Regional Chinese Deep — RC01–RC15