All the Chinese Dumplings You Never Knew Existed

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Photo credit: Getty

Chinese New Year is here. It begins January 31st, and celebrations will last a little more than two weeks. Naturally, we have Chinese food on the brain. Specifically, Chinese dumplings.

For the purpose of this piece, we’ll define dumplings as pockets of dough containing sweet or savory fillings. But here’s the thing: a dumpling is not a dumpling is not a dumpling. There are dozens (and dozens) of varieties out there, from fluffy char siu bao to velvety wontons.

Below, we’ve rounded up a number of popular types, although they’re just the tip of the iceberg. We bet you’ve tried one or two of them before; now you’ll know what to call them.

Guo Tie

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Photo credit: Rachel Tepper

Guo tie are a pan-fried type of jiaozi, which is a catch-all term for pouch-shaped dumplings. In Mandarin Chinese, “guo" means "pot" and "tie" means "to stick," which is why this variety is also called a "potsticker." Potstickers come stuffed with things like pork, shrimp, beef, chicken, vegetables, and various combinations of all five. All types of jiaozi are traditionally eaten during Chinese New Year.

Shuijiao

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Photo credit: Flickr/kawanet

Shuijiao, another type of jiaozi, are boiled. Like guo tie, they can be filled with any number of things, from pork to shrimp to veggies.

Zhengjiao

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Photo credit: Flickr/jasonlam

Zhengjiao is the last type of jiaozi on our list. It can have the same fillings as other jiaozi, but zhengjiao dumplings are always steamed.

Sheng Jian Bao

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Photo credit: Rachel Tepper

This Shanghai specialty is first steamed, then pan-fried to give it a crispy bottom. They’re filled with pork and gelatin, which melts into a soup-like liquid when cooked.

Xiao Long Bao

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Photo credit: Flickr/Charles Haynes

In the United States, these silky, liquid-filled parcels are known as “soup dumplings.” They can have a variety of fillings; these are stuffed with crab meat.

Shaomai

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Photo credit: Rachel Tepper

The word shaomai is spelled a ton of different ways in English (shui maishu maisui maishui mei… you get the picture), but all refer to an open dumpling made with a very thin wrapper. They’re usually steamed, and arrive containing delicious foods such as pork, shrimp, and vegetables.

Wonton

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Photo credit: Flickr/avlxyz

You’ve probably enjoyed wontons bobbing in hot bowls of noodle soup. They’re made with a thin, silky wrapper and often filled with ground pork and shrimp. In soup, they’re wonderfully slick and slurp-able. A deep-fried version filled with cream cheese, often seen in U.S. Chinese restaurants, is a distinctly American phenomenon.

Char Siu Bao

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Photo credit: Flickr/jessicafm

These fluffy white buns, filled with sweet, sticky barbecued pork, are a popular dim sum treat. They come in two varieties: steamed (above) and baked.

Har Gow

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Photo credit: Rachel Tepper

Translucent, steamed har gow are another dim sum specialty. They’re most always filled with balls of shrimp flavored with bits of pork, scallions, and bamboo shoots.

Hungry yet? Us too. Get thee to a dumpling house, pronto. (See you there.)

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