The sweet buns Hong Kong can’t live without

One of these sweet "pineapple" buns - bo lo bao - with a slice of frozen butter and a cup of milk tea is the ultimate Hong Kong snack.

Hong Kong's Pineapple Bun

A bo lo bao from Kam Wah Cafe - said by many to be the best source in Hong Kong. Source: Instagram / eunicedo

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Just as there is no moon in mooncakes, no donkey in , and no fish in , there is no pineapple in a pineapple bun.

Chinese dishes don’t always do what they say on the tin, and Hong Kong’s favourite snack is no exception.

The iconic bo lo bao, or pineapple buns, are named instead for the criss-cross pattern on their golden crusts, thought to resemble the fruit.

They are so central to life in Hong Kong that they were deemed part of its intangible cultural heritage in 2014.

“Pineapple buns are just a part of our daily lives. Some people eat it every day for breakfast... sometimes afternoon tea,” says Hong Kong local Silvana Leung, director of operations for tours.

The sweet buns are a fitting symbol for this east-meets-west city, a blend of European and Asian cooking techniques.

Hong Kong's famous Pineapple Bun
Source: Instagram

Invented mid last century, when Hong Kongers developed a taste for western cakes and bread during British colonial rule, the pineapple bun gained popularity as a local alternative. “Many cafes started selling them to earn extra revenue for their takeaway business,” says Leung.

The buns are sold at every bakery but are also a mainstay of Hong Kong’s cha chaan teng or tea houses. Originally, these diners sought to recreate western dishes for local palates at affordable prices, but now these fusion foods – from steak on spaghetti to pork chop sandwiches – are uniquely Hong Kong.

Bo lo bao is famously labour-intensive, and Hong Kong’s government is seeking to preserve the traditional way to make them. The soft, sweet bun dough is mixed and shaped into balls, and then covered with a thin layer of butter-rich pastry, which is scored and washed with egg before baking. This crackles and puffs up to form a crumbly crust, while the inside stays moist.



If you want to eat it like a local, hold it with two hands and munch into it like a hamburger, says Leung. They’re commonly paired with a milky cup of tea, and a frozen slab of butter wedged inside that melts into the hot bun – a variation known as a ‘pineapple butter’. Others include fillings of red bean, jam, custard, a pork chop, or even char siu.

Kam Wah Cafe is frequently lauded as having the best buns in Hong Kong, but Leung says your favourite is often just your local.

“I think every Hong Konger has their favourite place to get their pineapple buns, even if it may not necessarily have the ‘best in Hong Kong’. People usually just go to a convenient bakery to grab them, it may be on our way to work or around where we live.”



In Australia, your best bet for finding them hot out of the oven is at Chinese bakeries, such as the popular chain Breadtop. While there are Hong Kong cafes to be found here, like the wonderful Ching Yip Coffee Lounge hidden at the top of Dixon House in Sydney’s Chinatown, few offer pineapple buns because of the effort involved in making them daily from scratch.

And a hot pineapple bun is key, says Leung. “Good pineapple buns have to be fluffy and light and, most importantly, served fresh out of the oven and warm.”

by via Instagram.

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4 min read
Published 15 January 2019 2:42pm
Updated 31 July 2024 2:46pm
By Rachel Bartholomeusz


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