Jiucai hezi
Pan-fried jiucai hezi at a restaurant in Chongwenmen | |
Place of origin | China |
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Region or state | Shandong |
Main ingredients | Garlic chives, egg, cellophane noodles, wheat flour |
Jiucai hezi | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 韭菜盒子 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 韭菜合子 | ||||||
Literal meaning | chive box | ||||||
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Jiucai hezi (Chinese: 韭菜盒子 "chive box"), also called chive pockets, are a type of savory pie originating from Shandong, China. They are made of Chinese chives and eggs in a flour wrapper, then pan fried or baked. Jiucai hezi are traditionally eaten to celebrate the Chinese New Year.
Description
The dough is made from flour and water, with leavened and unleavened varieties. The stuffing typically includes chopped garlic chives, scrambled eggs,[1] sauteed mini-shrimp and cellophane noodles. Mushrooms and wood ear fungus are sometimes included. There is also a variety with minced meat as stuffing.[2] The stuffing will be put in the middle of a flat dough, and then folded into half-moon shape. The finished turnover is usually pan-fried instead of baked in the oven like a turnover, and is served with black rice vinegar and sesame oil mixture as dip.
Gallery
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With sesame
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Stuffing inside
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In popular culture
On February 14, 2022, during the second qualifying round of the freestyle skiing women's slopestyle event at the 2022 Winter Olympics, skier Eileen Gu was seen munching on a Chinese chive pocket (jiǔcài hézi) from a plastic bag while awaiting her score. In a later interview, Gu confirmed that the pastry was indeed a chive pocket.[3] The moment went viral across China. According to Meituan data, online searches for "jiucai hezi" surged by over 161% in the week following Gu's mention, with takeaway orders exceeding 1.6 million — a 93% year-on-year increase.[4] Furthermore, China Food Press reported that the post-Olympics surge in chive pocket sales reflected this viral trend, with searches and orders spiking noticeably.[5]
See also
References
- ^ Chinese chive pockets (韭菜盒子) – Red House Spice July 10, 2017, Retrieved on September 16, 2017
- ^ Chinese Chive Pie (Leek Pie, Garlic Chive Pie, Chinese Chive Box, 韭菜盒子) - Tiny Urban Kitchen February 6, 2014, Retrieved on September 16, 2017
- ^ James Pratt; Ed Knowles (2022-02-14). "Ailing (Eileen) Gu goes viral having lunch during qualifying". Olympics.com. Archived from the original on 2022-06-14. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Liu Xiaolin (2022-02-16). "Chinese cuisine scales new highs as Olympic athletes savor dishes" [中国美食在冬奥会上备受青睐,运动员尽享美味]. 上海热线. Retrieved 2025-06-22.
- ^ "Jiucai Hezi sales up 45% following Eileen Gu's mention". China Food Press. 2022-03-03. Retrieved 2025-06-22.