Ci fan tuan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ci fan tuan | |||||||||||||||
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Many pieces of Cí fàn tuán in a traditional steaming basket | |||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese: | 糍飯糰 | ||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese: | 糍饭团 | ||||||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin: | Cífàn tuán | ||||||||||||||
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Ci faan | |||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese: | 秶飯 | ||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese: | 秶饭 | ||||||||||||||
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Cí fàn tuán (糍飯糰) is a kind of food in Chinese cuisine, originated in Shanghai. It is made by tightly wrapping a piece of youtiao (fried dough) with glutinous rice. It is usually eaten as breakfast together with sweetened or savory soy milk in Eastern China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
In Hong Kong, it is usually known as ci faan (秶飯). In Shanghai, the equivalent term cifan means compressed glutinous rice generally, and is used in compound names such as cifan gao, "glutinous rice cake", a toasted cake also made from compressed glutinous rice.
In recent years, there have been innovations on the traditional ci fan tuan, originating from Hong Kong and Taiwan, then reverse-introduced into Shanghai and its vicinity. Today, ci fan tuan is commonly available in two varieties. The "savoury" variety includes ingredients such as zha cai (pickled vegetable), rousong (pork floss) and small pieces of youtiao being wrapped in the rice ball. The "sweet" variety adds sugar and sometimes sesame to the filling.