Hebaodan (荷包蛋) — Chinese Pan-Fried “Pouch” Egg
Hebaodan is the classic Chinese pan-fried egg: a compact, “pouched” shape with set whites, a tender yolk, and optional lacy-crisp edges. The key is hot, shimmering oil to set the bottom fast, then a tiny splash of water and a lid to gently set the top without overcooking the yolk. Serve simply over rice with soy sauce, or alongside noodles and stir-fries for an instant comfort-meal upgrade.
Total time: 6 minutes
Yield: Makes 1 egg
Ingredients
- 1 large egg
- 1–2 tsp neutral oil (or pork lard)
- Pinch of salt
- Optional: pinch of white pepper
- Optional (for steaming the top): 1 tsp water
- Hot rice
- Soy sauce
- Few drops toasted sesame oil
Instructions
- Heat a small nonstick (or well-seasoned) skillet over medium-high heat. Add the oil and swirl to coat.
- Crack the egg into a small bowl (for control), then slide it into the pan.
- For the first 10–15 seconds, use a spatula to nudge the spreading whites inward toward the yolk to keep a compact “pouch” shape.
- Let the bottom set until the edges turn lacy and golden, 30–60 seconds depending on heat.
- Add 1 tsp water to the pan (not directly onto the egg) and immediately cover with a lid to steam-set the top.
- Slide the egg out. Season with salt (and optional white pepper) while hot.
- Runny yolk: 20–30 seconds covered; yolk jiggles freely.
- Jammy yolk: 35–50 seconds covered; yolk jiggles but feels thicker.
- Fully set yolk: 60–90 seconds covered; yolk barely moves.
- Serve over hot rice with a drizzle of soy sauce and a few drops of toasted sesame oil, or alongside noodles and stir-fries.
Notes
Heat control is everything: start at medium-high for crisp edges, then reduce slightly if the oil smokes or the whites brown before the top sets. Nonstick is easiest; on stainless/cast iron, make sure the pan is well-heated and well-oiled before adding the egg to prevent sticking. Make 2–4 eggs: use a wider pan and crack each into a bowl first; slide in one at a time, leaving space. Add a touch more water when covering (about 1 tsp per 2 eggs). Flavor upgrades: finish with scallion oil, chili crisp, or a splash of black vinegar. Lard gives a more traditional, fragrant edge-crisp.