Learn how to make fried sesame balls (Jian Dui or Jin Dui) with a tested method at home. You can choose red bean paste or black sesame paste as filling, even empty sesame balls. Follow the guide and make lovely crispy fried sesame balls.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

What are sesame balls?

Fried sesame balls are made from sticky rice flour. Those sesame balls are usually filled with sweet red bean paste or black sesame paste and deep-fried until golden crisp. They are coated with toasted sesame seeds on the outside, giving them a nutty flavor. It has several other names, like Jian Dui, Jin Dui,Ma Tuan or Ma Yuan. It can be served as a snack or breakfast.

fried sesame balls|chinasichuanfood

Let me guess, have you ever tried those fried sesame balls in dim sum halls? Possibly yes! Those sesame balls usually are served to enjoy savory dim sum dishes of various sizes. In fact, sesame ball is a very common breakfast dish popular far beyond Guangdong cuisine (cause of the popularity). It gets several nicknames in Chinese—Jian Dui or Ma Tuan. We usually have this as breakfast during my high school time. Then more and more popular healthy ideas come to life, so we did not cook them frequently in the following years. However, when it comes to holidays, a small batch of sesame balls will bring almost every guest back to old memories. I feel it is necessary to record how to make these fried sesame balls at home.

It is a tradition to make some dishes with glutinous rice (sweet sticky rice) for Chinese people. For example, we have Chinese rice dumplings (Zongzi) for Dragon Boat Festival, Chinese tteok for the Middle Autumn Day, sesame rice dumpling for Lantern Festival, and NianGao for Spring Festival. Glutinous rice is gluten-free rice with lower production relatively in China. Chinese people treasure the healthy value of sticky rice and thus provide various yummy dishes not only for holidays but also daily desserts and breakfast- like glutinous rice balls with coconut, mixed congee, and glutinous rice balls with crushed peanuts.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Fillings of sesame balls

The most popular filling choice for sesame balls is red bean paste filling and black bean filling. No matter which one you choose, make sure any wrap a very small amount in each of the sesame balls.

You may also choose not to include a filling inside. But still, need to finish the wrapping process to make sure there is an empty space inside the sesame ball.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
black sesame filling sesame balls
Chinese sesame balls
red bean paste sesame balls

About the flour of the ball

Glutinous rice flour is made from glutinous rice with a special treating method named “水磨”. To produce glutinous rice flour, firstly glutinous rice shall be immersed in water for about two to three hours until it can be easily mashed by hand. In rural areas in China, the local people often use a stone mill to smash glutinous rice into rice milk. The rice milk will be poured into a yarn bag which is hung up to drain the rice milk. When the water in the rice milk is drained after a few hours, glutinous rice flour is initially accomplished and then it will be dried in the sun for long-time storage.

Water and flour ratio

Have you ever tried to make those sesame balls at home? And succeeded? Haha, I guess some of you guys might have tried, but ended with frustration. To make the perfect sesame balls, here are some tips Elaine would love to share publicly.

The ratio between the flour and water should be between 5:2 and 2:1. If too much water is added, the balls will collapse completely after deep-frying. If too little water is added, the shaping process will be quite difficult and the balls may explode during the deep-frying process.

How much sugar

The ideal ratio for the restaurant version usually calls for a ratio of 5:2 (flour: sugar). I know people are matching their sugar intake each day. We can only slightly reduce the amount of sugar for a homemade version.  The lack of sugar will not only influence the taste, but also the golden brown color.

How to avoid explosion during the deep-frying process

You may have this experience: you made perfect balls with red bean filling, and check the oil temperature very well but still, you get the balls to explode and oil splash almost everywhere in your kitchen.

I have developed a lovely method to make sure this will not happen once again. The key skill here is to boil around 1/10 of your flour first and then mix it with the remaining flour. When glutinous rice flour meets heat or hot water, it becomes sticky, which can prevent an explosion in the deep-frying process if the oil temperature is well controlled.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
A failed batch of sesame balls

How to deep-fry sesame balls

If you get a kitchen thermometer, heat the oil to around 120 degrees C. But relax if you do not have one. Just throw a smaller glutinous ball into the oil, and start deep-frying when you will see lots of small bubbles around. I would strongly suggest watching the video as I instructed lots of details about how to deep-fry the sesame balls. Higher oil temperature will burn the surface while the inner side keeps uncooked. However, lower oil temperature cannot bring you a perfect golden brown color.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Time to stop deep-frying

I would suggest transferring the balls out when they are slightly golden brown or medially golden brown because the left heat will darken the color in the following minutes. We call this as “后油” effect in Chinese, which literally means after deep-frying effect because of the hot oil.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Instructions

In a small bowl, take around 2 tablespoons of glutinous rice flour out and mix with around 15ml water. Knead until smooth.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Bring some water to a boil and then cook the small dough for around 2 to 3 minutes. Prepare a bowl with cold water on the side. Then the small dough is ready, and transfer out to the remaining flour.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

In a large bowl, mix the left flour with sugar and baking powder. And then add the small dough in. Break with hand and slowly stir in water. Continue kneading until smooth dough. The dough is completely different from the tangyuan dough, it is more elastic and much softer.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Further, shape the dough into long log and then divide into 20 equal portions.

Shape the small glutinous rice balls into a bowl and then wrap around 1 teaspoon of filling, either black sesame or red bean paste. Seal completely and shape into a round ball again.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Prepare two bowls: one with clean water and the other with sesame. Take one ball with one hand, quickly dip it in water and then roll the ball in a sesame bowl with another hand. This is a personal tip to make the process easier. Press the balls several times so the sesame seeds can stick to the surface. Repeat to finish all the sesame balls.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Heat enough oil (at least cover the balls) until 120 degrees C (or you can test the temperature with a smaller ball). Carefully add the sesame balls, I will recommend using a small scoop to help. Slow your fire immediately and slowly deep-fry the balls until slightly golden brown. Turn off the fire; transfer out and absorb extra oil with paper. Cool down for several minutes and enjoy!

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

How to store and reheat sesame balls

If you make a larger batch, you will need to deep-fry them for later serving. Another way is to cook in the oven for 4-5 minutes.

How to serve sesame balls

Sesame balls are the perfect option for Chinese breakfast. But since it is deep-fried, the recommend serving way is to serve it with soy milk, congee, or other savory dishes like Chinese cucumber salad.

sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

Sesame Balls-Jian Dui

Famous dim sum fried sesame balls made with glutinous rice flour and filled with red bean paste; Also known as Jian Dui in Chinese.
5 from 22 votes
Print Pin Rate
Course: Breakfast, Dessert, dim sum
Cuisine: Chinese
Keyword: Jian Dui, Sesame
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 35 minutes
Servings: 20 Making around 20 fried sesame balls
Calories: 109kcal
Author: Elaine

Ingredients

Instructions

Prepare the small dough

  • In a small bowl, take around 2 tablespoon of glutinous rice flour out and mix with around 15ml water. Knead to until smooth.
  • Bring some water to boil and then cook the small dough for around 2 to 3 minutes. Prepare a bowl with cold water on the side. When the small dough is ready, transfer out and add it into other sticky rice flour.

Prepare the main dough

  • In a large bowl, mix the left flour with sugar. And then add the small dough in. Break with hand and slowly stir in water. Continue kneading until smooth dough.
  • Further shape the dough into long log and then divide into 20 equal portions. Shape each portion into a round ball.

Assemble the sesame balls

  • Shape the small glutinous rice balls into a bowl and then wrap around 1 teaspoon red bean paste in. Seal completely and shape into a around ball again.
  • Prepare two bowls: one with clean water and the other with sesame. Take one ball with one hand, quick dip with water and then roll the ball in sesame bowl with another hand. This is a personal tip to make the process easier. Press the balls several times so the sesame seeds can sticky to the surface. Repeat to finish all the sesame balls.

Frying the balls

  • Heat enough oil (at lest cover the balls) until 120 degree C (or you can test the temperature with a smaller ball). Carefully add the sesame balls, slow your fire immediately and slowly deep-fry the balls until slightly golden brown. Turn off fire; transfer out and absorb extra oil with paper. Cool down for several minutes and enjoy!

Video

Notes

For larger batches, re-frying before serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 109kcal | Carbohydrates: 16g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 4g | Sodium: 1mg | Potassium: 54mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Calcium: 79mg | Iron: 1.2mg
sesame balls|chinasichuanfood.com

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95 Comments

  1. Oh my God, I love these jian dui, but I always make mine with lotus paste in the middle! this recipe helped my a lot. Xie Xie.

  2. Hi, I was thinking of shipping these to a friend of mine for her birthday- where she lives she can’t find any red bean cans. How long do these sesame balls stay good while unrefrigerated (so i can know how fast I have to deliver it) and how long do they last when put in the refrigerator usually?

    1. Hi Sam,
      That’s a really love idea. Perfect round sesame balls for a birthday. However it is quite difficult to operate as the sesame balls become sticky and not crunchy at all when cooled down. So it depends how far you need to deliver.

      1. I’m using an extra fast usps shipping so the Jian dui will get there in abt a day and maybe 6-7 hours.

  3. Wow! I’m finally able to enjoy these at home without having to drive hundreds of miles to a Chinese bakery! I just made them and we’ve eaten half already – still warm, couldn’t help ourselves. Gave a few to our Indonesian friends and their smiles told me I did a good job.

    The only issue I had was the dough, I had to add a lot more water than the recipe called for to get it to hold together.

    Thanks for posting the recipe in English and the video too, very helpful!!!

    1. Thank you for the wonderful comment. You really did a good job. It tastes so great when still warm and can be one of my favorite snack and breakfast. Happy cooking!

  4. Hi, Elaine! These are so beautiful and delicious, but I’m wondering if you can explain why you do the “small dough” part? Why cook a little bit of the dough first?
    Thank you so much for this great recipe!

    1. Hi Caroline,
      I usually cook one small portion of the dough, this can help to hold the sesame balls and reduce the chance of explosion during deep frying because of the gelatinization. If you cannot control the fire appropriately,the balls usually expand very quickly, which might lead to an explosion.

      1. I think you can also freeze the sesame balls before cooking. That way, the sesame ball won’t explode and it still cooks thoroughly.

  5. Hi Elaine,

    After 2 weeks of searching for the Authentic Glutinous Rice Flour here in Manila, Philippines… Finally I was able to accomplish my experiment on Sesame Balls – Jian Dui. I must admit that there are a lot of versions including Filipino Version called “Buchi”, I really want to follow your recipe to the T.
    And the result?

    FANTASCTIC, AMAZING and DELICIOUS!!!

    Worth the wait to find the said Flour. You are very precise in giving out instructions both written and video. There are a lot of recipe which I would like to do for the Chinese New Year, my only problem is where to find all the ingredients shown. If you happen to know any dealer or Distributor in the Philippines, please let me know.

    Thank you for being precise and truthful in your instructions.

    1. Thanks for trying my recipe and let me know the result. This is almost the perfect version for me. I have failed several times before having the access to my ideal sesame balls.
      I do not know sticky rice flour is so hard to find in Philippines. It is a very common ingredient in China. How about sticky rice? It is popular in Philippines?

  6. Hi Elaine,

    I made these twice this week and they are delicious; however, mine are not expanding at all. The flour looks more bread like than chewy mochi. Any suggests?

    1. It might be the oil temperature (usually too high) or you did not soak the balls in the oil. Next time, slightly change your oil temperature and press the balls down after floating.

  7. Is 120 c hot enough? It’s equal to about 250 f and I’ve seen other recipies go up to 330f. Tried making them myself, and 250f just kinda made them soggy.

    1. 120 degree C is hot enough. The frying process should take minutes with a lower oil temperature than other fried dishes.

  8. Hi there!
    I’m just about to make these for a friend’s gathering (very excited btw!) & I was wondering if you can recommend a dipping sauce. I recently discovered these when I tried Dim Sum for the first time and they were served with a dipping sauce but I unfortunately couldn’t get the name.

    Thanks in advance

    1. Usually, we do not need dipping sauce for sesame balls. They are good enough along. However if you really want to serve with a dipping sauce, you can use sweet and sour sauce or sweet and hot sauce.